James Bloodworth writes:
The number of people on low pay could be reduced by over one million by 2020 if employees were paid the living wage – and with no adverse economic consequences.
The number of people on low pay could be reduced by over one million by 2020 if employees were paid the living wage – and with no adverse economic consequences.
According to the independent Living Wage Commission, the cost of increasing the pay of nearly 500,000 public sector employees to the living wage would be offset by higher tax revenues and reduced in-work benefits from over 600,000 private sector employees also brought up to the living wage.
The Commission also says a living wage for
the lowest-paid staff could lead to increased productivity, reduced staff
turnover and improved morale.
Professional service firms like
accountancy and consultancy companies have almost 300,000 low-wage staff who
could be paid the living wage by 2020.
The banking and construction industries
could also pay the living wage to 75,000 employees with an increase to their
wage bills of less than 0.5 per cent.
Around 5.2 million people currently earn
less than the living wage and the majority of people in poverty live in working
households.
The living wage currently stands at £7.65 an hour, with the London
rate higher at £8.80 per hour. The national minimum wage is currently £6.31 an
hour.
The commission is calling on the
government to adopt as policy the goal of increasing voluntary take-up of the
living wage to at least 1 million more employees by 2020.
One measure it
recommends is a requirement for all publicly listed companies to publish the
number of people paid below a living wage.
However the report stops short of calling
for the living wage to become law, warning that such a rise would not be
affordable for some firms.
The Commission warns that, if the
government fails to support the voluntary extension of coverage of the living
wage, many working families will continue to rely on emergency measures such as
food banks and unsustainable debt.
Last year one
million people used a Trussell Trust food bank for emergency food aid.
Commenting on the findings, the Archbishop
of York, Dr John Sentamu, chair of the Living Wage Commission, said it was a
“national scandal” that working people were still living in poverty.
“If the government now commits to making
this hope a reality, we can take a major step towards ending the strain on all
of our consciences. Low wages equals living in poverty,” he added.
Dr Adam Marshall, director of policy and
external affairs at the British Chambers of Commerce, said that thousands of
companies already paid a living wage and many more had an aspiration to do so.
“Some businesses simply cannot afford to
pay a Living Wage just yet – which is why the Commission rejected a compulsory
Living Wage. The task now is to support as many employers as possible to make
this transition, because paying the Living Wage can benefit employers as well
as their staff.”
Labour shadow business secretary Chuka
Umunna said the report made a “powerful and timely case for tackling the
growing scandal of low pay”.
“Under David Cameron’s government we’ve
seen a rising tide of insecurity as ministers have attacked and undermined
people’s rights at work. That’s why the next Labour government will help more
firms pay a living wage through Make Work Pay contracts and will repair the
link between hard work and reward by restoring the value of the minimum wage,”
he said.
General secretary of the TUC Frances
O’Grady said that increasing the number of workers on the Living Wage would
“help ensure that ordinary people can start to share in the fruits of the
economic recovery”.
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