Britain needs a pay rise, not just to bring relief to hard-pressed
workers, but also to drive a sustainable economic recovery.
That’s
the message from the latest research and is particularly relevant to our
members in Scottish local government, who are being balloted on industrial
action over pay from next week. Their pay is the lowest, even across the hard
pressed public sector, as they are asked to keep public services going against
all the odds.
A TUC study on the living wage showed that women earn just 66p
for every pound earned by men working full-time (which is a pay gap of 34.2%).
One of the main reasons for this huge gender pay divide is the large
concentration of women doing low-paid, part-time work. This has led to a
majority of women working part-time earning less than the living wage in over
50 local authority areas across Britain.
It’s no better for young workers. The proportion of
workers aged 21 to 30 who are now classed as low paid has more than tripled
over the past four decades, according to new research from the ResolutionFoundation. Almost three in ten (29%)
are now low paid, equating to almost 1.5 million young workers. In 1975, the
proportion earning low pay
was less than one in ten (8%). This also explains why many young people are locked out of the housing market,
with just 3% of buyers in June aged between 18 and 30.
Missing out on the claimed economic recovery is not limited to these
groups. The Poverty and Social Exclusion in the United Kingdom project has
revealed that 800,000 Scots were too poor to participate in basic social
activities, more than 400,000 adults do without essential clothing and almost
one-third cannot afford to heat their homes adequately in the winter. The majority
of children in poverty come from small families with at least one parent in
work – so much for the UK government’s ‘strivers and shirkers’ analysis.
Across the UK, the percentage of households below what the public
considered a minimum standard of living has risen from 14% to 33% over the last
30 years. This is despite the size of the economy doubling, indicating the gap
between rich and poor is increasing.
Low incomes are also linked to underemployment. The TUC’s analysis of
the latest labour market data shows that while unemployment has fallen by over
400,000 since early 2012, under-employment has risen by 93,000. And at 3.4
million the current level of under-employment is over a million higher (46%)
than it was before the recession. It also highlights that the numbers who want
more hours in their existing jobs means that under-employment is still
increasing. In UNISON, we see this in sectors like care, with nominal hours
contracts becoming more prevalent.
The
answer to what some economists call the productivity puzzle
is that we have too many low-pay, low-skill and low-productivity jobs in
low-investment workplaces. We need to rebalance the economy with an emphasis on
creating good jobs and promoting fair levels of pay for everyone – not just
those at the top.
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