Starting salaries for permanent jobs in Britain grew in May at the fastest pace in three years, something that may give the Bank of England confidence that inflation pressure is on the rise, a survey showed on Friday.
The monthly gauge of starting salaries for permanent workers from the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) and accountancy KPMG jumped to 63.4 from 60.5 in April, its highest since May 2015.
The survey, watched by BoE officials as a guide of the labour market’s health, also showed the number of permanent staff starting new jobs rose in May at the weakest pace this year.
Last month, BoE Governor Mark Carney highlighted stronger wage growth as he presented new forecasts for the economy.
Economists polled by Reuters last month think the Bank will raise interest rates to a new post-financial crisis high of 0.75 percent in August [ECILT/GB].
Recruiters reported the strongest demand for engineering and IT permanent staff last month. Retail was the only sector in which demand declined.
Many British retailers are shutting shops in the face of online competition, a squeeze on consumer budgets and a change in British spending habits from fashion and towards holidays and entertainment.
Source: UK Reuters