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Date: 2024-09-17 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00015997

Wages / Employment
Low wages in the UK

The rise of the low pay workforce ... The UK is experiencing record levels of employment, with over 32 million people in work. But ...

Burgess COMMENTARY
Nearly all the liberal Western capitalist democracies have the problem of growing inequality ... a problem that has been growing since the 1980s, with remarkably little effort to address the problem in all of this time. More and more profit may be a good thing for investors and senior management, but if it comes at the expense of society and the environment it is actually a bad idea. I am mad as hell that leaders have ignored this problem for going on 40 years and it is now dangerously out of hand. During my adult lifetime, technology has enabled productivity and profit improvement that has been spectacular. ALL of the benefit from this improvement in performance has been allocated to owners and senior management and essentially none to the rest of society. The solution is not rocket science. The people in the first group should be paid a lot less and the rest should be paid a lot more. YES ... profits will take a hit, and YES ... stock markets will lose value ... but a lot of modern profit is phony (intangible) and a lot of stock value is bubble ... but the system as a whole will be one heck of a lot healthier.
Peter Burgess

The rise of the low pay workforce

The UK is experiencing record levels of employment, with over 32 million people in work. But many workers and their families continue to struggle to survive financially – it’s estimated 5.5 million workers are paid below the Real Living Wage, which is set at a level at which people can afford to “live”, based on the minimum income standard.

But what’s missing from these statistics are those people who have to work in more than one low paid job to make ends meet. This is the focus of our research – which has never been conducted in the UK before.

The forgotten workers

We interviewed 50 low paid workers in multiple forms of employment in the regions of Yorkshire and North East England. We expected to speak to workers with two or three jobs, but were surprised and alarmed to find a number with four, five, six and even seven different jobs.

All of the workers we spoke to had multiple jobs as they were struggling to make a living, and some made use of food banks. Ages ranged from late-teens to 60s and education levels varied: a minority had no qualifications, but many had NVQs, GCSEs, O-levels, A-levels, good quality degrees and even masters degrees.

The workers we interviewed were employed in cleaning, catering, the entertainment sector, the care sector, bar work, security, DIY, social services, public services, libraries, education, retail, administration, accountancy and IT services. These occupations spanned the private, public and third sectors, but a number of public sector jobs had been outsourced to private contractors due to austerity cuts.

In terms of employment contracts, there was a combination of full-time, part-time, agency, temporary, seasonal, term-time only, casual and zero hours.

Job insecurity

We believe the rise of multiple jobs is due to the creation of a deregulated “flexible” labour market. Recent research by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation highlighted the expansion of insecure work. The TUC, which comprises the majority of the UK’s major trade unions, has also reported that only one in 40 jobs created since the recession is full-time.

The workers we interviewed had to acquire additional jobs as a result of low wages, limited working hours, under-employment and job insecurity. Additional factors include the proliferation of part-time, zero hours contracts and temporary and casual contracts. Many of the people we spoke to were experiencing job insecurity and instability, and having to work for employment agencies.

The workers we spoke to were also acutely aware of these issues and the associated challenges of insufficient wages and hours in order to make ends meet – as Anna, who works four jobs, two cleaning, one in catering, and one as a shop worker, explained,

“I’m exhausted. I get up at 4:30 in the morning. I leave the house at 5:10 for a 6am start and 10am finish. Then I come here [to my second job] at 11am and I’ve got all day here. I finish at 4pm here, get across the water and go to my son’s and get a sandwich or something and then go to my next job.

“That one is five nights a week and it’s a very hard job. The evening job is really hard. I get really tired when it’s about 8pm. It’s about midnight when I get to bed. But if I didn’t do these jobs I wouldn’t be able to live. I wouldn’t be able to survive.”

Decent working hours

The changing world of work has thrown up a range of challenges and the voices of these forgotten workers can no longer be ignored. These workers are not in this position out of choice. These were the only jobs available – leading them to have to take on more than one job due to low wages, limited working hours and opportunities.

Our research affirms the necessity for the adoption of the Real Living Wage. This is set at £9/hour, (£10.55 in London), whereas the National Minimum Wage (£7.38/hour) and National Living Wage (£7.83/hour) are set at a lower level. Indeed, some workers we spoke to who received a National Living Wage pay rise had their hours cut by their employer to compensate for the rise, so they actually ended up worse off.

Along with a recommendation for more effective wage regulation, there also needs to be stronger regulation of working time arrangements with guaranteed hours. Many of the workers we spoke to worked zero hours or highly variable short hours contracts. These recommendations are important because it is very clear that more people need access to secure jobs with decent working hours and opportunities for progression, if this situation is to be improved.

Andrew Smith, senior Lecturer in Human Resource Management and Employment Relations, University of Bradford and Jo McBride associate professor (reader) of Industrial Relations, Work and Employment, Durham University

This article first appeared on The Conversation. Read the original here.

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