August wage packets for freelance workers up 2% overall, according to Hudson Contract
Freelance tradespeople beat the usual late summer slump this August, setting a record for average weekly pay.
Wage packets were above 拢1,000 in London, the South-east and eastern England, according to payroll firm Hudson Contract, which recorded an average labour rate increase of 2% across the country.
Earnings traditionally dip at the end of the summer as workers take holidays, but the demand for skilled labour saw this trend bucked this year with average pay for the month up 4.6% on the same period in 2021.
Ian Anfield, managing director at Hudson Contract, said demand was largely being driven by infrastructure and work by the big housebuilders which have strong forward order sales.
But he warned that 鈥渞ecent volatility in financial markets has clouded the outlook with the shares of housebuilders, landlords and building suppliers under pressure as fears grow over increases in the cost of borrowing鈥.
He added: 鈥淚n the labour market, we are starting to see a longer-term impact of Brexit. Those subbies who returned to Europe, retired or switched industries are no longer being replaced by newcomers from the EU as the tap has been turned off.鈥
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Plasterers saw the biggest increase in pay rates 鈥 up 10.5% to 拢927 a week 鈥 while regionally the South-west (6.4%), East Midlands (4.6%) and the North- east (4.6%) experienced the biggest monthly growth.
Only in the West Midlands (-1.8%) did workers see their pay packets shrink last month.
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