In a stark blow to the UK economy, the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) reveal that unemployment has climbed to 4.7% in the three months to May 2025, marking the highest level in nearly four years. This alarming rise, reported on July 17, 2025, continues a troubling month-on-month increase in joblessness since Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ controversial autumn budget, with critics pointing to her £25 billion tax raid on businesses as the primary culprit.
The ONS data paints a grim picture: payroll numbers have plummeted by 178,000 in the 12 months to June 2025, with a further 41,000 jobs lost between May and June alone. Since Reeves’ budget took effect in April, the UK has seen a staggering 276,000 jobs vanish, including a single-month drop of 109,000 in May—the largest since the 2020 Covid lockdown. The hospitality sector has been particularly hard-hit, with 69,000 jobs lost in pubs, restaurants, and hotels since the budget’s introduction, a sharp reversal from the 18,000 jobs created in the same period last year under the previous government.
Reeves’ budget, unveiled in October 2024, included a £25 billion increase in employer National Insurance Contributions (NICs) and a 6.7% hike in the national living wage, measures that business leaders and economists have branded a “jobs tax.” The impact was immediate, with companies scaling back hiring, freezing recruitment, or cutting staff to offset the sharply rising payroll costs. Julian Jessop, an economics fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs, described the slump as a “painful lesson in basic economics,” arguing that making it more expensive to employ people inevitably leads to fewer jobs. The British Chambers of Commerce echoed this sentiment, noting that “warning lights” on recruitment and employment were already flashing before the budget’s full effects were felt.
The month-on-month rise in unemployment since April—when the NICs hike took effect—tells a clear story. The unemployment rate rose from 4.4% in the three months to December 2024 to 4.5% in the first quarter of 2025, then to 4.6% in the three months to April, and now to 4.7%. Job vacancies have also continued to slide, dropping by 63,000 in the three months to May, signalling a broader slowdown in the labor market. ONS economic director Liz McKeown underscored the severity of the situation, stating, “The job market continues to weaken. The number of job vacancies is still falling and has now been dropping continuously for three years.”
Critics, including shadow business secretary Andrew Griffith, have been quick to pin the blame on Reeves’ fiscal policies. “Unemployment is the only thing growing under Labour,” Griffith remarked, highlighting the government’s failure to deliver on its pre-election promise of “growth, growth, growth.” Posts on X reflect similar public frustration, with users like @CutMyTaxUK stating, “Tax something more and you get less of it. That’s also true of jobs as Rachel Reeves has proved with her tax hikes on jobs.” Shadow chancellor Mel Stride has warned that the economic fallout from Reeves’ budget is undermining tax revenues, potentially forcing further tax rises or spending cuts to balance the books.
The broader economic context only amplifies concerns. The UK economy shrank by 0.3% in April 2025, following a 0.1% contraction in May, defying expectations of growth and adding pressure on Reeves as she prepares for the upcoming autumn budget. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has cautioned that any further economic downturn could necessitate additional tax hikes, with Reeves’ fiscal headroom already described as hanging by a “gnat’s whisker.” Meanwhile, inflation has climbed to 3.8%, further squeezing businesses and consumers alike.
Reeves has defended her budget, arguing that it aims to “fix the foundations” of the economy and boost long-term growth. However, the immediate fallout—rising unemployment, falling job vacancies, and a shrinking economy—has fueled accusations of economic mismanagement. As one X user put it, “Reeves and her Budget have brought the economy to the cliff edge of catastrophe.” With businesses closing, wealthy individuals reportedly fleeing, and fears of further tax rises looming, the Chancellor faces mounting pressure to reverse course or risk deepening the UK’s jobs recession.
As the nation braces for the next budget, the question remains: can Reeves deliver on her promise to put “more money in people’s pockets,” or will her policies continue to drive jobs and growth into the ground? For now, the unemployment figures serve as a stark reminder of the real-world consequences of her tax-heavy approach, leaving many to wonder if Labour’s economic vision is unravelling before it even takes hold.