Britain’s unemployment rate has soared to 5%, from 4.9%, in what officials describe as the first real glimpse of how the Iran conflict is reshaping the British economy. Wage growth simultaneously slowed to 3.4%, a sharp decline from the 5-6% range that characterized 2023 and 2024.
The numbers tell a dark story
The 5% figure marks the highest unemployment rate in the UK since the start of 2021, when the country was still emerging from pandemic lockdowns. As a reminder, the rate was at a relatively comfortable level of 3.8% at the start of 2024.
Payroll data paints an even bleaker picture. The UK economy shed 74,000 employees between February 2025 and February 2026, a significant contraction that indicates companies are actively reducing their workforces rather than simply freezing hiring.
Economic inactivity in the UK has actually fallen slightly, which would normally be a positive signal suggesting more people are looking for work. But when unemployment increases at the same time, it means people want work and can’t find it.
Previously published forecasts by TradingEconomics predicted UK unemployment would fall to 4.8% by 2027 and 4.5% by 2028. These projections now carry significant downside risk.
Stagflation: the kryptonite of crypto
Look at what happened during the mini-stagflation scare of 2022. Bitcoin fell from around $47,000 in March to less than $20,000 in June as the Fed tightened in a slowing economy.


