During the height of the austerity years it was the phrase used to describe people, families or groups who were bumping along not really getting anywhere - the JAMs.
Following the latest figures from the ONS on working trends two things emerge - 730,000 jobs have gone since the pandemic began and the number in work decreased by 220,000 in the last quarter. The difference in the two figures is partly explained by the highest being for the whole pandemic period whilst the smaller is a quarterly figure. The numbers are further compounded due to the millions of people who are furloughed, those on zero hours contracts but not getting shifts, or people on temporary unpaid leave from a job as they still count as employed. A bit of a muddy picture.
What does seem clear is that the figures will get worse in the coming months. Companies have already said that redundancies will rise once furlough ends and the number of people claiming universal credit rose to 2.7 million in July, up by 117% since March.
This makes me wonder about how many businesses were also JAMs and for how long?
These businesses were also just bumping along, They were not making losses, but neither were they making sustainable profits. They were only just about able to keep people in work and off benefits and that raises questions about how robust the UK economy actually was. However, and on a positive note, gaps in the market will open up and there will be opportunities for new businesses so it's not all doom and gloom as the BBC, Sky and others would have us believe.