The sectors where jobs are growing

Simon Ward
by Lovemoney Staff Simon Ward on 03 January 2012  |  Comments 8 comments

New figures from a leading recruitment consultancy show how events in the wider economy are affecting employment in different sectors.

The sectors where jobs are growing

Although unemployment continues to rise, recruitment firm Reed’s Job Index has found that the number of full-time jobs available via its website increased by 17% in December 2011 compared to a year earlier.

Here’s a breakdown of the sectors with the highest annual increases in job opportunities, according to Reed's latest figures:

 

Sector

Annual increase 2010-2011

Motoring and automotive

82%

Engineering

60%

Hospitality and catering

43%

Leisure and tourism

43%

IT and telecoms

41%

Energy 39%

Construction and property

35%

Qualified accountancy

29%

Estate agency

28%

Charity and voluntary

25%

Human resources

25%

In terms of the areas where the number of opportunities fell fastest, unsurprisingly the public sector and some of its associated sectors – notably education and social care – showed big annual drops.

There were also falls in banking and financial services, again unsurprising given the number of large companies making redundancies during 2011.

What's happened to salaries?

Salaries have remained flat overall over the past 12 months. The biggest increases came in financial services, recruitment consultancy and estate agency, plus security and safety, suggesting commission-led sectors are still willing to pay out. Salaries dipped the most in the retail, reflecting the current turmoil on the high street, legal, charity/voluntary and strategy/consultancy sectors.

Looking at job opportunities by region, the biggest annual increases in vacancies were in London and East Anglia. Only Northern Ireland showed a drop in vacancies, but there was only very minor growth in Wales, Scotland and north-west England.

When it comes to salaries, Reed reports no annual increase across the UK as a whole. However, salaries grew by 5% in East Anglia, 3% in the West Midlands, 2% in Yorkshire and Humberside and 1% in the south east. Wales and the East Midlands experienced the biggest falls.

More: Six top ways to get a pay rise in 2012 | Rules to make you richer at workHow to write the perfect CV

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Comments (8)

  • nickpike
    Love rating 270
    nickpike said

    I wonder if estate agency jobs were on offer as a lot are leaving? I would have thought this was a problem industry at present. I foresee a lot of EAs going bust this year. Of course, retail must be suffering. There's been several thousand jobs losses in the last week.

    Report on 03 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • naednhoj
    Love rating 6
    naednhoj said

    As a professional in construction I find the suggestion of growth in construction jobs contradictory to what is actually happening.

    Can you ask Reeds if this is just weighted to London and distorted by the Olympic provision?

    In the north western region the construction Industry is suffering as the PFI projects come to an end resulting in more redundancies than ever.

    One North West construction company has moved most of it's staff to the M25 as there are no opportunities in the North west where tender values are below actual cost

    Report on 03 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • richmoll
    Love rating 26
    richmoll said

    With the growth in online retailing maybe there is a growth in the delivery industry

    Report on 04 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • jonnie2thumbs
    Love rating 90
    jonnie2thumbs said

    If Israel is stupid enough to attack Iran there will be thousands of vacancies in the armed forces....

    Report on 05 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Singe57
    Love rating 8
    Singe57 said

    who wants to live by a gun:(

    Report on 09 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    It seems strange that unemployment is going up according to the ONS but these figures suggest that there are a lot more vacancies; it doesn't appear to make sense. This video from the ONS paints a more plausible picture -

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edXoPPqKFkI

    Report on 09 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • mambach
    Love rating 33
    mambach said

    Is 'volunteering' a job opportunity? I'm not dissing volunteers; far from it, I just want to know if the entry for 'chairty and volnteering' consists of all those things that used to be paid for and now rely on volunteers (librarians and classroom assistants spriing to mind)

    Report on 10 January 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • TheSophist
    Love rating 0
    TheSophist said

    A possible explanation for the apparent contradiction of increasing jobs and increasing unemployment is the concept of misallocation of resources. This theory is provided by the school of Austrian economics.

    It is the idea that government involvement in the economy causes resources to go where they are not needed, as a consequence you get the contradiction where the market signals the desire for more engineers but you get more philosophy graduates instead.

    You could also call it opportunity cost. people who spent time working for the NHS or studying for a humanities degree are actually needed in the engineering sector or wherever. Its not for me, as a theoretical omniscient bureacrat, to say where workers are needed. It is the market which decides.

    Put simply get the government out of as much of economy as possible. Get oligarchical sectors broken up.

    Report on 30 July 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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