Teachers and chefs are in short supply due to the recruitment crisis in the UK
Teachers and chefs are in short supply due to the recruitment crisis in the UK (Picture: Getty)

The number of job vacancies in the UK has shot up in recent weeks, with nearly two million positions now available.

Industries are being hard hit by a shortage of staff, with more than 100,000 people needed in the haulage sector alone.

Potential recruits are being offered salaries of double the usual rate in a bid to tempt more people into switching careers.

The problems have been fuelled by Brexit and Covid, with a lack of foreign workers causing particular issues.

Teachers, care workers, chefs and cleaners are all in high demand with tens of thousands of jobs available, according to an analysis by the Recruitment & Employment Confederation (REC).

The organisation’s Jobs Recovery Tracker has been monitoring the number of positions being advertised since January 2020.

It shows postings now are far higher than at any point during the pandemic after steep growth during September.

A total of 1,903,045 jobs were available in the week September 13-19, up from 1,795,856 the week before.

An instructor guides a driver under instruction at the LGV Driver Training in Pallion, Sunderland, Britain September 24, 2021. REUTERS/Lee Smith
New recruits are being trained up quickly to try to address the shortages in lorry drivers (Picture: Reuters)

Number of job postings last week by sector

These are the number of new job adverts posted in the UK from September 13 to September 19, according to data analysed by Recruitment & Employment Confederation (REC):

  • Care workers: 55,019
  • Chefs: 36,471
  • Primary school teachers: 32,942 
  • Metal workers: 22,956
  • Cleaners: 28,220
  • HGV drivers: 7,513
  • Bar staff: 6,557
  • Sales assistants: 32,615
  • School secretaries: 2,678
  • Lollipop men and women: 2,478 
  • Postal workers: 2,251

The biggest growths have come in Wales and Northern Ireland while London lags behind.

Neil Carberry, Chief Executive of the REC, said although the number of new positions is ‘good news’, he warned: ‘There is a real chance now that shortages of available workers will slow the recovery.

‘A recent REC survey of recruiters found that three in five have over 30% more vacancies than usual, and 97% said it’s taking longer to fill them.

‘Labour shortages and the related recruitment difficulties put constraints on the economy, restricting output growth and innovation, so it’s vital we solve them quickly.’

NORTHWICH, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 22: Shelves in a supermarket look sparse as supply chain issues continue on September 22, 2021 in Northwich, England. Gaps in supermarket shelves have appeared more frequently as a shortage of lorry drivers and other workers has disrupted supply chains. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
Staff shortages have left to items disappearing from supermarket shelves (Picture: Getty)

The shortages across key industries are already impacting on the entire country, with items disappearing from supermarket shelves and some petrol stations unable to get fuel.

One farm in Lincolnshire is offering employees £30-an-hour, equivalent to an annual salary of £62,000-a-year.

Retailers have warned the Government that it has just 10 days to save Christmas from ‘significant disruption.’

On Thursday, Rod McKenzie of the Road Haulage Association trade body said that the Government had allowed the driver shortage to get ‘gradually worse’ in recent months.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Martin Dalton/REX/Shutterstock (12462882j) Despite fears of fuel shortages due to the lack of lorry drivers, Petrol Tankers leave the Navigator Terminal in Essex. Over 450 Tankers leave the terminal each day in Oliver road West Thurrock to refill petrol stations in the South of England Fuel Delivery shortages, Essex, West Thurrock, UK - 24 Sep 2021
Petrol stations have been running out of fuel because of difficulties transporting fuel around the country (Picture: Shutterstock)

‘We have got a shortage of 100,000 (drivers),’ he told BBC’s Newsnight.

‘When you think that everything we get in Britain comes on the back of a lorry, whether it’s fuel or food or clothes or whatever it is, at some point, if there are no drivers to drive those trucks, the trucks aren’t moving and we’re not getting our stuff.’

He added: ‘I don’t think we are talking about absolutely no fuel or food or anything like that, people shouldn’t panic buy food or fuel or anything else, that’s not what this is about.

‘This is about stock outs, it’s about shortages, it’s about a normal supply chain being disrupted.’

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