For two decades I have watched the City's pulse quicken at the scent of a recession. When the Bank of England began its hiking cycle, the chorus of Cassandras predicted a bloodbath in the job market. Yet here we are, with employment figures that refuse to play the tragedy. A 30-year recruitment veteran has broken his silence, and his secrets are a rather damning indictment of the conventional wisdom.
The man, who has placed more bankers than I have had cups of tea, reveals that the 'job-winning secrets' are not about CV formatting or interview techniques. They are about understanding the market's hidden liquidity. The British labour market, much like a well-diversified portfolio, has hedged itself against the storm.
Consider the data. The unemployment rate hovers near historic lows, and vacancies, while off their peaks, remain stubbornly high. The doomsayers point to falling real wages and shrinking GDP, but they miss the point. The labour market is not a lagging indicator of economic health; it is a leading indicator of human adaptability. When the cost of capital rises, firms do not simply fire staff. They reallocate labour to more productive uses, much like shifting from gilts to equities in a rising rate environment.
The veteran's secret, as I see it, is that the market has priced in the pessimism. The sell-off in labour has been oversold. Employers, having learned from the 'Great Resignation', are hoarding talent. They are discounting the cyclical noise and focusing on structural trends: the ageing workforce, the skills shortage, and the shift to hybrid work. These are not factors that disappear when the MPC raises rates by 50 basis points.
Critics will say I am ignoring the fragility of the consumer. They will point to the savings ratio and the cost of living crisis. They are not wrong, but they are looking at the wrong yield curve. The labour market is not about consumption today; it is about investment in human capital. The veteran's advice is to treat your career like a bond: seek duration, not yield. In other words, look for roles that offer long-term growth, not short-term cash.
What does this mean for the inflation outlook? If the labour market remains tight, wage pressures will persist, complicating the Bank of England's task. But this is not a disaster. It is a sign of a resilient economy that adapts rather than collapses. The real risk is not inflation but a sudden flight of confidence. If firms stop hiring, the gilt market will take note, and the cost of borrowing will rise. But for now, the job market is a anchor in a sea of volatility.
So here is my cynical take: the recruitment veteran is not revealing secrets. He is stating the obvious, but in a world obsessed with bad news, the obvious looks revolutionary. The British labour market is not a miracle. It is a rational response to irrational fear. As long as firms continue to invest in people, the market will hold. And for the job seekers out there, the advice is simple: ignore the headlines. Do your own due diligence. The bear market in jobs was cancelled due to lack of interest.








