Editor's Blog2 mins ago
The State Is Subsidising Our Largest And Most Profitable Retailers.
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -322728 17
Aso the Sunday Times :::: http:// www.the sundayt imes.co .uk/sto /news/u k_news/ article 1542849 .ece
These firms are able to pay their workers below the living wage, knowing that us, the taxpayers, will have to subsidise their poor wages with "in work" benefits.
This isn't a Party-political issue, as its been going on for years. How can this be right ? Why should my hard-earned wages go into the coffers of already wealthy companies, like Tesco, ASDA and Amazon ?
Aso the Sunday Times :::: http://
These firms are able to pay their workers below the living wage, knowing that us, the taxpayers, will have to subsidise their poor wages with "in work" benefits.
This isn't a Party-political issue, as its been going on for years. How can this be right ? Why should my hard-earned wages go into the coffers of already wealthy companies, like Tesco, ASDA and Amazon ?
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///These firms are able to pay their workers below the living wage,///
What is the difference between the living wage and the national minimum wage?
The living wage is an informal benchmark, not a legally enforceable minimum level of pay, like the national minimum wage.
The national minimum wage is set by the business secretary each year on the advice of the Low Pay Commission. It is enforced by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
The living wage is currently calculated by the Centre for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University, while the London living wage has been calculated by the GLA since 2005.
The basic idea is that these are the minimum pay rates needed to let workers lead a decent life.
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/bu siness- 2020459 4
///These firms are able to pay their workers below the living wage,///
What is the difference between the living wage and the national minimum wage?
The living wage is an informal benchmark, not a legally enforceable minimum level of pay, like the national minimum wage.
The national minimum wage is set by the business secretary each year on the advice of the Low Pay Commission. It is enforced by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
The living wage is currently calculated by the Centre for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University, while the London living wage has been calculated by the GLA since 2005.
The basic idea is that these are the minimum pay rates needed to let workers lead a decent life.
http://
FF...if 5.2 million British workers are having to claim benefits because their Employers are not paying them decent wages, then its obvious to me that a living wage is not being paid, however you define the word.
To use Tesco as an example..... according to the Sunday Times, the company paid £519m in tax last year, but received £364m in public subsidy for its 209,000 low paid workers. We taxpayers are being taken for a ride here, and treated like mugs.
To use Tesco as an example..... according to the Sunday Times, the company paid £519m in tax last year, but received £364m in public subsidy for its 209,000 low paid workers. We taxpayers are being taken for a ride here, and treated like mugs.
We seem to be getting bogged down by the terms living and minimum wage.
Its really not the point. These firms are being subsidised by eye-wateringly large sums of taxpayers money, which they will then use to dole out to their shareholders.
As regards the official minimum wage, its obvious that it needs to be raised to a more realistic level, as it is plainly not sufficient for people to live on.
Its really not the point. These firms are being subsidised by eye-wateringly large sums of taxpayers money, which they will then use to dole out to their shareholders.
As regards the official minimum wage, its obvious that it needs to be raised to a more realistic level, as it is plainly not sufficient for people to live on.
They are getting at least the minimum wage. This is a rather silly evaluation of reality mikey, the "living wage" is a fluid concept of no real substance. You could equally well argue that these employers are saving billions in benefits because the workers are at least earning money that would otherwise have to come from benefits.
TTT...I am not sure I could argue that !
These firms are only paying as much as the minimum wage, because the law forces them to do so. Even with the law as it is, some firms have tried and succeeded in paying less than the minimum wage, as has been seen recently in the exposure of certain Home Care companies, that haven't been paying their carers travelling time between visits, my niece included in that.
I said that this issue wasn't a party-political affair, but as others have chosen to bring politics into it.....it was a Labour Government that introduced the minimum wage, which the Tory opposition at the time voted tooth and nail against, although the present Tory party now think that it a smashing idea !
These firms are only paying as much as the minimum wage, because the law forces them to do so. Even with the law as it is, some firms have tried and succeeded in paying less than the minimum wage, as has been seen recently in the exposure of certain Home Care companies, that haven't been paying their carers travelling time between visits, my niece included in that.
I said that this issue wasn't a party-political affair, but as others have chosen to bring politics into it.....it was a Labour Government that introduced the minimum wage, which the Tory opposition at the time voted tooth and nail against, although the present Tory party now think that it a smashing idea !
Baldric.....perhaps you might have forgotten this ! ::::
http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Nation al_Mini mum_Wag e_Act_1 998
http://
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