The number of people saying they are on zero-hours contracts has risen, according to official figures.

That's up 21% from the figure of 747,000 for the same period last year.
It means that 2.9% of people in employment are on such contracts, compared with 2.4% last year.
Shops, hotels and care homes are among the businesses that use zero-hours contracts.
Frances
O'Grady, general secretary of the TUC, said: "If you don't know how
much work you will have from one day to the next, paying the bills and
arranging things like childcare can be a nightmare."
The
Resolution Foundation said some workers favoured the flexibility, but
the think tank called on the government to provide more help for people
with insecure working conditions.
A Department for Business
spokesman that almost 70% of workers on zero-hours contracts were happy
with the number of hours they work.

The ONS releases this data twice a year - the figure for October to
December 2015 showed that about 801,000 people were on zero-hours
contracts.
However, that figure is not comparable with the latest
number because it is likely that the use of such contracts is affected
by the time of year.
The ONS usually also releases a figure based
on a business survey, indicating how many zero-hours contracts have
been issued for work done over a particular period.
Last November
there were 1.7 million such contracts, but the ONS has had a data
collection problem this time and so has delayed the updating of this
figure.
Big survey
The figure for the
number of people saying their main job is on a zero-hours contract comes
from the Labour Force Survey, in which the ONS speaks to about 40,000
households every quarter.
As it is based on people's responses, it is sensitive to whether people are aware that they are on zero-hours contracts.
The
ONS warns that the figures may have been influenced by greater
awareness of the contracts, although it could not quantify how much of
an effect there had been.
Because the figures are based on a survey, even a very large survey, they are not precise figures.
The
ONS is 95% confident that the figure of 903,000 is right within plus or
minus 68,000. That means the rise of 156,000 is statistically
significant.
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