During Living Wage Week we should
focus on ensuring that the 400,000 workers in Scotland on poverty pay are paid
the living wage.
The idea behind a living wage is very simple. A worker
should be paid enough to live decently and to adequately provide for their
family. It helps prevent in-work poverty and ensures workers are not exploited
through low wages.
The Scottish Living Wage is
good news for workers as they get higher wages that also improves their health
and job motivation. It’s good for employers because it reduces turnover,
improves productivity and attracts better staff through reputational gain. The
wider community benefits through lower benefit cost, less stress on the NHS and
cash into the local economy. The Institute of Fiscal studies has calculated
sub-living wage employers cost the taxpayer £6bn a year in in-work benefits
alone. The indirect cost on poverty is around £25bn a year.
This year’s Living Wage Week
got off to a good start with a 20p increase in the rate to £7.85. That means a
much needed pay rise for those on the living wage. That includes most of the
public sector in Scotland and a growing number of private sector employers who
have signed up voluntarily. The energy company SSE has been a champion of the living
wage in Scotland this year and they have been joined by high profile firms
including Nationwide and Heart of Midlothian Football Club. Celtic have yet to
follow, but there is a great grass roots campaign pressing them at every
opportunity.
Of
course its women who are the main victims of poverty pay. Today is Equal Pay Day, marking
the point at which women working full-time effectively stop earning as they are
paid £5,200 (15.7%) less per year, on average, than men working full-time. Equal
Pay Day for women working part-time was way back on 28 August. Research published last week
by the World Economic Forum revealed that the UK has fallen out of the top 20
most gender-equal countries in the world for the first time after women’s
incomes fell by £2,700 over the past year. The UK is now behind Nicaragua,
Bulgaria and Burundi for women having an equal chance of a good education,
career and health. And it’s not just women. Young workers, part-timers and black
workers are all more likely to be on poverty pay.
The Scottish Government is to be commended for
including the Scottish Living Wage in their pay policy and for supporting the Scottish
Living Wage accreditation initiative. However, it is through procurement that
they could do much more to extend the scope of the living wage in Scotland. Promises
were made during the passage of the Procurement (S) Act that have not been
delivered. Our experience on the ground shows that public bodies are not even
abiding by the current rules - so we need to get a move on with developing the
statutory guidance. In this briefing I set out how we could make progress now.
Labour also needs to be more radical. Ed Miliband’s
plan to raise the National Minimum Wage (NMW) to £8 by 2020, won’t do a lot for
workers below the living wage after you take into account rising inflation.
UNISON and others, in submissions to the Smith Commission, have argued for the
devolution of labour regulation including the NMW.
Scottish Labour, under a
Leader like Neil Findlay, could be much bolder. Helping families out of poverty
and saving the taxpayer from subsidising bad employers.
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