Fewer claiming benefits in Sunderland

The number of people claiming benefits in Sunderland has fallen over the last year, new figures show.
Fewer claiming benefits.Fewer claiming benefits.
Fewer claiming benefits.

Figures from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) show around 9,430 people were on out-of-work benefits as of March 10, down by 3,870 from 13,300 at the same point the year before.

It meant 5.4% of the area's working population sought support in March.

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The figures include those aged 16 to 64 on Jobseeker’s Allowance and some Universal Credit claimants, who are unemployed and seeking work or employed but with low earnings.

The figures also show that the number of workers on company payrolls in Sunderland has continued to increase.

The data shows 114,897 people were in work in March – up from 114,762 the month before and from 109,905 in March 2021.

At the start of the pandemic, 112,045 people were in payrolled jobs in the area but – with the cost of living rocketing – experts have called for more support for unemployed people and those on lower incomes.

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Jack Leslie, senior economist at anti-low pay group, the Resolution Foundation, called on the Government to provide more help in the autumn budget.

He said: "The sheer scale of this inflation-led squeeze of living standards makes it all the more remarkable how little support the Chancellor provided in his spring statement".

Chancellor Rishi Sunak acknowledged this is a "worrying time" but highlighted the £22bn in support that the Government is providing.

Employment minister Mims Davies said the Government is "doing everything it can to help" - including supporting people in moving into better paid, higher skilled work and increasing the National Living and Minimum Wage.