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UK Firms Scale Back 2027 Pay Outlook: Brightmine

June 24 (Reuters) - British employers expect to scale back pay increases markedly next year, according to a survey on Wednesday ​from human resources data firm Brightmine that added to ‌signs of a cooling labour market.

About 42% of employers surveyed said they expected pay awards in 2027 to average between 2% ​and 3%, with the same proportion expecting deals ​between 3 and 4%.

Brightmine said this marked a step ⁠change from recent years where 3 to 4% was ​the norm.

While the Bank of England is likely to ​welcome the readings given worries over the persistence of inflation, the findings underline concerns about the outlook for household demand.

Consumer morale is running low ​ahead of a change in prime minister, with the ​Labour Party's Andy Burnham currently the only candidate to take over ‌from ⁠Keir Starmer.

Brightmine said its median pay deal for the three months to the end of May - based on actual awards - was 3.2%, unchanged from the three months to April.

"With ​inflation still above ​the Bank ⁠of England's 2% target and close to the current median pay award, employers may ​come under renewed pressure to go further than ​they ⁠are currently planning to support employee living standards," said Sheila Attwood, senior content manager of data and HR insights at ⁠Brightmine.

Its ​survey was based on 251 pay ​awards struck between March 1 and May 31, covering settlements for around ​3.2 million employees.

Reporting by Andy Bruce; editing by Suban Abdulla

Source: Reuters


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