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Business Today
Business live
UK unemployment rate jumps to 4.2% as labour market cools; China’s growth beats forecasts
Live  
UK unemployment rate jumps to 4.2% as labour market cools; China’s growth beats forecasts
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, including the latest Chinese GDP report and UK unemployment data
Headlines
Retail  
UK stores attract more Easter shoppers despite cost of living crisis
UK stores attract more Easter shoppers despite cost of living crisis
Technology  
Leisure centres scrap biometric systems to keep tabs on staff amid UK data watchdog clampdown
Boeing  
Employees’ use of safety concern service up 500% after panel blowout
Electric cars  
Britishvolt ‘gigafactory’ site to be sold for £110m to US private equity firm
Car industry  
Tesla to cut 14,000 jobs as Elon Musk bids to make it ‘lean and hungry’
US  
Trump Media shares tank after company reveals plan to sell more stock
Airlines  
EasyJet and Wizz Air cancel flights to Tel Aviv after Iran attack on Israel
China  
German chancellor urges Chinese industry bosses to play fair in EU market
Stock markets  
Private equity group CVC plans €1.25bn Amsterdam float
Apple  
Tech giant loses mantle as world’s biggest phone seller
Utilities  
Thames Water has six weeks to agree survival plan with Ofwat
Today's agenda
Britain’s unemployment rate has risen to 4.2%, as the number of workers in payrolled jobs falls and more people leave the jobs market.

The latest healthcheck on the UK’s labour market shows that the unemployment total rose by 85,000 in the December-February quarter, to 1.44 million.

That takes the jobless rate to its highest level since last summer, just before the UK began sliding into a shallow recession.

The number of people in employment fell by 156,000 in the quarter to 32.98 million, as firms cut back on their workforce.

But not all those people joined the ranks of the unemployed; another 150,000 people were classed as "economically inactive" in the quarter, taking the number neither in work nor looking for a job to 9.404 million.

And in March, the number of payrolled employees shrank by 67,000, to 30.3 million.

ONS director of economic statistics Liz McKeown says there are “tentative signs that the jobs market is beginning to cool”, given the drop in headline employment rate and the fall in payrolls.

McKeown adds: “However, we would recommend caution when looking at the size of the fall in headline employment, as previously highlighted lower sample sizes mean there is greater volatility in quarterly changes than was the case.”

Meanwhile, China’s economy has beaten expectations for growth in the first quarter of the year, but there are already signs that growth may be slowing.

China’s gross domestic product. grew by 5.3% in January-March compared to a year ago, data released today by the National Bureau of Statistics showed.

That beat foreasts of 4.6% increase, and shows a slight rise on the 5.2% growth recorded in the previous quarter.

China’s National Bureau of Statistics says the country’s economy had continued to rebound in Q1 2024, but also struck a cautious note: "Generally speaking, in the first quarter, the national economy made a good start with positive factors amassing, laying a strong foundation for achieving the annual development targets.

"However, we should be aware that the external environment is becoming more complex, severe and uncertain, and the foundation for stable and sound economic growth is not solid yet."

However, a flurry of economic reports from March were weaker than expected, implying that demand softened at the end of the quarter.

Retail sales figures for March only rose by 3.1%, missing forecasts of 4.5% growth, while industrial production grew by 4.5%, failed to meet market expectations of 5.4% growth.

Asia-Pacific markets have fallen into the red, with China’s Shenzhen Composite index down 2.3%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng has lost 1.5%, and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 is down 1.7%.

Concerns over tensions in the Middle East, along with anxiety over how soon central banks will start cutting interest rates, are dampening risk appetite among investors.

The agenda
• 10am BST: ZEW index of eurozone economic sentiment
• 10.15am BST: Treasury committee hearing with Clare Lombardelli, deputy governor at the Bank of England
• 1.30pm BST: US building permits and housing starts data for March
• 2pm BST: IMF releases its latest World Economic Outlook
• 3.15pm BST: IMF releases its latest Global Financial Stability Report

We’ll be tracking all the main events throughout the day ...
Nils Pratley on finance
Thames Water break-up is a promising idea
Thames Water break-up is a promising idea
Opinion
Explainer  
What next for oil prices after Iran’s attack on Israel?
What next for oil prices after Iran’s attack on Israel?
Media
BBC  
Nick Robinson says he ‘should have been clearer’ after Gaza interview row
Nick Robinson says he ‘should have been clearer’ after Gaza interview row
New Zealand  
Parts of axed media outlet Newshub to continue in new deal
Spotlight
My dystopian trip to an AI burger joint
‘Eat the future, pay with your face’  
My dystopian trip to an AI burger joint
If the experience of robot-served fast-food dining is any indication, the future of sex robots is going to be very unpleasant
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