Dole numbers in Kent increase for second straight month in February, bucking the national trend

The number of people claiming unemployment benefits increased for the second consecutive month in Kent, once again bucking the national trend.

Another 351 jobseekers joined the dole queue in February, taking the county’s total to 19,836 according to the Office for National Statistics.

Yet the Chancellor George Osborne will not fret ahead of his budget speech today, with number of people out of work in the UK falling by 102,000 to 1.86 million.

The number of people claiming unemployment benefits in Kent has grown
The number of people claiming unemployment benefits in Kent has grown

Canterbury was the worst performer in Kent, with 85 more people signing on last month, taking the city’s total to 1,224.

It was closely followed by Ashford, where the claimant count rose by 82 to 1,122.

Malcolm Lawrence, operations manager at Ashford Jobcentre, said: “Traditionally in January in February you get a spike after the Christmas period but there is not any particular reason for it.

“Over the last year we have seen a 25% reduction in unemployment from 1,539 to 1,154 and the number of young people out of work has fallen by 100 since February to 295.”

Significant increases were recorded in Maidstone, up 62 to 1,316, and Dartford, up 36 to 900, while Gravesham and Tonbridge and Malling both increased by 33 to 1,430 and 809 respectively.

Ashford and Canterbury had the highest rises in Jobseeker's Allowance claimants
Ashford and Canterbury had the highest rises in Jobseeker's Allowance claimants

Medway, the region with the county’s highest claimant count, recorded an increase of 34 to 3,966.

Other rise of 10 in Dover to 1,553 was more modest but there was some good news, with Swale falling 45 to 1,857, although not making up for the increase of 137 a month earlier.

The affluent Tunbridge Wells watched its dole queues thinned by 14 to 530, while neighbouring Sevenoaks saw Jobseeker’s Allowance claimants decline by 11 to 625. Shepway fell nine to 1,584.

The total number of unemployed workers in the South East fell by 1,000 to 209,000 in the three months to January.

The unemployment rate in the South East was the lowest in Britain at 4.5%. The region’s claimant count rate was also the nation’s lowest at 1.3%.

Nationally, the number of people out of work in the UK fell by 102,000 to 1.86 million. The unemployment rate remains at 5.7%.


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