Pro Installer April 2014 - Issue 13 | Page 13

13 PRO INSTALLER APRIL 2014 PRO NEWS @proinstaller1 Selfemployment boom: good or bad? Britain now has more people working for themselves than ever before. As of the last quarter of 2013 some 4.3 million of us earn our own crust and are officially self-employed. This represents a significant increase. Though there was a slight trend upwards for many years in the early to mid-2000s, the number of self-employed has increased by 573,000 since the recession of 2008-09 a rise of 15%. ‘increased by 573,000’ Interestingly, over 60% of this increase has actually taken place even more recently from around the middle of 2011. The net result is that a staggering one in seven of the workers in this country is now working for him or herself. It is something that has passed relatively unnoticed but it is worth considering how much more negative the overall unemployment picture would have been had it not happened. The HR professionals body, the CIPD estimates that the rise in self-employment has compensated for around 40% of the loss in employee jobs. Had that not happened we could have seen unemployment nudging three million, with unemployment for women, who represent more than half of the self-employment growth since the recession, taking the brunt of that. And the trend shows no sign of abating if anything it seems to be getting stronger. Compared to a year ago the Office for National Statistics (ONS) says there are now 395,000 more people in employment overall. Of that, some 273,000 are employees, i.e. people working for firms or public sector bodies. That means that some 150,000, or 38%, are self-employed. If we look at the gains in recent quarters the trend is even starker. In the latest quarter’s data around three quarters of the 193,000 increase in people in employment comes from people employing themselves. For some this will be a cause of jubilation, proof that the UK is more entrepreneurial than ever before. Indeed there are signs that the UK’s more flexible labour force has more room these days for freelancers and people starting their own businesses which can only be a good thing. But others say the speed at which the rate has increased in such a short time it is proof that our recovery isn’t creating the jobs that it ought to be, and the jobs market remains insecure. ‘a major change’ Whatever your view there is no doubt that this is a major change in the manner in which our economy operates and in how its recent recovery has come about. For a start the trend might mark a divergence from how our economy has recovered from recession in the past. If we look at the recession in the early 1990s, for example, we see that self-employment declined as firms began t