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‘You are forgotten about’: the mental health impact of redundancy

Much of the experience of the coronavirus pandemic is reduced to numbers. A daily total of new Covid cases is the most frequent snapshot of the virus’s spread. Lives lost become lines on a chart. Furloughed workers become statistics in rolling news stories.

Jobs lost during the crisis are similarly often spoken of in terms of headline numbers. According to the Office for National Statistics, 314,000 people in the UK were made redundant in the three months to September, a record quarterly figure. But behind the numbers are colleagues, work friends, bosses and mentors – and workers in the real estate industry know this as well as those in any other sector.

Throughout the pandemic, many property firms have had to make cuts to staff as a result of the financial and business impact of Covid-19. The agency sector has been hit particularly hard, with hundreds of roles put at risk and job cuts implemented to reshape businesses for a post-pandemic world. Now, with redundancy-related mental health issues on the rise, workers who have lost their jobs have spoken to EG – in all cases anonymously – about why the industry needs to rethink the way it handles mass job losses to limit as much of the pain caused to workers as possible.

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