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Fight low pay

We demand a living wage for all workers, regardless of age

THE NATIONAL minimum wage, introduced in 1999 at the very low level of £3.60 an hour, has not done anything to eliminate the scandal of poverty pay.

In fact the introduction of a lower rate for 18-21 year olds has driven wages down further. Now they get 75p an hour less than the 'adult' rate of £4.10.

This presents an opportunity too tempting for some bosses to pass up. Whereas many of the big supermarkets pay the adult rate from 18, firms like McDonalds, Burger King, KFC and Dixons all pay lower wages to those under 21.

Shop workers' union USDAW have exposed this scandal and have produced figures to show a doubling of the number of 18-21 year-olds earning less than the adult minimum wage. Nearly 16% of young workers are in this position now and USDAW warn this could rise to over 20%.

Chief executives

The bosses haven't been suffering any slow-down in their pay increases though. This week, just one group - NHS chief executives - have been shown to be on over 70% more than they got a decade ago - top earners now receive £200,000 a year.

The increase was 20% higher than the rise in nurses' pay over the same period.

Incomes Data Services looked at the pay of 2,500 NHS chief executives and directors in the year up to last March. Chief executive pay averaged £107,500 in England and £116,000 in Wales. The chief executive of Hammersmith Hospitals earned more than £210,000, the report says.

The report's compilers say the figures show the widening gap between the pay of board members and employees. "As in the private sector, it seems earnings of NHS directors have outpaced the rest of the health workforce."

But as the feature in the centre pages this week shows, it is possible to get organised and fight back against low pay.

We say: End poverty pay, for a legal minimum wage of £8 an hour with no exemptions. For an annual increase in the minimum wage, linked to average earnings.

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In The Socialist 26 February 2005:

Hands off our pensions

Pensions - force the government to retreat

Pensions: Our strength can stop this robbery

France: 24-hour general strike in the making

Russian pensioners put pressure on Putin

Fight low pay

Young workers: fight for your rights at work

Lecturers strike over pay

No to fire service cuts

Scottish Socialist Party conference report

Israeli/Palestinian conflict: A road to peace or to further conflict?


 

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Related links:

Low pay:

triangleNext threat to under-25s: Housing Benefit

triangleWorkplace news in brief

triangleVirgin boss Branson not stopping low pay of train cleaners

triangleLow pay, no way!

triangleLow pay and the housing crisis

triangleDevon Bus Workers Fight Low Pay

Pay:

triangleNational Shop Stewards Network

triangleCome to the 6th annual NSSN conference!

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

NHS:

triangleHospital jobs scandal - Action now to save the NHS!

triangleNHS GMB members vote No to pensions deal

triangleIt's our NHS - Let's fight for it!

Poverty:

triangleReview: We must look - the photographs of Don McCullin

triangleInternational Women's Day 2012

triangle2012: Millions face poverty and homelessness

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