UK jobless claims more than doubled at the height of Britain's coronavirus outbreak, official data showed Tuesday.
Claims surged 126 percent to 2.8 million people in the three months to May, coinciding with a strict nationwide lockdown that shut shops and businesses, Office for National Statistics figures revealed. Claims surged almost a quarter in May from April, the ONS added, while job vacancies tumbled to a record low as economic activity ground to a halt.
Britain's lockdown was imposed on March 23, when the UK government also launched a "furlough" jobs retention scheme under which it pays the bulk of wages. Lockdown restrictions were eased this month but furloughing continues.
The ONS on Tuesday added that the unemployment rate -- or the proportion of the workforce that is unemployed -- was flat at 3.9 percent in the three months to April, not far from a 45-year low. Furloughed workers are classified as employed under the ONS data, while the rate is likely to start shooting higher from next month's figures, taking into account the surge in claims to May and beyond.
Separately Tuesday, the UK Treasury said 9.1 million people were being paid via its furlough scheme. Economists argue that the full extent of coronavirus will not be clear until the costly scheme ends in October. Companies will meanwhile have to start contributing from August.
"The government's furlough scheme is massaging the numbers," City Index economist Fiona Cincotta told AFP. "Those furloughed are not appearing in the unemployment statistics, which explains why the UK unemployment rate remains at a multi-decade low despite UK GDP contracting by 20.4 percent in April. The furlough scheme is delaying the brutal blow that will hit the labour market."
Cincotta added: "Make no mistake the UK unemployment level will surge."
The UK economy collapsed by a fifth in size in April from March, ravaged by the COVID-19 outbreak that has killed more than 41,000 in Britain.