Pay growth stable but pressures remain
Median expected pay increases remain at 3% for the eighth quarter in a row.
However, inflation is expected to rise. This means many workers are likely to see a real-terms fall in wages. The distribution of pay awards is also narrowing. More organisations are clustering around the 3% mark with fewer planning higher or lower increases.
This suggests employers are balancing affordability with ongoing cost-of-living challenges for their employees. We have some practical guidance you can use to support employee financial wellbeing in this difficult period.
Recruitment pressures ease but skills shortages persist
Fewer employers expect significant difficulties in filling vacancies in the next six months. Just 12% expect major challenges. That's down from 16% a year ago.
However, one in three organisations (33%) still report hard-to-fill roles. This highlights ongoing skills mismatches across the labour market.
Looking ahead
The findings show a labour market that remains stable, but low confidence and ongoing cost pressures continue to shape how employers make decisions.
We encourage organisations to take a cautious approach to hiring freezes and redundancies that may create future skills gaps. Employers should focus on the areas they can directly influence such as taking a proactive approach to workforce planning. That means ensuring investment in technologies such as AI is supported by the right mix of people, skills and systems to deliver meaningful productivity gains.