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: Britain
Britain: Labour government announces small rise in minimum
wage
By Keith Lee
3 May 2001
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The government has recently announced it intends to increase
the National Minimum Wage (NMW) for those over 21 years old from
£3.70 to £4.00, to take effect in October this year.
Young people under 21 will continue to receive £3.20. Even
this somewhat miserly rise will be dependent "on the state
of the economy". A further rise of 10 pence will take place
in 2002.
The proposal, coming on the eve of a probable June general
election, has more to do with electioneering than with guaranteeing
a decent income for low paid workers. The government has rejected
calls from bodies such as the Low Pay Unit, which called for a
minimum wage to be set at £4.94. The current rise is still
less than half the current median full time hourly rate.
The minimum wage is set below most of Britain's main economic
rivals and is being used to boost the UK's competitive position.
Far from reducing inequality, it will still make Britain one of
the lowest waged and unequal industrialised country: some 23 percent
of all adults in full time employment earn less than £250
($360) a week; 50 percent get less than £350 ($502) a week
and 87 percent less than £575 ($825) a week.
The introduction of a minimum wage has been a central part
of Labour's employment initiatives. Its "welfare to work"
scheme was heralded as ending the "something for nothing"
society aimed at getting people off benefits and into work. Trade
and Industry Secretary Stephen Byers said of the proposed rise:
"The best form of welfare is having a job... the national
minimum wage is a key part of making work pay". He went to
say that it had had the "greatest beneficial effect "
on women's pay since the Equal Pay Act of 30 years ago.
The truth is, however, that the modest increase will do little
to raise the living standards of the worst-off low paid workers
and provides nothing for the majority of working people. Only
a small section of workers initially benefited from the introduction
of the minimum wage. Up to April 1999, the proportion of the workforce
earning below the minimum wage fell from five to two percent.
But this was more than offset by the subsequent depression in
overall wage rates.
In its second report on the NMW in February this year, the
government-appointed Low Pay Commission (LPC) acknowledged there
appears to have been some erosion of differentials between the
lowest-paid workers and those immediately above them where strata
of responsibility are narrow, but employers do not appear to be
restoring differentials. The LPC noted that in helping to
level out wages, the results of introducing the NMW are
consistent with international evidence which suggests that minimum
wages cause substantial compression of the earnings distribution.
In addition to this general lowering of wages, hourly rates
for women still remain at only 80 percent of their male colleagues.
For part-time female workers the situation is even worse, with
average rates of only 60 pence for every £1 earned by a
male employee.
The 30 pence increase in the minimum wage in October will do
little to alleviate poverty. In many cases, the employer takes
back any increase in the minimum wages in other ways. Much of
the wage of the low paid is made up of tips, incentive payments
and commissions, and many of these "perks" have been
taken away by companies who have been forced to pay the minimum
wage. Some employers are also cutting hours, sick and holiday
pay, and replacing older workers with under 21 year-olds, who
can be employed at a lower rate.
Big business initially reacted with hostility to the minimum
wage, fearing that it would damage competitiveness. They were
reassured by Labour's decision to set the initial rate at just
£3.60 an hour, with a lower rate for those under 21. With
no significant increase in overall wages costs, Britain has been
able to cut its huge welfare bill by over £100 million,
with savings set to rise to £300 million. On the whole,
the business community has now largely accepted the minimum wage
and the proposed increase for this year will not alter this.
The unions trumpeted the NMW as a major step forward in the
campaign against low pay. When it was introduced, Unison, the
public sector union, launched a campaign to pressure the government
to set the minimum wage £5.00 an hour, and a demonstration
in Newcastle in 1999 was attended by 30,000 people.
Since then Unison has toned down its campaign, holding a pop
concert featuring some of Britain's top bands in place of a demonstration
this year. The union is conscious not to upset Labour's apple
cart in the run-up to a general election. It is also loath to
draw too much attention to its own abysmal record in relation
to the fight against low pay.
Unison is the largest union in the National Health Service
and has been instrumental in paving the way for the privatisation
of hospitals. With the union doing nothing to halt the outsourcing
of jobs such as porters, cleaners and catering staff, a substantial
section of the union's membership has already seen their wages
depressed, in part due to the introduction of the minimum wage.
See Also:
Britain: Labour promises "baby
bonds" to legitimise its attacks on welfare rights
[27 April 2001]
Britain: Gap widens between
incomes of rich and poor
[24 April 2001]
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