The Westminster government's legal minimum wage rates
are set to rise on 1st April, with new hourly rates ranging from £8.21 for
workers aged 25 and over, to a derisory £4.35 for those under 18, and £3.90 for
apprentices.
Every penny extra is naturally welcomed by millions of
workers' families struggling to survive, as prices rocket, especially on daily
necessities like food, transport, energy and rent. And the average increase on
the various minimum wage rates of 4.5% has been hard won, by the naming and
shaming of the profiteers by trade unionists and socialists; the battling by
workers and socialists like the SSP in our unions and on the streets.
But these rates remain a major
cause of the grinding poverty in this rich nation, not a means of eradicating
it. They are miles short of being a solution to the criminal fact workers in
jobs make up 52% of the one million Scots officially living below the poverty
line.
Furthermore, employers increasingly treat the basement level minimum wage
as the norm, not the minimum - something which only collective bargaining and
collective action by the unions can overcome.
Rampant Job Insecurity
Pathetic hourly rates of pay, twinned with insecure and
short or zero hours contracts, are the root causes of shameful numbers of
working people having to swallow their dignity and turn to food banks so they
can swallow some food.
The retail workers who make, sell and put food on the
shelves - but can't afford to put food on the family table.
The fast-food
workers who accumulate millions in profit for tax-dodging giants that hire them
on zero hours contracts, but themselves have to resort to emergency food
parcels, courtesy the generosity of other workers in collections for food
banks.
Wages as a share of overall wealth,
GDP, are at a record low. Profits soar as people suffer. Stagnant wages are
accompanied by cuts to in-work benefits. The systematic cuts to benefits since
2015 - including Working Tax Credits and child benefits - means over
£1.4billion a year less to working families than if they'd kept pace with
inflation.
Far from the Tory government "tackling burning
injustices" as Theresa May declared on being foisted on us as PM, they are
further shackling the unions, escalating job insecurity, slashing workers' benefits
- all behind the deafening noise about Brexit.
There are still officially 850,000 workers on zero
hours contracts. Two-thirds of them have been stuck on these modern forms of
slavery for over a year. A TUC survey has shown 51% of them have had shifts
cancelled with less than 24 hours notice, and a whopping 73% offered shifts
with less than a day's notice. So much for planning your future!
Nearly half
the workers on zero hours contracts get no paid holidays, and on average they
are £4-an-hour worse paid than workers in the same jobs that are not on ZHCs.
These are but a few statistical
reminders of the need to abolish them. Reinforcement of the case for the
alternative which the SSP has pioneered and has now been agreed by the entire
trade union movement - as a result of our convincing my own union, Usdaw, to
pioneer the demand: a legally guaranteed minimum 16-hour contract for all
workers who want it.
Tories Rob our Language!
The Tories are past masters at
using twisted language to bamboozle those they are exploiting for profit.
They
took up the perfectly honourable idea of 'a living wage' and deliberately
abused it when they introduced a new, marginally-higher minimum wage for
workers aged 25 and over - labelling it the 'National Living Wage'. The new
figure of £8.21 is nothing of the sort. If in doubt, try living on it!
To add to the confusion, the Living Wage Foundation
calculates a figure for what they call a 'Living Wage', uprated every November.
This is now set at £9-an-hour. We should be clear: although six million people
earn less, it is still not a real living wage. Furthermore, it only applies to
those over 18, and is entirely voluntary, not legally binding.
Recent news stories merely confirmed what many of us
have warned for years: employers often gain the kudos (and additional customer
base) of being Accredited Living Wage employers, whilst delegating the dirty
work to contractors who prolong and delay paying their staff anything like this
figure.
Recent media reports rightly exposed
four Scottish Further Education colleges which hire contract cleaners denied
the Living Wage Foundation figure that the college bosses signed up to.
But as
I've exposed and argued for action against within Usdaw for years, this is
rampant practice within the private sector too. Big companies winning public
applause for being a Living Wage Employer - now paying core staff £9-an-hour -
but using contractors who for instance impose a 6-day week, instead of 5, on
workers only getting the paltry minimum wage (currently £7.83).
Union and Political Action
That's why we need serious trade union and political
action across all sectors to achieve two things: to bring these contractors
in-house, and to insist on a decent, legally-enforced, living minimum wage for
all, regardless of age.
Not the derisory current minimum, which is also riddled
with age discrimination.
Not the entirely voluntary, and
still far too low Living Wage Foundation figure (£9), applied according to the
whims and fancies of employers, who often contract out lower-paid jobs anyway,
whilst keeping up their public image.
Instead, we need a legally guaranteed
living minimum wage for all over 16, calculated by a formula that helps
close the gender pay gap, helps eradicate poverty, and ensures the absolute
minimum keeps pace with increases in average wages or inflation, whichever is
the greater.
Two-thirds Median Male Earnings
That's why the SSP has consistently fought for a
national minimum wage based on two-thirds median male earnings.
In September 2014, that formula worked out at
£10-an-hour. Since that same month, the SSP has spearheaded
campaigns on the streets and in the workplaces and unions for £10now! That's
also the policy unanimously agreed by the TUC all those 4.5 years ago.
For
millions of workers - including about 480,000 in Scotland - this would be a
substantial hike in their wages. But frankly, even £10-an-hour is increasingly
falling below what can be genuinely regarded as a decent living minimum wage.
And it certainly no longer matches the formula of two-thirds median male
earnings, nor allows for the galloping inflation since 2014, when the TUC first
demanded this minimum wage for all workers.
Let us illustrate just how modest the demand for £10
immediately, rising with inflation, really is. Since 2014, average inflation
has officially risen by 14%. So £10 then would need to be £11.40 now to keep up
with price rises.
Recent reports say the overall
median wage for all is £632 a week. For the best-paid bracket - men aged 40-49
- the median weekly wage is £707. In contrast, an immediate £10-an-hour,
assuming a 35-hour working week, would only reach £350.
Join Our Struggle!
The battle for a decent living minimum wage -
regardless of age or gender, and legally binding - is more urgent than ever, as
the working poor make up the absolute majority of those below the breadline.
Alongside that, the demand for a guaranteed minimum 16-hour contract for all
workers who want it is a key weapon against poverty and insecurity, plus the
epidemic of mental illness which they help create.
It's no wonder 26,000 people have already signed the new online petition for these minimum employment standards, launched by Usdaw -
which we need 100,000 to sign to force a debate in parliament.
It's no wonder thousands respond to the SSP street
campaigning on these twin demands.
Join a union and help make sure
there's collective struggle to achieve these aims. And join the SSP to
challenge the entire rigged capitalist system, which robs workers to feed the
profits of a tiny, rich minority.
It's time for radical socialist change - to
put people in charge of the economy, instead of profit dictating to people.
Please take one simple step TODAY to help the campaign to win these minimum employment standards. Sign the Online petition, launched by my own union, Usdaw. Our target is 100,000 signatures - to force a debate on the demands in parliament.
Please take one simple step TODAY to help the campaign to win these minimum employment standards. Sign the Online petition, launched by my own union, Usdaw. Our target is 100,000 signatures - to force a debate on the demands in parliament.
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