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date: 10 November 2004 embargo: 11 November 2004 |
In its annual submission to the Low Pay Commission (LPC), the TUC will
today (Thursday) recommend an increase in the adult national minimum wage
to £5.35 for next October, rising towards £6 by October 2006.
These increases would lift the national minimum wage by more than the
projected growth in earnings and give a boost to the pay packets of up to
two million workers.
In its oral evidence to the LPC today (Thursday) the TUC will point out
that previous increases in the minimum wage have benefited fewer than the
LPC's target of up to two million workers. A minimum wage set at £5 or
less - as the business lobby is suggesting - would mean that the value of
the wage would fall against average earnings, which are expected to rise
by nine per cent over the next two years.
The TUC is also recommending that the adult minimum wage be paid from the
age of 18 rather than at 22. The submission proposes an increase that
would sustain the level of the £3 minimum wage for 16 and 17 year olds in
2005 in relation to earnings, and says that for 2006 it would like to see
an interim review to set a rate that benefits larger numbers of young
workers.
Roger McKenzie, TUC Midlands Regional Secretary, said: "This increase would be fair and affordable. The TUC has taken a considered and constructive approach
to the minimum wage. We have looked at the hard evidence and worked with
our partners on the Commission to ensure that the wage is set at the right
level to benefit business and the target number of low-paid employees.'
"There is no economic argument against continuing to increase the minimum
wage above inflation and the growth in earnings. But there is a very
strong case for ensuring that up to two million low paid workers get a pay
rise over the next two years, not a pay cut."
Why the adult national minimum wage can increase in 2005 and 2006
Why the adult national minimum wage should be paid from age 18
Why the national minimum wage for 16 & 17 should increase modestly
next year and be reviewed in 2005
Notes to Editors:
All TUC press releases can be found at www.tuc.org.uk
Contacts:
Media enquiries: Roger McKenzie on 0121 236 4454 or 07879 497 291 (mobile) or Alan Weaver on 0121 236 4454 or 07771 778694
Press release (800 words) issued 11 Nov 2004
This page http://www.tuc.org.uk/workplace/tuc-8970-f0.cfm
printed 9 February 2012 at 08:14 hrs by 38.107.179.231