News

A fifth of people in Islington in insecure work

A fifth of people in Islington work in severely insecure jobs, new analysis reveals.

By Marieta Marinova, Data Reporter

A job centre sign
Photo: RADAR

A fifth of people in Islington work in severely insecure jobs, new analysis reveals.

The Work Foundation at Lancaster University has found one in five of those in employment in England are in unstable jobs.

They called on the Government to introduce an Employment Bill in the next parliament that “puts job quality and security at the heart of labour market regulation”.

The figures show 18.8% of workers in Islington were in severely insecure jobs – a higher rate than the average of 18.3% in Greater London .

‘Insecure work’ is defined by the think tank as employment that is involuntarily temporary or part-time, or when multiple forms of insecurity come together, such as casual or zero-hours contracts, or low or unpredictable pay. The analysis is based on the Office for National Statistics Labour Force Survey 2021-22.

Rebecca Florisson, principal analyst at the Work Foundation, said: “Being trapped in insecure work isn’t just about poor pay.

“Research shows those in insecure work also experience worse health, living standards and future job prospects so it is an issue that affects all aspects of life.”

She added: “Communities across the country are already struggling with the lack of secure, good quality jobs in their areas, which means that the Government’s focus on getting people into ‘any’ job is both unhelpful and harmful.”

The analysis suggests just 44.2% of Islington workers were in secure employment and a further 37% had a moderately or low insecure job.

The think tank also found variation in the levels of severely insecure work amongst different worker groups.

In Greater London, a higher proportion of female workers (23.5%) were in unstable employment than male workers (13.7%).

Those from ethnic minorities also suffered greater inequality, with 22.1% having jobs considered severely insecure, while 16% of white workers did.

Ben Harrison, director of the Work Foundation, said: “We know that those who face wider structural disadvantage in the labour market are more likely to find themselves in these kinds of jobs.

“Women, those with disabilities and those from ethnic minority backgrounds are often particularly at risk, leaving these worker groups even more vulnerable to the cost-of-living crisis.”

He added: “The reality is, people in severely insecure work are paying the price of Government’s failure to strengthen employment rights and protections during this Parliament, and this failure is also holding back wider levelling up ambitions.”

The Work Foundation said insecure jobs tend to be concentrated in sectors such as hospitality, social care and administrative services, but they found job security within these sectors also differed wildly across the country.

Overall, in Greater London 45.5% of those working in accommodation and food services were in insecure work, while 19.1% of health and social care workers and 33% of administration and support workers were.

A Government spokesperson said: “Zero hours contracts are an important part of the UK’s flexible labour market helping people balance work around other commitments, and the government has consistently acted to ensure employees are protected in these roles.

“Numbers in temporary work due to an inability to find permanent roles are down almost 200,000 since 2010.

“Our In-Work Progression Offer for people on Universal Credit means over one million low-income earners can tap into additional support to help secure promotions and boost their finances.”

AdBlocker Message

Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

About EC1 Echo

EC1 Echo is your free local independent community news website. We publish stories to the web across the week and offer a platform for local people to highlight what matters to them. EC1 Echo is a not-for-profit project in partnership with the Peel Institute. Please consider becoming a subscriber supporter from £3.00 per month.
We need your help

Submit your listing here