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The share of the economy going to wages fell by more than five percentage points between 1980 and 2011 – equivalent to £85bn in today's money – while the sharp growth in inequality has meant that low and middle income earners have done even worse.

date: 28 June 2013

embargo: 00.01hrs Monday 1 July 2013

The share of the economy going to wages fell by more than five percentage points between 1980 and 2011 - equivalent to £85bn in today's money - while the sharp growth in inequality has meant that low and middle income earners have done even worse.

But a new TUC pamphlet published today (Monday) shows that new policies could close a quarter of this wage gap in the short to medium term, while in the longer term the creation of high-skill, high-wage jobs can close the rest.

The TUC Touchstone pamphlet How to Boost the Wage Share says that there is growing evidence that increased wage inequality helped cause the crash and has hindered recovery.

It shows that the increased profits generated as the wage share fell did not result in increased investment, as free market economic thinking said it would. Instead, rising profits became concentrated in the finance sector through takeovers and financial engineering, with little wider benefit to the economy.

But with international organisations such as the OECD and IMF now pointing to the need to increase wages to help secure renewed economic growth, the pamphlet - authored by economists Stewart Lansley and Howard Reed - argues that public policy should aim to raise the wage share from its current level of 55 per cent to 60 per cent, as it was in 1980 and during much of the 1950s and 1960s.

While that cannot be achieved without restructuring the UK economy to produce higher skilled jobs, the pamphlet suggests a mix of policies can close a quarter of this wage gap more quickly:

  • A modest increase in the national minimum wage to restore its 2009 level in real terms (£6.60 per hour compared to £6.19 today).
  • New structures to create higher minimum wages in sectors that can afford them set through new tripartite structures and collective bargaining.
  • The spread of the living wage though measures such as living wage zones.
  • Extending collective bargaining and narrowing the pay gap between top and bottom in companies.
  • Ensuring full employment to increase demand for labour.

The cumulative effect of these policies could boost pay packets across Britain by billions of pounds, says the TUC. Research published earlier this month by the TUC to launch its fair pay campaign found that pay packets across Britain had fallen by £52bn a year, compared to before the recession in 2007.

TUC General Secretary Frances O'Grady said: 'Keeping wages down may boost profits in the short-term, but across the economy it does long-term damage as consumers have less money in their pockets.

'With increasing evidence that the extra profits ended up enriching the finance sector, rather than driving investment or innovation, it's time for politicians to set increased living standards as a clear objective.

'Boosting the minimum wage, introducing higher wage floors in sectors that can afford them and spreading collective bargaining can all make an immediate difference. In the longer term, the government needs to do more to encourage highly skilled, better paid job creation. You can't build an prosperous economy on low-wage insecure work.

'Britain needs a pay rise, and this is how to get it.'

NOTES TO EDITORS:

The effect of policies to raise Britain's wage share

 

Gross increase in wage bill for each item

Percentage of wage gap closed for each item alone

Cumulative effect of combining the policies

National Minimum Wage increased to £6.60 per hour

£1.0bn

1.2%

1.2%

Living Wage introduced for 50 percent of employees currently paid below it

£3.2bn

3.9%

4.5%

Extension of trade union membership and collective bargaining coverage

£13bn

15.7%

20.2%

Reduced unemployment

£4.1bn

4.9%

25.1%

- How to Boost the Wage Share is available at www.tuc.org.uk/closingthewagegap.

- The latest TUC pamphlet is being launched at a TUC seminar later today at its central London headquarters. The event Mind the Income Gap will feature a presentation from Romain Ranciere, Professor of Economics at the Paris School of Economics and author of the influential International Monetary Fund (IMF) report Inequality, Leverage and Crises. More information about the event is available at www.afterausterity.org.uk

- More information on the TUC's fair pay campaign is available at www.britainneedsapayrise.org

- All TUC press releases can be found at www.tuc.org.uk

- Follow the TUC on Twitter: @tucnews

Contacts:

Media enquiries:
Liz Chinchen T: 020 7467 1248 M: 07778 158175 E: media@tuc.org.uk
Rob Holdsworth T: 020 7467 1372 M: 07717 531150 E: rholdsworth@tuc.org.uk
Alex Rossiter T: 020 7467 1337 M: 07887 572130 E: arossiter@tuc.org.uk

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