Official Statistics

Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme statistics: October 2020

Updated 12 November 2020

Overview

This is the fifth release of Official Statistics on the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS). This release provides analysis of claims for periods up to 31 August 2020. The data used includes claims submitted to HMRC by 30 September 2020.

The data for July and August is incomplete as claims relating to these months may still be filed; thus, the figures for July and August should therefore be considered preliminary results and will be revised in future releases.

This release extends the daily time series presented in the last release up to the end of August and includes analysis of the use of CJRS as at 31 August.

Claims data for periods after August 2020 is currently too incomplete to produce reliable figures. Statistics on the use of the CJRS in September and onwards will be included in future publications.

We will continue to publish more CJRS statistics in future months. These statistics are Experimental Statistics and are subject to revisions. Further information is provided later in this publication.

The government announced the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS) on 20 March 2020. CJRS supports employers in paying their employees. Employers have been able to claim CJRS support for employees furloughed from 1 March 2020. Up to 30 June 2020, CJRS provided employers with financial support of up to 80% of their employees’ salaries.

This support is capped at £2,500 per month per employee. Employers were also able to claim Employer National Insurance and minimum automatic enrolment pension contributions. Starting from 1 July 2020, except in certain exceptional circumstances, staff who have not already been furloughed under the scheme may not be included in claims for support.

Further changes from the start of August, September and October – as described later in this bulletin – have gradually reduced the total level of support available for each furloughed employee.

Contact details

For queries or feedback on this publication, please contact:

For press queries, please contact:

  • Dan Allen, tel: 03000 585 024
  • Lisa Billard, tel: 07773 091 264

Next release

The next release will be published on 25 November 2020.

Main points

The key points from this release covering the period to 31 August 2020 are below. Figures for July and August are provisional and subject to revision as additional claims for the period are received.

  • the CJRS claims data for July and August is not yet complete as claims for periods from 1 July onwards may still be made. This means that the figures for July and August are preliminary and are likely to be revised upwards in future releases
  • in this release for the figures from July onwards we’ve refined the methodology giving us better information on the start and end dates of furloughing at an employment level. This doesn’t significantly change the total numbers, but has allowed for more data to be moved from unknown to known categories Further details can be found in the methodology section
  • following on from the last release which covered the period to 31 July, preliminary estimates show that furloughing of staff across all sectors continued to decrease up to 31 August
  • since the peak of 8.9 million employments furloughed on 8 May, followed by reductions in June, preliminary figures show that the number of employments furloughed continued to fall throughout July to 5.1 million on 31 July and 3.3 million on 31 August. These figures are based on incomplete data and will be revised in future releases
  • the end of July figure has been revised since the September release and it is estimated that the final figure could be in the region of 5.3 million once all returns are received and revisions made. Similarly, it is estimated that 31 August figure could be revised upwards by around 12% - to in the region of 3.7 million once all returns are received
  • furloughing of staff in the wholesale and retail sector peaked on 24 April at 1.9 million employments. By 31 August, initial figures show 535,100 jobs furloughed in this sector – a decrease of more than 70% since the peak for the sector
  • across all employer sizes, the number of employments furloughed continued to decrease between 31 July and 31 August
  • as at 31 August, the sector with the highest proportion of its workforce eligible for furlough that were actually furloughed was arts, entertainment and recreation at 33% followed by accommodation and food services sector at 27%. In all, 50% of employers in the arts, entertainment and recreation sector were using the furlough scheme at the end of July as were 45% of employers in accommodation and food services
  • overall, where it was possible to link the data, across the UK, 1.6 million women were furloughed at the end of August compared with 1.5 million men. This is a decrease of 808,600 women and 820,200 men when compared to the end of July
  • preliminary estimates show there was broad consistency in furlough rates across the nations and regions of the UK at the end of August (provisional data). London had the highest take-up rate of 13% against the UK average of 11%
  • in most countries and regions more women than men were furloughed at 31 August, the greatest exception to this being the West Midlands where 137,300 women were furloughed and 141,100 men
  • 207,200 employers were using flexible furlough at the end of August for at least one job. In total over 984,400 employments were on flexible furlough at the end of August – about 30% of all furloughed employments
  • at 38%, the Accommodation and food services sector had the highest proportion of employments furloughed flexibly
  • based on the preliminary data for 31 August, the South West has the highest proportion of employments on flexible furlough at 35%

About the data in this release

The data used in this release comprises the CJRS claims made up to 30 September 2020. Where possible, this data has been matched with other HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) data to enable additional analysis to be presented. As previously, this bulletin includes breakdowns of CJRS claims as follows:

  • the number of employments furloughed by day, also broken down by sector and employer size

New additions/ expanded tables:

  • the number of employments furloughed by day, for July onwards broken down by:
    • country and region
    • gender
    • age
    • type of furlough (fully furloughed or flexible (partial) furlough)
  • Figures for the use of CJRS as at 31 August by:
    • employer size
    • sector
    • country and region, including a gender breakdown
    • local authority, including a gender breakdown
    • parliamentary constituency, including a gender breakdown
    • age, including a gender breakdown
    • region and sector

Revised figures for the use of CJRS as at 31 July by:

  • employer size
  • sector of the economy
  • the use of flexible (partial) furlough by sector and region as at 31 July
  • furloughed employments by region and gender as at 31 July

These statistics have been produced using data from both the CJRS and HMRC’s Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Real Time Information (RTI) system. Following user feedback, we continued to include details of the number of employments furloughed each day. We would welcome any further feedback from users. This should be sent to CJRS.Statistics.Enquiries@hmrc.gov.uk. User responses will then be taken into consideration when developing future releases.

For these statistics, an ‘employer’ is defined as a PAYE scheme, and ‘employments’ are defined according to the CJRS criteria; further details are within the background section.

As with previous releases, where we have been unable to match the CJRS claims with other HMRC data, we have denoted this as ‘unknown’ in the tables within this release.

The release reports a CJRS take-up rate for both employers and employments, where appropriate. The take-up rate has been calculated using PAYE RTI data, to estimate the eligible population of both employers and employments. An individual with employments with more than one employer is counted once for each employment furloughed.

Rounding has been applied to the figures in the tables accompanying this release, with counts rounded to the nearest 100 and amounts to the nearest million.

Employments furloughed over time

This section of the release presents the number of employments furloughed each day from the scheme’s start up to 31 August 2020. The figures for July and August 2020 are based on incomplete data and should be considered to be provisional and subject to change.

This is because claims for staff furloughed from the start of July onwards can be submitted until 30 November. It is estimated that the overall total number of people furloughed at the end of August will be in the region of 12% higher once all claims are submitted and revisions applied. A further consequence of this is that the available data is not complete enough to reasonably reliably extend the daily series after the end of August.

While the job retention scheme was announced on 20 March 2020, claims for furloughed staff could be made extending back to 1 March 2020 for jobs which had already been furloughed in the period 1 March to 19 March 2020; therefore, the daily series included in this release starts before the scheme was announced.

The data presented in this section comes from combining detail about furlough periods from the job level data supplied with larger claims (claims with 100 or more furloughed jobs) and the total number of furloughed staff included in each claim.

This change to the methodology in comparison to the previous statistics releases gives us better data on the start and end date of claims within a given month and so has slightly reduced the size of the step changes seen in the series at month ends.

More details on the methodology can be found below.

The figures show the total number of employments furloughed by day. Some employees have moved on and off furlough over time. Because not all furloughed employments have been furloughed at the same time, the peak figures in the time series are lower than the cumulative total number of jobs furloughed at any time up to the end of June.

This is published in the management information on the scheme and included in the August release. That figure is 9.6 million. Additional jobs could normally not be newly furloughed after the end of June.

Where figure 1 shows a reduction in the number of employments furloughed, it should not necessarily be inferred that employees have returned to work or alternatively that employments has ended. The data presented here should be interpreted in this context.

The key points to note from figure 1 are:

  • initially the number of employments furloughed increased quickly following the announcement of the scheme on 20 March, reaching 4.8 million on 23 March and 6.8 million by the end of March
  • following further strong growth at the start of April the number of employments furloughed increased gradually and peaked at 8.9 million on 8 May 2020
  • after the early May peak, the number of employments furloughed decreased slowly before a fall of around 670,000 employments between the end of May and the start of June
  • the number of employments that were furloughed then continued to reduce throughout June to 6.8 million on 30 June
  • preliminary figures show that the number of employments furloughed continued to fall throughout July to 5.1 million on 31 July and 3.3 million on 31 August. These figures are based on incomplete data and will be revised in future releases
  • the end of July figure has been revised since the September release and it is estimated that the final figure could be in the region of 5.3 million once all returns are received and revisions made. Similarly, it is estimated that 31 August figure could be revised upwards by around 12% - to in the region of 3.7 million once all returns are received

Figure 1: Total employments furloughed, 1 March 2020 to 31 August 2020

Source: HMRC CJRS data

Employments furloughed over time by industry

This section breaks down the overall time series included above by the employer’s industrial sector. figure 2 is a set of charts, one for each industrial sector. The underlying data for these charts can be found in the accompanying spreadsheet.

The key points to note from figure 2 are:

  • following on from the last release which covered the period to 31 July, preliminary estimates show that furloughing of staff across all sectors continued to decrease up to 31 August
  • furloughing of staff in the wholesale and retail sector peaked on 24 April at 1.85 million employments furloughed. This dropped to 1.33 million employments furloughed by 30 June. Preliminary figures for this sector show 801,000 jobs furloughed at 31 July and 535,100 jobs furloughed at 31 August
  • accommodation and food services peaked at 1.65 million employments furloughed on 10 April. There was a net decline of 325,700 employments to 1.32 million employments furloughed by 30 June. Preliminary figures for this sector show 1.03 million employments furloughed by 31 July and 592,800 employments furloughed by 31 August
  • the manufacturing sector had a peak of 911,000 employments furloughed on 17 April. This reduced to 583,600 by 30 June. Preliminary figures for this sector show 444,400 employments furloughed at 31 July and 292,500 employments furloughed at 31 August
  • in construction, furloughing peaked on 14 April with 723,600 employments furloughed, with this falling to 404,200 employments on 30 June. Preliminary figures for this sector show 290,800 employments furloughed at 31 July and 185,700 employments furloughed at 31 August. This was the third largest proportionate decrease from the peak to 31 August across all sectors (74%) except for energy production and supply and mining and quarrying, but these sectors had far fewer employments furloughed
  • furloughing in arts and entertainment sector peaked later than other sectors on 15 May 2020 with 455,100 employments furloughed on that date. To 30 June there was been a net decrease of 61,700 employments furloughed in this sector. Preliminary figures for this sector show 314,600 employments furloughed at 31 July and 218,400 employments furloughed at 31 August– a decrease of about half from the peak to 31 August

Figure 2: Total employments furloughed by industry (millions) (largest 15 sectors), 23 March to 31 August 2020

Source: HMRC CJRS data

Employments furloughed over time by employer size

In addition to the sectoral breakdown we also provide a breakdown of the number of employments furloughed per day by employer size. The employer size has been calculated based on an estimate of the number of employments eligible to be furloughed. We assume a PAYE scheme to be equivalent of an employer.

Presented in figure 3 is a set of charts, one for each employer size band. The underlying data for these charts can be found in the accompanying spreadsheet.

The key points to note from figure 3 are:

  • across all employer sizes, the number of employments furloughed continued to decrease between 30 June and 31 August
  • 3.45 million employments were furloughed by large employers with 250 or more employments on 5 May (the peak for this category). This reduced to 2.82 million employments furloughed by 30 June. Preliminary figures for the largest employers show 1.80 million employments furloughed by 31 July and 987,800 employments furloughed by 31 August. This is the largest proportionate decrease across all employer size bands between the peak and 31 August (71%). Note that it is believed that the figures for larger employers are more subject to revision due to them submitting claims less promptly than those for smaller employers
  • employers with 20 to 49 employments had a peak of 1.15 million employments furloughed on 16 April, compared with a peak of 795,400 for employers with 100 to 249 employments on 1 May
  • employers with one employment had a peak of 295,700 employments furloughed on 20 April, compared to 219,400 employments furloughed on 30 June. A net decline of 76,300. Preliminary figures show this decreased further to 182,500 employments furloughed by 31 July and 153,600 employments furloughed by 31 August

Figure 3: Total employments furloughed (millions) by employer size (number of employees), 23 March to 31 August 2020

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Employments furloughed over time by Country and Region

This section provides a geographic breakdown of the number of employments furloughed each day from 1 July up to 31 August. This is based on the residential address information that HMRC holds for employees.

This does not directly translate to the employee’s usual place of work, or employer’s centre of operations which may be in a different region. For example, an employee who lives in Wales and normally commutes daily to work in Bristol would be included within the count for Wales, rather than for South West England. At present these statistics are only available for 1 July onwards (see methodology section for more information).

Presented in figure 4 is a set of charts, one for each region. The underlying data for these charts can be found in the accompanying spreadsheet.

The key points to note from figure 4 are:

  • preliminary estimates show that, across all regions the number of employments furloughed decreased from the start of July to the end of August
  • on 1 July there were 4.4 million employments furloughed in England. By 31 July this had dropped to 4.0 million employments furloughed and 2.6 million by 31 August
  • in London – the English region with the most furloughed staff in July and August, there were 856,300 employments furloughed on 1 July. This decreased by 62,100 to 794,200 million employments furloughed by 31 July and 557,400 employments furloughed by 31 August
  • the number of employments furloughed in Scotland on 1 July was 465,900. On 31 July this figure had fallen to 395,800 and by 31 August was 242,600
  • the number of employments furloughed in Wales was 234,300 on 1 July, this fell to 210,600 by 31 July and 130,400 by 31 August
  • on 1 July, the number of furloughed employments in Northern Ireland was 130,800. Preliminary figures for Northern Ireland show there were 111,800 employments furloughed by 31 July and 70,500 employments furloughed by 31 August
  • as elsewhere in this release, the figures for July and August here are preliminary and subject to revision as more claims data is received

Figure 4: Total employments furloughed (millions) by country and region, 1 July to 31 August 2020, preliminary data

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Employments furloughed over time by gender

This section provides new analysis showing the number of employments furloughed each day from 1 July up to 31 August, broken down by the claimants’ gender. The underlying data for figure 5 can be found in the accompanying spreadsheet. At present these statistics are only available for 1 July onwards (see the methodology section for more information).

The key points to note from figure 5 are:

  • since 1 July, more employments have been furloughed with female job holders than where the employee was male
  • for employments where the employee was female, there were 2.74 million employments furloughed on 1 July. This decreased to 2.44 million by 31 July and 1.63 million by 31 August
  • for employments where the employee was male, there were 2.57 million employments furloughed on 1 July. This reduced to 2.32 million by 31 July and 1.50 million by 31 August
  • the August CJRS statistics release reported cumulative figures for the March to June period. Over that period more jobs with male employees than female employees were furloughed, That finding refers to jobs that were furloughed at any time until the end of June when CJRS closed to additional employees being furloughed (rather than any specific point in time)
  • as elsewhere in this release, the figures for July and August here are preliminary and subject to revision

Figure 5: Total employments furloughed by gender, 1 July to 31 August 2020, preliminary data

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Employments furloughed over time by age

This section provides new analysis for the number of employments furloughed each day from 1 July up to 31 August, broken down by age band. The claimant’s age is calculated at 1 March 2020. Figure 6 is a set of charts, one for each age band. The underlying data for figure 6 can be found in the accompanying spreadsheet. At present these statistics are only available for 1 July onwards (see methodology section for more information).

The key points to note from figure 6 are:

  • preliminary figures show that across all age bands the number of employments furloughed decreased between 1 July to 31 August
  • for employments where the employee was aged 25 to 44, the number of employments was 2.25 million on 1 July. This decreased by 227,000 to 2.02 million employments furloughed on 31 July and fell further to 1.34 million by 31 August
  • the number of employments furloughed with employees in the 18 to 24 age band was 911,000 on 1 July. Provisional figures show this decreased to 781,700 employments furloughed by 31 July and 456,600 employments furloughed by 31 August
  • where the employee was 65 or over, the number of employments furloughed was 232,700 on 1 July. Preliminary figures for this age band show the number of employments furloughed decreased to 215,300 by 31 July and 148,600 by 31 August
  • as elsewhere in this release, the figures for July and August here are preliminary and subject to revision and more claims are received. More detailed analysis of the furloughed jobs at 31 August by the age of the employee, including take-up rates, can be found later in this release

Figure 6: Total employments furloughed (millions) by age of employee, 1 July to 31 August 2020, preliminary data

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Employments furloughed over time by furlough type

This section provides a breakdown of the overall time series by employments furloughed full time and part time. On 1 July, the option was introduced for employers to furlough their employees for part of their usual hours, with the employee free to work the remainder. Therefore, the time series shown in figure 7 starts at 1 July. The underlying data for figure 7 can be found in the accompanying spreadsheet.

All figures and findings in this time series are based off preliminary data and are subject to change.

The key points to note in figure 7 are:

  • the number of employments furloughed on a full-time basis has decreased throughout July and August. The number of employments on full time furlough was 4.29 million at 1 July. This dropped to 3.75 million at 31 July and at 31 August there were 2.17 million employments furloughed full time
  • the number of employments furloughed partially has remained steady throughout July and August. At 1 July there were 1.07 million employments furloughed part time, this was little changed at 31 July when there were 1.04 million employments furloughed part time and 984,400 at 31 August

Figure 7: Total employments furloughed by furlough type, 1 July to 31 August 2020

Source: HMRC CJRS data

Furloughing by employer size at 31 August

Where it has been possible to match CJRS data to Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Real Time Information (RTI), we have estimated the size of each employer in terms of number of employees potentially eligible for CJRS support.

For this data, we have assumed that PAYE scheme is the equivalent to an employer. For some employers, this is not an exact one-to-one equivalent. For example, some organisations operate multiple payrolls for different groups of employees and in other situations, a group of companies may pool their payrolls together under one PAYE scheme.

However, in our view PAYE schemes provides a reasonable proxy for employers for the purposes of this release. The employer size has been calculated based on an estimate of the number of employments eligible to be furloughed.

The key points to note from tables 1a and 1b are, as at 31 August:

  • provisional figures for 31 August show 33% of employers had staff furloughed at that date under CJRS and 11% of employments were furloughed
  • as at 31 August, employers with 20 to 49 employees were most likely to have claimed under CJRS to support the furloughing of staff, with 55% of employers of this size having at least 1 employee furloughed
  • employers with 250 or more employees had a provisional total of 987,800 employments furloughed at 31 August. However, this represents just 6% of employments eligible across employers of this size

Table 1a: CJRS claims by employer size as at 31 August – employer level

Employer size Employers furloughing staff Take-up rate Value of claims made for periods to 31 August (£ million)
1 148,400 20% 1,039
2 to 4 236,100 35% 3,318
5 to 9 104,700 43% 3,429
10 to 19 62,700 46% 3,689
20 to 49 48,700 55% 5,554
50 to 99 15,400 53% 3,474
100 to 249 9,100 52% 3,944
250+ 5,700 49% 14,691
Unknown 500 - 36
Total 631,300 33% 39,173

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data

Table 1b: CJRS claims by employer size as at 31 August – employment level

Employer size Employments furloughed Eligible employments Take-up rate
1 153,600 727,600 21%
2 to 4 427,600 1,682,900 25%
5 to 9 345,100 1,547,800 22%
10 to 19 333,000 1,792,700 19%
20 to 49 448,900 2,615,200 17%
50 to 99 272,200 1,977,600 14%
100 to 249 303,400 2,606,900 12%
250+ 987,800 17,402,300 6%
Unknown 3,200 - -
Total 3,274,900 30,353,200 11%

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data

Note: the number of employments furloughed in the unknown size category is not directly comparable with the number of employers in the equivalent category in table 1a.

Furloughing by sector at 31 August

This section presents analysis of CJRS claims according to the primary economic sector of employers’ activity. The take-up rate is also reported in this table for both employments and employers. This is presented in tables 2a and 2b, below.

Key points from these tables are, as at 31 August:

  • the sector with the highest proportion of its workforce eligible for furlough that were actually furloughed was arts, entertainment and recreation at 33% followed by accommodation and food services sector at 27%. In all, 50% of employers in the arts, entertainment and recreation sector were using the furlough scheme at the end of August as were 45% of employers in accommodation and food services
  • the wholesale and retail sector were responsible for the greatest total value of claims up to the end of August at £7.4 billion. Accommodation and food services and manufacturing were the two sectors with the next highest values of claims to date by the end of August, with £6.2 billion and £4.8 billion claimed respectively

More details on this are available in the methodology section.

Table 2a: CJRS claims by sector as at 31 August 2020 – employer level

Sector Employers furloughing staff Take-up rate Value of claims made for periods to 31 August (£ million)
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 3,800 11% 120
Mining and quarrying 300 29% 93
Manufacturing 41,100 41% 4,789
Energy production and supply 300 29% 91
Water supply, sewerage and waste 2,000 36% 212
Construction 72,100 31% 3,535
Wholesale and retail; repair of motor vehicles 95,200 39% 7,369
Transportation and storage 23,700 32% 2,194
Accommodation and food services 58,900 45% 6,175
Information and communication 38,700 25% 1,163
Finance and insurance 9,100 26% 360
Real estate 17,000 37% 684
Professional, scientific and technical 97,000 31% 2,992
Administrative and support services 59,100 36% 3,688
Public administration and defence; social security 200 3% 43
Education 17,100 43% 1,198
Health and social work 33,000 33% 1,440
Arts, entertainment and recreation 20,100 50% 1,741
Other service activities 35,700 38% 1,146
Households 2,600 3% 41
Unknown and other 4,300 - 100
Total 631,300 33% 39,173

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data and Inter-Departmental Business Register

Table 2b: CJRS claims by sector as at 31 August – employment level

Sector Employments furloughed Take-up rate
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 10,000 6%
Mining and quarrying 3,000 6%
Manufacturing 292,500 12%
Energy production and supply 1,600 1%
Water supply, sewerage and waste 11,600 7%
Construction 185,700 14%
Wholesale and retail; repair of motor vehicles 535,100 12%
Transportation and storage 131,200 10%
Accommodation and food services 592,800 27%
Information and communication 115,700 9%
Finance and insurance 30,100 3%
Real estate 54,300 12%
Professional, scientific and technical 290,200 13%
Administrative and support services 323,900 12%
Public administration and defence; social security 6,000 0%
Education 156,400 5%
Health and social work 173,600 4%
Arts, entertainment and recreation 218,400 33%
Other service activities 129,500 23%
Households 3,200 2%
Unknown and other 10,000 -
Total 3,274,900 11%

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data and Inter-Departmental Business Register

Furloughing by countries and regions at 31 August including gender breakdown

We also provide geographic breakdown of CJRS claims based on the residential address information that HMRC holds for employees. This does not directly translate to the employee’s usual place of work, or employer’s centre of operations which may be in a different region. For example, an employee who lives in Wales and normally commutes daily to work in Bristol would be included within the count for Wales, rather than for South West England.

Figure 8 shows the number of furloughed employments by each of the English regions, and the totals for Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. For some employments it has not been possible so far to link the employment to the employees’ area of residence and these are included in the unknown category.

The key points from figure 8 are as at 31 August (provisional figures):

  • London and the South East accounted for over 994,600 of the furloughed employments
  • the East Midlands and West Midlands had a total of 487,400 employments furloughed under CJRS
  • Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland combined had 443,500 employments claimed for under CJRS
  • overall, where it was possible to link the data, across the UK, 1.63 million women were furloughed at the end of August compared with 1.50 million men
  • for 144,500 employments it had not been possible to link the furloughed employments to other HMRC data to determine the region of residence and gender of the furloughed employees
  • in most countries and regions more women than men were furloughed at 31 August, the greatest exception to this being the West Midlands where 137,300 women were furloughed and 141,100 men

Figure 8: Employments furloughed as at 31 August, by Country and Region and gender

Region Female Male Total
London 284,200 273,200 557,400
South East 239,000 198,200 437,200
North West 163,200 156,000 319,200
East 156,000 130,700 286,700
West Midlands 137,300 141,100 278,400
South West 132,800 110,700 243,500
Yorkshire And The Humber 112,800 107,200 220,000
East Midlands 110,400 98,600 209,000
North East 49,100 46,900 96,000
Wales 68,100 62,300 130,400
Scotland 123,800 118,800 242,600
Northern Ireland 35,400 35,100 70,500

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information

Figure 9 shows the take-up rate of employments furloughed within each country and region using CJRS with a gender breakdown.

The key points to note from figure 9 are, as at 31 August (provisional figures):

  • preliminary estimates show there was broad consistency in furlough rates across the nations and regions of the UK at the end of August (provisional data). London had the highest take-up rate of 13% against the UK average of 11%
  • preliminary estimates show that the take up rate is similar for men and women across all regions and countries of the UK

Figure 9: Employment furlough take-up rate at 31 August, by Country and Region and gender

Region Female Male
London 13.0% 12.8%
South East 11.1% 9.5%
North West 9.8% 9.6%
East 10.7% 9.1%
West Midlands 10.6% 10.9%
South West 10.4% 9.0%
Yorkshire And The Humber 9.3% 9.0%
East Midlands 10.0% 9.0%
North East 8.7% 8.6%
Wales 10.1% 9.7%
Scotland 9.8% 9.8%
Northern Ireland 8.6% 9.3%

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information

The data for both figures 8 and 9 can be accessed from the accompanying spreadsheet.

Furloughing by Local Authority and Parliamentary Constituency at 31 August including gender breakdown

Accompanying this release is a separate file providing counts of the number of furloughed employments by Local Authority and UK Parliamentary Constituency based on each employee’s residential address. In figures 10 and 11 we present maps representing the take-up rates for employments furloughed for both the local authorities and UK Parliamentary Constituencies. Darker shades indicate a higher take-up rate.

The key points to note for local authorities, at 31 August, are:

  • Crawley, Haringey and Newham have the highest employment take-up rate, with a rate of 16% of employments furloughed. This is followed by Barnet, Brent, Waltham Forest and Hounslow with take-up rates of 15%
  • Boston was the local authority with the lowest proportion of employments furloughed at 5%. This was followed by Barrow-in-Furness with a take-up rate of 6%
  • Birmingham had the highest number of employments furloughed, with 55,400 employments furloughed. This was followed by Leeds with 35,700 employments furloughed. The take-up rates in these areas were 12% and 10%, respectively
  • in Scotland, Glasgow City had 30,200 employments furloughed – a take-up rate of 11%. The City of Edinburgh also had a take-up rate of 11%, with 28,400 employments furloughed
  • for Northern Ireland, Belfast, Antrim and Newtownabbey and Newry, Mourne and Down had the highest take-up rates of 10%. Belfast had 14,700 employments furloughed
  • in Wales, Conwy had the highest employment take-up rate of 12%. Cardiff had the highest number of employments furloughed with 17,600

Figure 10: Employments furloughed as a proportion of eligible employments at 31 August, by Local Authority

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information. Office for National Statistics licensed under the Open Government Licence v.3.0. Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right 2020

The key points to note here for UK Parliamentary Constituencies, at 31 August, are:

  • the Tottenham constituency in London had the highest take-up rate, with 17% of employments furloughed
  • the rate of furloughed employments was lowest in the Scunthorpe constituency at 6%
  • the West Ham constituency had the highest number of employments furloughed, with 15,300 employments furloughed. Nine of the ten constituencies with the highest number of furloughed employments fall within the London area
  • the Belfast South constituency had the highest number of employments furloughed in Northern Ireland with 4,800, this represented a take up rate of 9%
  • the Edinburgh North and Leith constituency had the highest number of employments furloughed with 7,400, this represented a take up rate of 12%
  • in Wales, the Aberconwy and Dwyfor Meirionnydd constituencies had the highest employment take-up rates of 13%. The Cardiff South and Penarth constituency had the highest number of employments furloughed with 6,000 employments furloughed

Figure 11: Employments furloughed as a proportion of eligible employments at 31 August, by Parliamentary constituency

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information. Office for National Statistics licensed under the Open Government Licence v.3.0. Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right 2020

Furloughing by age at 31 August including gender breakdown

This section of the release describes the number of employments furloughed as at 31 August by employees’ age and gender. This breakdown is based on the most up-to-date demographic information that HMRC holds on the individuals for whom claims have been made. The age of employees is calculated as at 1 March 2020.

The key points to note from figure 12 are:

  • female claimants account for more of the employments furloughed than Males in each of the age categories, bar 65 and over
  • the 25 to 44 age band had the highest number of claimants for both Females and Males, 708,700 and 635,400 respectively

Figure 12: Employments furloughed as at 31 August, by age and gender of employee

Age band Female Male
Under 18 37,400 29,000
18 to 24 242,400 214,200
25 to 44 708,700 635,400
45 to 64 573,900 540,700
65 and over 69,200 79,400

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Figure 13 shows the take-up rate of employments furloughed broken down by age and gender.

The key points to note from figure 13 are, as at 31 August (provisional figures):

  • the under 18 age group had the highest take up rate of all age groups for both Female and Male claimants, 16% and 15% respectively
  • male claimants aged 25 to 44 had the lowest take up rate at 9%
  • females had a higher take up rate than males in the majority of age bands, the only exception being 65 and over

Figure 13: Employment furlough take-up rate at 31 August, by age and gender of the employee

Age band Female Male
Under 18 16.0% 15.0%
18 to 24 13.0% 12.0%
25 to 44 10.0% 9.0%
45 to 64 10.0% 10.0%
65 and over 14.0% 14.0%

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Full and partial furlough use by sector at 31 August

The spreadsheet file accompanying this release presents analysis that additionally provides a sector breakdown of the figures for employments furloughed in each country and region as at 31 August. The analysis is based on where employees live rather than where they work.

Figure 14 shows the number of employments fully and partially furloughed at 31 August by sector.

The key points to note from figure 14, as per the provisional figures for 31 August:

  • 207,200 employers had at least one employment on flexible furlough
  • 984,400 employments were on flexible furlough: 30% of the total employments on furlough
  • at 38%, the Accommodation and food services sector had the highest proportion of employments furloughed flexibly
  • 2.17 million employments were furloughed on a full-time basis, 66% of the total employments on furlough. Missing information on some furloughed employments – for example incomplete or not fully processed spreadsheet-type returns for employers furloughing 100 or more staff – means that whether an employee has been flexibly furloughed is not known in 4% of cases. This figure should reduce over time

Figure 14: Employments fully and partially furloughed at 31 August, by sector

Sector Employments fully furloughed Employments partially furloughed Total
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 6,900 3,100 10,000
Mining and quarrying 1,900 600 2,500
Manufacturing 180,300 107,900 288,200
Energy production and supply 1,400 300 1,700
Water supply, sewerage and waste 7,900 3,500 11,400
Construction 138,600 45,700 184,300
Wholesale and retail; repair of motor vehicles 348,100 167,900 516,000
Transportation and storage 100,700 29,000 129,700
Accommodation and food services 341,500 223,500 565,000
Information and communication 82,600 32,400 115,000
Finance and insurance 23,500 6,300 29,800
Real estate 40,400 12,000 52,400
Professional, scientific and technical 207,300 77,100 284,400
Administrative and support services 235,600 75,200 310,800
Public administration and defence; social security 4,800 800 5,600
Education 121,100 31,100 152,200
Health and social work 118,100 54,300 172,400
Arts, entertainment and recreation 129,700 61,200 190,900
Other service activities 74,100 48,800 122,900
Households 2,500 700 3,200
Unknown and other 7,000 3,000 10,000

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Full and partial furlough use by Country and Region at 31 August

figure 15 shows the number of employments fully and partially furloughed at 31 August by Country and Region. The key points to note are:

  • at 35%, the South West had the highest proportion of employments furloughed flexibly
  • Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland combined had 149,700 employments furloughed flexibly
  • London had the highest number of employments furloughed flexibly at 140,200, followed by the South East at 138,800

Figure 15: Employments fully and partially furloughed at 31 August, by Country and Region

Region Employments fully furloughed Employments partially furloughed Total
London 417,100 140,200 557,400
South East 298,400 138,800 437,200
North West 217,200 102,100 319,200
East 198,500 88,200 286,700
West Midlands 189,900 88,500 278,400
South West 157,500 86,000 243,500
Yorkshire And The Humber 146,100 74,000 220,000
East Midlands 139,100 69,900 209,000
North East 63,300 32,700 96,000
Wales 86,600 43,900 130,400
Scotland 160,500 82,100 242,600
Northern Ireland 46,700 23,700 70,500

Source: HMRC CJRS data and PAYE Real Time Information

Furloughing by employer size at 31 July

This section and the following sections with figures as at 31 July include figures updated from those released last month to additionally include claims made in September.

Where it has been possible to match CJRS data to Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Real Time Information (RTI), we have estimated the size of each employer in terms of number of employees potentially eligible for CJRS support.

For this data, we have assumed that PAYE scheme is the equivalent to an employer. For some employers, this is not an exact one-to-one equivalent. For example, some organisations operate multiple payrolls for different groups of employees and in other situations, a group of companies may pool their payrolls together under one PAYE scheme.

However, in our view PAYE schemes provides a reasonable proxy for employers for the purposes of this release. The employer size has been calculated based on an estimate of the number of employments eligible to be furloughed.

The key points to note from tables 3a and 3b are, as at 31 July:

  • provisional figures for 31 July show 41% of employers had staff furloughed at that date under CJRS and 17% of employments were furloughed
  • employers with 20 to 49 employees were most likely to have claimed under CJRS to support the furloughing of staff, with 70% employers of this size having at least 1 employee furloughed
  • employers with 250 or more employees had a provisional total of 1.80 million employments furloughed at 31 July. However, this represents just 10% of eligible employments

Table 3a: CJRS claims by employer size as at 31 July – employer level

Employer size Employers furloughing staff Take-up rate Value of claims made for periods to 31 July (£ million)
1 181,800 25% 922
2 to 4 286,200 43% 2,963
5 to 9 132,800 55% 3,108
10 to 19 79,800 59% 3,364
20 to 49 61,700 70% 5,089
50 to 99 19,400 67% 3,194
100 to 249 11,400 66% 3,651
250+ 7,400 64% 13,889
Unknown 600 - 32
Total 781,300 41% 36,210

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data

Table 3b: CJRS claims by employer size as at 31 July – employment level

Employer size Employments furloughed Eligible employments Take-up rate
1 182,500 727,600 25%
2 to 4 538,700 1,682,900 32%
5 to 9 479,000 1,547,800 31%
10 to 19 487,300 1,792,700 27%
20 to 49 686,500 2,615,200 26%
50 to 99 426,700 1,977,600 22%
100 to 249 483,500 2,606,900 19%
250+ 1,803,200 17,402,300 10%
Unknown 6,500 - -
Total 5,093,900 30,353,200 17%

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data

Note: the number of employments furloughed in the unknown size category is not directly comparable with the number of employers in the equivalent category in table 3a.

Furloughing by sector at 31 July

The figures in this section as at 31 July include have been updated from those released last month to additionally include claims made in September.

This section presents analysis of CJRS claims according to the primary economic sector of employers’ activity. The take-up rate is also reported in this table for both employments and employers. This is presented in tables 4a and 4b, below. Key points from these tables are, as at 31 July:

  • the sector with the highest proportion of its workforce eligible for furlough that were furloughed was arts, entertainment and recreation at 48% followed by accommodation and food services sector at 46%. In all, 60% of employers in the arts, entertainment and recreation sector were using the furlough scheme at the end of July and 59% of employers in accommodation and food services
  • the wholesale and retail sector was responsible for the greatest total value of claims up to the end of July at £6.9 billion. Accommodation and food services and manufacturing were the two sectors with the next highest values of claims to date by the end of July, with £5.7 billion and £4.5 billion claimed respectively More details on this are available in the methodology section

Table 4a: CJRS claims by sector as at 31 July 2020 – employer level

Sector Employers furloughing staff Take-up rate Value of claims made for periods to 31 July (£ million)
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 5,300 16% 111
Mining and quarrying 400 36% 89
Manufacturing 51,700 51% 4,452
Energy production and supply 400 35% 90
Water supply, sewerage and waste 2,600 47% 198
Construction 94,300 41% 3,324
Wholesale and retail; repair of motor vehicles 118,700 49% 6,914
Transportation and storage 29,600 40% 2,040
Accommodation and food services 77,400 59% 5,730
Information and communication 45,000 29% 1,040
Finance and insurance 10,800 31% 327
Real estate 20,600 45% 633
Professional, scientific and technical 112,500 36% 2,695
Administrative and support services 70,600 43% 3,367
Public administration and defence; social security 300 4% 40
Education 19,900 51% 1,071
Health and social work 41,800 41% 1,311
Arts, entertainment and recreation 23,900 60% 1,597
Other service activities 45,700 49% 1,054
Households 3,900 5% 37
Unknown and other 5,900 - 91
Total 781,300 41% 36,210

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data and Inter-Departmental Business Register

Table 4b: CJRS claims by sector as at 31 July – employment level

Sector Employments furloughed Take-up rate
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 16,100 9%
Mining and quarrying 5,900 11%
Manufacturing 444,400 18%
Energy production and supply 4,500 3%
Water supply, sewerage and waste 18,500 11%
Construction 290,800 23%
Wholesale and retail; repair of motor vehicles 801,000 18%
Transportation and storage 226,900 17%
Accommodation and food services 1,028,700 46%
Information and communication 150,900 12%
Finance and insurance 46,100 4%
Real estate 80,300 18%
Professional, scientific and technical 408,200 18%
Administrative and support services 546,000 20%
Public administration and defence; social security 9,300 1%
Education 234,200 7%
Health and social work 255,900 6%
Arts, entertainment and recreation 314,600 48%
Other service activities 189,700 33%
Households 4,800 4%
Unknown and other 16,900 -
Total 5,093,900 17%

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information data and Inter-Departmental Business Register

Geography – countries and regions at 31 July including gender breakdown

The figures in this section as at 31 July include have been updated from those released last month to additionally include CJRS claims submitted in September.

The geographic breakdown of CJRS claims in here are based on the residential address information that HMRC holds for employees. This does not directly translate to the employee’s usual place of work, or employer’s centre of operations which may be in a different region. For example, an employee who lives in Wales and normally commutes daily to work in Bristol would be included within the count for Wales, rather than for South West England.

Figure 16 shows the number of furloughed employments by each of the English regions, and the totals for England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. For some employments it has not been possible so far to link the employment to the employees’ area of residence and these are included in the unknown category.

The key points from this figure 16 are as at 31 July (provisional figures):

  • London and the South East accounted for over 1.45 million of the furloughed employments
  • the East Midlands and West Midlands had a total of 730,000 employments furloughed under CJRS
  • Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland combined had 718,200 employments claimed for under CJRS
  • overall, where it was possible to link the data, across the UK as a whole, 2.44 million women were furloughed at the end of July compared with 2.32 million men. However, for 344,800 employments it had not been possible to link the furloughed employments to other HMRC data to determine the region of residence and gender of the furloughed employees
  • in most countries and regions more women than men were furloughed at 31 July, the greatest exception to this begin the West Midlands where 201,700 women were furloughed and 211,100 men

Figure 16: CJRS Furloughed employments as at 31 July by region and country

Region Female Male Total
London 400,700 393,500 794,200
South East 350,900 302,700 653,600
North West 248,500 246,400 495,000
East 229,500 198,100 427,500
West Midlands 201,700 211,100 412,800
South West 205,600 180,000 385,700
Yorkshire And The Humber 172,200 169,900 342,000
East Midlands 163,600 153,600 317,200
North East 77,700 76,900 154,700
Wales 107,700 102,900 210,600
Scotland 198,100 197,700 395,800
Northern Ireland 55,000 56,800 111,800

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information

Figures 17 and 18 show the take-up rate of employments furloughed within each country and region using CJRS, with figure 18 providing a gender breakdown.

The key points to note from figures 17 and 18 are as at 31 July (provisional figures):

  • in figure 17, preliminary estimates show there was broad consistency in furlough take-up rates across the nations and regions of the UK at the end of July (provisional data). London had the highest take-up rate of 18% against the UK average of 17%
  • as shown in figure 18, preliminary estimates show that the take up rate is similar for men and women across all regions and countries of the UK

Figure 17: Employments furlough as a proportion of eligible employments as at 31 July, by Country and Region

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information. Office for National Statistics licensed under the Open Government Licence v.3.0. Contains OS data © Crown copyright and database right 2020

Figure 18: Employment furlough take-up rate at 31 July by Country and Region

Region Female Male
London 18.3% 18.4%
South East 16.3% 14.4%
North West 14.9% 15.2%
East 15.7% 13.9%
West Midlands 15.6% 16.4%
South West 16.0% 14.6%
Yorkshire And The Humber 14.3% 14.2%
East Midlands 14.8% 14.0%
North East 13.7% 14.1%
Wales 16.0% 16.1%
Scotland 15.7% 16.3%
Northern Ireland 13.3% 15.0%

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information

The data for both figures 17 and 18 can be accessed from the spreadsheet accompanying this bulletin.

Use of flexible furlough at 31 July by sector

The figures in this section as at 31 July include have been updated from those released last month to additionally include CJRS claims submitted in September.

Before 1 July, employers could only furlough staff full time. It was not possible under the scheme for an employee to, for example, work half their normal hours and for the employer to claim furlough support under CJRS for the remaining hours. From 1 July additional flexibility was introduced into the scheme whereby employees could be partially furloughed.

Under this type of arrangement, the employee would work part of their normal hours for their employer and be furloughed for the rest of the time. Both part-time and full-time employees can be furloughed for part of their contracted hours under flexible furlough arrangements.

The key points to note, as per the provisional figures for 31 July:

  • 207,100 employers had at least one employment on flexible furlough
  • at 29%, the accommodation and food services sector had the highest proportion of employments furloughed flexibly
  • 1,038,500 employments were on flexible furlough: 20% of the total employments on furlough
  • 3.75 million employments were furloughed on a full-time basis, 74% of the total employments on furlough. Due to missing information on some furloughed employments – for example incomplete or not fully processed spreadsheet-type returns for employers furloughing 100 or more staff – mean that whether an employee has been flexibly furloughed is not known in 6% of cases. This figure should reduce over time

Figure 19: Employees furloughed at 31 July by Sector

Sector Full time Part time Total
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 12,300 3,800 16,100
Mining and quarrying 3,300 1,200 4,500
Manufacturing 323,600 104,500 428,100
Energy production and supply 4,200 200 4,400
Water supply, sewerage and waste 13,800 2,600 16,400
Construction 236,400 49,500 285,900
Wholesale and retail; repair of motor vehicles 597,700 154,100 751,800
Transportation and storage 185,400 31,800 217,200
Accommodation and food services 645,900 302,200 948,100
Information and communication 119,700 28,200 147,900
Finance and insurance 35,800 8,900 44,700
Real estate 65,900 12,700 78,600
Professional, scientific and technical 318,600 71,600 390,200
Administrative and support services 431,600 76,300 507,900
Public administration and defence; social security 5,900 1,600 7,500
Education 188,600 32,600 221,200
Health and social work 198,100 52,200 250,300
Arts, entertainment and recreation 223,100 50,800 273,900
Other service activities 126,700 49,900 176,600
Households 4,200 700 4,900
Unknown and other 11,900 3,200 15,100

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information

Use of flexible furlough at 31 July by country and region

The figures in this section as at 31 July include have been updated from those released last month to additionally include CJRS claims submitted in September.

The spreadsheet file accompanying this release additionally provides figures for the proportion of the workforce furloughed in each area and sector. The analysis is based on where employees live rather than where they work.

The key points to note from figure 20, as at 31 July (provisional data):

  • London had the highest number of staff flexibly furloughed at 31 July (145,900) and the South West had the highest proportion of employments on flexible furlough at 25%. London had the lowest proportion of employments flexibly furloughed across all regions and countries of the UK at 18%

Figure 20: Employees partially and fully furloughed by Country and Region – as at 31 July

Region Employments fully furloughed Employments partially furloughed Total
London 648,400 145,900 794,200
South East 510,400 143,100 653,600
North West 383,800 111,100 495,000
East 335,000 92,600 427,500
West Midlands 320,000 92,800 412,800
South West 288,600 97,100 385,700
Yorkshire And The Humber 262,500 79,600 342,000
East Midlands 248,000 69,200 317,200
North East 119,800 34,900 154,700
Wales 165,400 45,200 210,600
Scotland 310,600 85,200 395,800
Northern Ireland 84,900 26,900 111,800

Source: HMRC CJRS and PAYE Real Time Information

Background

CJRS has been introduced by the government to support employers through the COVID-19 period, this has commonly been referred to as the furlough scheme. It works by providing grants to employers of up to a maximum 80% of salary to a maximum value of £2,500 per employee (until the end of August). Up to the end of July, the scheme also met some of the cost of employer pension contributions and the employer National Insurance Contributions.

The scheme is based around HMRC’s Pay As You Earn (PAYE) system. For an employer to qualify for the scheme they need to have created a PAYE scheme by 19 March 2020. In these statistics, an employer is defined as a PAYE scheme.

The rules for an employment to qualify to be covered by the scheme are set out in guidance, and two of the key rules are that the furloughed employee must have been employed on 19 March 2020 and the employer must have submitted a Real Time Information (RTI) submission to HMRC for the employee by this date. Further information on the qualifying criteria are available online.

The scheme closed to new entrants from 30 June 2020. After this date, employers have only been able to furlough employees they furloughed for a full three-week period prior to 30 June 2020.

As a consequence of the closure of the scheme to additional employees and the minimum three-week furlough period that applied until the end of June, the final date that an employer could have furloughed an employee for the first time was 10 June 2020. Employers had until 31 July 2020 to make any claims in respect of the period to 30 June 2020.

A small number of claims have been made since this date. These claims relate to exceptions as set out in the CJRS guidance (for example, for employees being furloughed who have been absent from work and who had been paid Statutory Maternity Pay).

Changes to the scheme from 1 July

From 1 July 2020, employers have the flexibility to bring furloughed employees back to work part time. Additionally, employers have the flexibility to decide the hours and shift patterns of their employees – with the government continuing to pay 80% of salaries for the hours they do not work.

From 1 September 2020, the scheme supported 70% of salaries for the hours for hours not worked, reducing to 60% from 1 October. When claiming the CJRS grant for furloughed hours, employers will need to report and claim for a minimum period of a week. Employers have until 30 November to submit claims for support from the CJRS.

Glossary

An employer is defined within this release as a Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Scheme. In some circumstances this does not map directly to what is commonly understood to be an employer. For example, some organisations operate multiple payrolls, and in other situations, a group of companies may pool their payrolls together under one PAYE scheme. However, in our view PAYE schemes provides a reasonable proxy for employers for the purposes of this release.

An employment is defined within this release as anyone who meets the scheme criteria set out within the published guidance. We have applied this definition in order to keep the presentation simple and the difficulty in separating out Office Holders (such as directors) from what are generally considered employees. Further information on the eligibility criteria is set out in the background section above.

Measuring the data

Data source and collection

The data for this release comes from HM Revenue and Customs’ CJRS claims. It covers the whole population rather than a sample of people or companies, and it will allow for more detailed estimates of the population.

The release is classed as Experimental Statistics as the methodologies used to produce the statistics are still in their development phase. As a result, the series are subject to revisions. Information about what the term Experimental Statistics means is published by the Office for National Statistics.

Additional data from HMRC’s Real Time Information system has been matched with CJRS data in order to produce the statistics released here.

Coverage

This publication covers all CJRS claims made by employers from the start of the scheme up to 30 September 2020 for support for the wages of furloughed staff up to 31 August 2020.

Upcoming changes

Future bulletins are planned to include additional statistics. The further analysis will be informed by user feedback. Please email CJRS.Statistics.Enquiries@hmrc.gov.uk. if you would like to offer feedback on how the contents can be improved in the future.

Methodology

This section provides notes on the methodology and implications for interpreting the figures.

The statistics in this release count employments. Therefore, an employee with jobs at two employers will be counted twice if both jobs are furloughed.

The take-up figures and the breakdown by employer size are based on a list of employees employed on 19 March 2020 and included in PAYE Real Time Information submissions for the 2019 to 2020 tax year. Only employments in RTI submissions received by HMRC by 19 March 2020 are counted.

Following the criteria for qualifying for the scheme, this is supplemented by a list of people who were employed on 28 February 2020 but who left their job before 19 March and who were later re-employed by the same employer.

In some circumstances HMRC holds incomplete information about employments, for example where a leaving date had not been submitted by employer. In this situation, an estimate of the probability that an individual was employed on the qualifying dates has been used. The assessment of whether a person was employed on the qualifying dates is based on the methodology used for the joint HMRC/ONS statistics release, Earnings and employment from Pay As You Earn Real Time Information, last released in August 2020.

Employers making claims for 100 or more employees are required to submit the details of the employees furloughed in a spreadsheet-type file. While these claims have been processed from a customer service perspective, the processing of this information for these statistics has been complex and the processing of data on some employments has not been completed.

This is a factor behind the unknown category in the tables. The completeness of this data has gradually improved since the first release, and we expect some further (smaller) improvements.

The geographic and flexible furlough breakdowns of employments include all employees that employers have furloughed where it has been possible to link claim data on furloughed employments to classifying information (such as the employee’s gender and address).

The linking has been performed using employees’ National Insurance numbers to data held within HMRC’s Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Real Time Information (RTI) system. When the employer-submitted National Insurance numbers are not of sufficient quality to be matched with other HMRC data, the employments have been categorised as ‘unknown’.

The geographic breakdowns in the tables and maps use a postcode lookup file from Office for National Statistics (ONS) data to link UK postcodes to geographic areas.

Industrial sector information is based on the Interdepartmental Business Register (IDBR) produced by the ONS. Where PAYE schemes are absent from the IDBR, we have used sector information from Companies House, linking on employer name where possible. This provides Standard Industrial Classification codes (UK SIC 2007) for employers that have made a claim. Where we have unable to determine SIC codes, we have reported the sector as ‘unknown’.

The time series in this bulletin show figures for the number of employments furloughed each day, using all claims submitted to HMRC by 30 September 2020. The closing date for claims for periods to the end of June was 31 July but claims for July onwards may be submitted until 30 November.

Whilst we have been able to produce time series up to the end of August, at the time of the preparation of this bulletin the data available for September was not complete enough to produce reliable statistics. We will reassess the position for the next release.

In producing the time series statistics some challenges had to be tackled. These included dealing with data on amendments to claims and claims for overlapping periods. In addition, claims for 100 or more furloughed staff may include staff furloughed for varying periods.

These factors combined with some incomplete data (as mentioned above) make counting the number of employees furloughed over time complex. The method employed is designed to generally prevent overcounting employments and may in certain circumstances very slightly undercount. Consequently, for the period to the end of June, the time series presented in this bulletin may typically slightly undercount the number of furloughed employments.

Some additional detail about the start and end dates of furlough periods is available from the job level data supplied with larger claims (covering 100 or more furloughed jobs). Previously it has not been possible to make use of this information but for this release, for the figures for July onwards, this additional information has been incorporated into the estimates.

The data for earlier periods is more affected by the issues of amendments and overlapping claims mentioned above, and the additional complexity that creates means that it has not be possible to apply this improvement to the earlier months at this stage. This improvement slightly reduces the size of the step changes in the series seen between July and August and apparent in the charts. We are continuing to investigate possible refinements to further address the points above and may revise the figures in a later issue if appropriate.

For July and August 2020, the claims data is incomplete, and the series should be considered to be preliminary. It is estimated that the overall total number of people furloughed at the end of August will be in the region of 12% higher once all claims are received and incorporated (and excluding the effect of any other refinements to the methodology that may be made).

This estimate is higher than the 10% figure used last month for the likely change to the July figure since that estimate made an allowance for effect of incorporating the employment level start and leaving dates mentioned in the previous paragraph. This has now been done so no similar allowance is needed. The estimate is based on the pattern of filing of claims for May In calculating this estimate no allowance has been made for the change in the types of employers furloughing staff since May.

Questions and feedback on these statistics will be welcomed and can be sent to the email address above.

Strengths and limitations

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) grants pre-release access to Official Statistics publications, and in accordance with the HMRC policy, pre-release access has been granted to a number of people to enable the preparation of a ministerial briefing. Further details, including a list of those granted access, can be found on HMRC’s website.

Experimental Statistics status

The release is classed as Experimental Statistics as the methodologies used to produce the statistics are still in their development phase. This does not mean that the statistics are of low quality, but it does signify that the statistics are new and still being developed. As the methodologies are refined and improved, there may be revisions to these statistics.

Rather than waiting until the development work has been completed, the statistics are being published now to involve potential users in developing the statistics. We hope that this encourages users to provide us with their thoughts and suggestions of how useful the statistics are and what can be done to improve them. Comments can be sent by email to CJRS.Statistics.Enquiries@hmrc.gov.uk.

More information about what it means for Official Statistics to be classified as Experimental Statistics is available from the Office for Statistics Regulation.

Office for Statistics regulation review

These statistics have been produced quickly in response to developing world events. The Office for Statistics Regulation, on behalf of the UK Statistics Authority, has reviewed them against several key aspects of the Code of Practice for Statistics and regards them as consistent with the Code’s pillars of Trustworthiness, Quality and Value.

Strengths of the data

The data used in this release includes all claims made by employers up until 31 August 2020 and thus covers the complete employer population having made at least one CJRS claim. We have linked CJRS data to Pay As You Earn Real Time Information data (PAYE RTI) to provide the additional information presented in this release.

Revisions

The figures in this release incorporate data on claims received by HMRC up to 30 September and cover employments furloughed up to 31 August 2020. The figures presented for July and August will be revised to reflect additional claims for July and August by the filing deadline for claims which is 30 November. In future iterations of this statistics release there may be some further revisions reflecting improvements to the data processing and methodology.

Earnings and employment from Pay As You Earn Real Time Information, UK: October 2020 - Employee and earnings statistics from PAYE Real Time Information.

Labour market in the regions of the UK: October 2020 - Regional breakdowns of changes in UK employment, unemployment and economic activity

Employment in the UK: October 2020 - Estimates of employment, unemployment and economic inactivity for the UK.

Average weekly earnings in Great Britain: October 2020 - Estimates of growth in earnings for employees before tax and other deductions from pay.

HMRC coronavirus (COVID-19) statistics - Collection of HMRC data regarding COVID-19 response initiatives and policy.