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Unions call for minimum wage to rise to £15 an hour

Business / Wed 24th Aug 2022 at 07:19am

THE TUC has set out, today, a plan for pay growth underpinned by a £15 minimum wage. As workers struggle to stay afloat, it is clear that higher wages have to be at the heart of the UK’s economic strategy.

https://www.tuc.org.uk/blogs/we-need-15-minimum-wage

A spokesperson said: “We need to transition the economy to high-wage, high-skilled and secure jobs. And shift our economic model away from a reliance on low-paid and insecure work.

As part of our package of measures to deal with the cost of living crisis, the TUC is also calling for the minimum wage to be uprated by at least inflation this October – as opposed to April next year when the uprating was due.

The minimum wage began life in 1999 against a backdrop of opposition from Tories, business groups, and even some economists. But since then, we have proven that the minimum wage is effective. It has delivered pay increases for the lowest paid workers, without causing job losses. There is now a widespread consensus in favour of the minimum wage. This reaches across academic experts and across political divides.

The TUC believes it is time for the minimum wage to take the next step. But if the minimum wage is just £9.50 an hour now, how do we get to £15? Here’s the plan:

1) Deliver a return to normal pre-crisis wage growth

Workers are living through the longest and harshest wage squeeze in 200 years, but it hasn’t always been like this. Up until the financial crash, wages saw sustained growth in every decade in modern

Wages since 1900

This wage stagnation has held the minimum wage back, because the wage floor is explicitly tied to median wages. The government must deliver a return to normal wage growth so workers get proper pay rises for the first time in over a decade.

We need to see sustained pay growth, year on year, so that median wages reach £20 an hour as soon as possible. This will underpin our £15 minimum wage. The government can make wage growth happen by delivering:

  • A macroeconomic approach which boosts demand and creates growth
  • A plan to strengthen and extend collective bargaining across the economy including introducing fair pay agreements to set minimum pay and conditions across whole sectors
  • A life-long learning and skills strategy to fill labour shortages, boost productivity and so workers can update their skills throughout their working life
  • Corporate governance reform to prioritise long-term sustainable growth, rather than short-term focus on shareholder returns
  • Industrial and trade policies to promote good jobs and ensure that businesses compete on a level playing field
  • Making decent jobs a requirement of all government spending and procurement.

2) Raise the minimum wage target to 75% of median wages

Secondly, the TUC believes government should raise its target for the minimum wage. The current target is 66 per cent of median wages by 2024. The obvious next step is 75 per cent.

Since it was introduced, the minimum wage has increased as a proportion of the median wage. The wage floor was introduced at 47 per cent and is now on its way to 66 per cent by 2024. As unions predicted, the evidence continues to show a positive effect on wages and no job losses.

Minimum wage bite has increased over time

The government should set its next target at 75 per cent of median wages and make progress towards this. The Low Pay Commission should be responsible for the path based on consultation and negotiation through its social partnership model which brings together unions, and independent experts. This model provides an effective way to make sure we can keep the minimum wage rising over time.

Conclusions

If our plans are implemented, we will get:

  • A return to normal wage growth getting average wages up to £20 an hour
  • 75% minimum wage target establishing a £15 an hour minimum wage

This must be delivered as soon as possible. A government that is serious about wage growth will be able to get us there. And trade unions will also play a key role in getting wages to these levels more quickly. Workers in unions will see bigger pay rises. And in sectors with good collective bargaining coverage, a £15 floor will be implemented earlier. Fair Pay Agreements should be rolled out, and anti-trade union legislation should be repealed, so workers can win higher pay ahead of the minimum wage. Unions are already fighting for £15 in workplaces up and down the country and its time employers paid up.

6 Comments for Unions call for minimum wage to rise to £15 an hour:

Theman
2022-08-24 07:42:05

Nice! And 2+2=22

Emily Pankhurst
2022-08-24 07:42:42

You cannot expect any person to run a family home on a minimum wage as it stands today. Workers do not choose to work for a minimum wage and or zero hours, it is forced upon them! Even an average earner in Harlow is well below inflation, so work in London? Teain fares extortinate!

Nostradamus
2022-08-24 07:59:56

TUC other unions and government, don't forget pensioners and those who depend on benefits! Time to bring back Robin Hood taxes, nationalise water, rail, and energy industries and "take back control" of the profits these industries are making for foreign government, (who have invested heavily in buying great chunks of these uk industries and use the profits to keep prices down for such industries in their own country). Time to cap top salaries to 5 times the National average pay and plough investment into the uk. Meanwhile reverse the privatisation of the nhs started by Thatcher and Blair. The Government is on holiday literally whilst the uk burns and is heading for a major precipice and engaged in selecting a new PM from two candidates one flips and flops from repeating various tory tropes and the other a multi millionaire who should try living life on benefits and out of work to understand the poverty traps that exist in the uk. Meanwhile the fossil fuel companies offer to bail us out if we give them a hundred billion pounds, better Nationalise them take their profits and go hell for leather to build up a wind, wave and solar hydrogen economy.

Theman
2022-08-24 10:26:50

You can’t win, when these industries were nationalised they were badly run and made no profit, hence they were privatised at the time, sadly the same people were still running these companies once privatised( only the sign changed). This underperformance led them to being easy prey to foreign providers who took them over. The foreign owners quite rightly will run their business to their own national concerns at our expense. Where our gov went wrong is they should have retained a controlling stake in these businesses instead of totally privatising them, that way they would be able to control where the profits go. Sadly our politicians have only old idea mindset, they can only think in terms of totally state owned or totally private, when you only need to be the largest share holder to dictate the tune.

David Forman
2022-08-24 11:18:10

Working people should join a union and start a campaign for recognition by their employer if their union does not already have negotiating rights with that firm. Union recognition allows unions to nominate safety reps and later form safety committees. The bosses have the CBI, Institute of Directors and numerous think tanks advocating their cause, but working people only have trade unions.

Theman
2022-08-24 13:33:16

What does the CBI, Institute Of Directors and trade unions have in common? They all take a slice of your earnings in return for pretending to represent you. I have been a member of all three(and more) at points in my life time, and it was the biggest waste of money and time ever. If you have a problem with your employer, employee, customer or supplier, then talking direct to them gets you further, and if it does not then simply change customer, employer, employee or supplier. It’s in everyone’s interest to work together at every level, and if you find yourself dealing with someone who can’t see that then deal with someone else. Too much division in our society is the problem and unity is the solution, and the only way to get there is to circumnavigate the people who keep driving division

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