§ 20. Mr. Anthony CoombsTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he will make a statement on the numbers of 18 to 25-year-olds in employment.
§ Mr. CopeThe number of young people aged 18 to 24 years inclusive in employment in June 1987 is provisionally estimated to be 4,359,000.
§ 27. Sir John FarrTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what is the number of unemployed persons in the Leicester travel-to-work area at the latest available date.
§ Mr. LeeOn 8 October 1987 the number of unemployed claimants in the Leicester travel-to-work areas was 21,488.
§ 28. Mr. O'BrienTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what information he has on the trend of unemployment levels in the Yorkshire and Humberside travel-to-work areas compared with all other travel-to-work areas in the English regions and in particular areas having assisted areas status.
§ Mr. LeeThe number of unemployed claimants in the Yorkshire and Humberside region has decreased by 44,500, or 14.3 per cent. over the last year. The comparable figures for the rest of England are 375,500, and 16.6 per cent. and for all areas with assisted areas in England are 145,200 and 14 per cent.
§ 29. Mr. FlanneryTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment how many people are at present unemployed; and how many of these are under 21 years of age.
§ Mr. LeeOn 8 October 1987, the number of unemployed claimants in the United Kingdom was 2,751,384. The numbers aged under 21 years are not separately identified, however those aged under 20 numbered 374,445.
§ 31. Mr. KirkhopeTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he will make a statement on the recent labour market statistics.
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§ Mr. LeeThe latest labour market statistics show a continuing sharp fall in unemployment in all regions. The unemployment rate fell below 10 per cent. in October and the seasonally adjusted total was the lowest for five years and nearly half a million lower than in June 1986. Vacancies have continued to rise and employment was up by 372,000 in the year to September contributing to a total of more than 1.3 million extra jobs since June 1983.
§ 39. Mrs. PeacockTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he will make a statement on the number of women in employment.
§ Mr. LeeIn June 1987, the latest date for which figures are available, there were 10,337,000 females in the employed labour force in Great Britain. This represents an increase of 931,000 since June 1983. The figures are adjusted for the effects of seasonal variation. The employed labour force is the sum of employees in employment, the self-employed and Her Majesty's forces.
§ 40. Mr. DuffyTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what percentage of the work force was unemployed, on the basis of the last recorded figures, in the Sheffield travel-to-work area.
§ Mr. LeeOn 8 October 1987 number of unemployed claimants in the Sheffield travel-to-work area expressed as a percentage of employees in employment plus the unemployed was 14.6 per cent.
§ 41. Mr. RookerTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what is the current rate of male and female unemployment in Birmingham.
§ Mr. LeeOn 8 October 1987, the number of unemployed claimants in the Birmingham travel-to-work area expressed as a percentage of employees in employment plus the unemployed was 16 per cent. for males and 9.6 per cent. for females.
§ 48. Mr. CoxTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what was the number of men over the age of 50 years who were registered as unemployed in the greater London area on 31 October.
§ Mr. LeeOn 8 October 1987, the latest date for which figures are available, the number of unemployed male claimants aged 50 years and over, in the greater Londo n area was 47,486.
§ 49. Mr. AmessTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what is the total number of people currently unemployed in the Basildon constituency; and what were the figures for the same period in each of the last four years.
§ Mr. LeeFollowing is the available information. The table shows the number of unemployed claimants in the parliamentary constituency of Basildon in October of each year since 1984. The comparison is affected by the change in the comparison of the unemployment statistics in March 1986.
Number October 1984 6,972 October 1985 6,492 October 1986 6,159 October 1987 4,877
§ 53. Mr. HarrisTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what is the present level of job vacancies registered at jobcentres in the south-west region.
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§ Mr. LeeOn 2 October 1987 the number of unfilled vacancies at jobcentres in the south-west region was 22,081.
§ 57. Mr. Neil HamiltonTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he will make a statement on the numbers of 16 to 18-year-olds in employment.
§ Mr. LeeThe information is not available in the form requested. It is estimated that in January 1987 1,095,000 people in Great Britain aged 16 to 18 at 31 August the previous year were in employment outside YTS; however, this figure also includes small numbers who were unemployed but not claiming benefit, who were neither seeking work nor claiming benefit, or who were on Government schemes outside YTS, and it excludes some people in full-time education who also had some paid employment. Jobs for young people are also available within YTS. About one in 10 YTS trainees have employed status and also benefit from the quality training YTS provides.
§ 73. Mr. SteenTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment what is the number of unfilled vacancies in each of the jobcentres covering the South Hams constituency.
§ Mr. LeeThe South Hams parliamentary constituency is covered by the Totnes, Dartmouth and Kingsbridge jobcentres, where there were 120, 51 and 83 unfilled vacancies respectively on 2 October 1987.
§ 80. Mr. Andrew McKayTo ask the Secretary of State for Employment if he will make a statement on the number of people in employment.
Part-time1 employees Thousands, Spring 1986 16–29 30–49 50 and over All ages Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Region Northern 10 49 13 144 11 55 34 248 Yorkshire and Humberside 28 84 15 240 16 114 59 437 East Midlands 19 57 14 200 18 88 51 345 East Anglia 12 38 2— 96 2— 35 27 169 South East 102 254 42 714 82 371 226 1,338 South West 18 71 16 210 24 90 58 371 West Midlands 25 71 19 232 18 99 62 403 North West 33 90 21 294 19 125 73 508 Wales 11 43 11 123 2— 51 32 217 Scotland 20 65 13 209 16 112 49 386 Northern Ireland 2— 15 2— 51 2 21 15 87 United Kingdom 284 836 173 2,511 228 1,162 685 4,509 1Basic usual hours (i.e. excluding paid and unpaid overtime and meal breaks) of 30 hours or less per week. Estimates exclude those employees who did not state hours worked. 2 Sample size too small to provide a reliable estimate.