No flights of fancy - we are airborne!
Back in late 2007
and 2008 the talk was of a soft landing. Evidence abounded of the impending
downturn, but very few people called it as it was - a disaster of grotesque
proportions just around the corner. Just why we thought the landing would be
soft, is hard to recall. Looking back at the numbers from leading edge
industries and sectors, the picture was abundantly clear – we weren’t so much
heading for a soft landing as hitting a brick wall, falling off a cliff –
choose your metaphor, the clear signs were there that the trip was over. However,
after five years of mass unemployment, sectors destroyed and beatings from our
EU and IMF colleagues, I believe we've finally come out the other side. To
explain my reasoning I need to take us back to where it all began.
In early 2007 the
streets were full of BMWs and Mercedes and regular people were deciding on
whether to go for that third or fourth property. In the Hays offices, we were
flying around the world trying to find architects and engineers from the Far
East and Africa to import into Ireland .
Our offices were packed with Eastern Europeans flooding over to fill the labour
void on the huge development sites of the South Docklands
and elsewhere.
By July it had stopped dead in its tracks. The phone was still ringing, but it was Irish architects looking for a move as their firm’s prospects suddenly looked bleak. Anyone in housing was getting out quick, and then, in October activity froze in a recession that hit the entire construction sector like a tsunami. Eighteen months into the recession a sector that accounted for over 10% of GDP and employed over a quarter of a million people had halved in output and lost half its employees. Some soft landing!
By July it had stopped dead in its tracks. The phone was still ringing, but it was Irish architects looking for a move as their firm’s prospects suddenly looked bleak. Anyone in housing was getting out quick, and then, in October activity froze in a recession that hit the entire construction sector like a tsunami. Eighteen months into the recession a sector that accounted for over 10% of GDP and employed over a quarter of a million people had halved in output and lost half its employees. Some soft landing!
Looking back is
instructive whilst trying to figure out what might be happening now in the
economy, and, more importantly, what might happen next. The recruitment sector
is often overlooked as a key indicator of changes in the economy, but I would
argue it’s the first place to look. Staff numbers are the mercury in the
economic barometer because they are directly linked to business
confidence. We see defined stages in the
economic cycle. In a downturn businesses see a reduction in workload, hiring
activity goes on hold, new enquires for permanent staff dry up. Then, as the
situation worsens, temporary staff are let go, followed by non-core permanent
staff and then, perhaps finally, wholesale redundancies.
All this played out
throughout 2007 and 2008, with the recruitment market bottoming out in spring
2009. Since 2010 the sector has been growing, quietly, but steadily and
significantly. Now, in 2013, something is happening to that growth that is more
significant and, I believe, portends the start of a significant shift in the
wider economy.
If we take the
graph of hiring activity as an accurate portrait of an economy in decline, then
the same can be done for an economy in recovery. The very first thing we would
expect to see would be a pick-up in temporary hiring activity, as companies
cautiously add numbers. Temporary staff are used to circumvent corporate
headcount quotas or to simply cover skills gaps on specific projects. They also
provide a tentative re-entry into the labour market when prospects pick up. We
have already seen this happen in the IT and finance sectors, both of which are
characteristically ‘employment resilient’ in a recession. But now we are seeing
it elsewhere, crucially in construction. There is a spring in the step of the
partners of those surviving firms of architects and engineers in Dublin . They have work on
the drawing board, and their response is evident in the calls we’re getting for
short term staff and fixed terms contractors.
This summer two
things happened which give me the confidence to state that the economy is
undergoing a significant shift in momentum. Overall, cross-sector numbers of
temporary workers are almost back to pre-recession levels. Secondly, and most
significantly, the source of this momentum comes from the construction sector. Temporary workers in construction are up 40% compared
to this time last year, the biggest growth rate of any sector in which we
recruit. It was also reported recently that the large cranes that were once
synonymous with the Dublin
cityscape have seen an increase in hires by 10%. This only happens at the start
of an upturn, and the pace at which it is happening tells me that we are at the
critical point of the recovery where, having been parked on the apron for three
years, we’re motoring down the runway and primed for take-off.
Talk to the right
people, in the right businesses, and they will tell you the same thing.
Property recovers first at the top end and in South
Dublin property is moving, and moving rapidly; prices are
up, sharply. There is an absolute dearth of high quality commercial space in
the City and foreign money is acting on this opportunity. The buzz of
international financiers hovering around Ireland
has turned into a frenzy of activity.
The service sector
is growing at its fastest rate in six years and new export orders grow for the
25th successive month. PwC's 2013 CEO Pulse Survey showed business confidence
in the Irish economy at its highest level since 2007. Add this to the sustained
recovery in employment numbers on a base of three years uninterrupted economic
growth, and the start of a recovery is undeniable.
Yet, just as no-one
diverted from the ‘soft-landing’ script in 2008, no-one is calling the recovery
now. Caution is the watchword, and we’re quick still to fasten to the grimmer
aspects of our immediate situation than to focus on the brightening light on
the horizon. But it’s clear to me that the recovery has started to take off and
we are airborne again.
Hays are hosting a
breakfast panel discussion entitled “2013 growth, are you seeing it?” Liam
Diamond, the International Tax & Inward Investment expert at
PricewaterhouseCoopers will join Goodbody’s Chief Economist Dermot O'Leary and
other panellists to give their views and answer questions on where the economic
growth is coming from and how businesses can take advantage of the green
shoots. For more information and to register go to hays.ie/2013growth
For further information about Hays visit www.hays.ie
Labels: #construction, #economy, #growth, #hays, #jobs, #officesupport, #PwC, #recovery
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