At the last place where I worked we had a single mum with 3 kids earning about £19k and she offered a promotion. She turned it down as she worked out that unless she got £24k (we offered £22k) that she wasnt going to be any better off take home wise as all the extra she earnt would be removed in benefits/rents etc. So she would rather have less responsibility and stay in the same job role if she wasnt going to be any better off. Hard to compete when people have that attitude.
Isn't that the same attitude as her employer though? I'm sure the business wouldn't undertake more work for the same profit margin so why should the employee?
It should have never happened. To have somebody turn down a £3k payrise cause with her benefits she would get nothing is madness.
I agree but the way you wrote it was if the problem was her attitude and not the current situation with benefit payments.
Yep exactly as I have described where I work. NWM may not have raised cost of living or had an affect on none NVM wages in the past, but we are now talking about 4% increases per year when both private and public sector have gone through years of zero or 1% increases.
Not everyone has the ability to progress either for one reason or another. (not skilled enough, not dedicated enough, purely not interested, etc.)
Working as intended.
I stick by my original argument. If you are concerned at this present time, that the MW rise in 5 years time is going to 'devalue your worth', then perhaps you are not as skilled as you think you are.
I can't give you evidence for something that hasn't happened yet, apart from anectdotal and my own.
I know the fees this Nursery will be charging over the next four years are set to rise 60% to cover the NLW
But it's just obvious that people above the NMW now will want a commensurate wage rise, whether other businesses absorb that or pass the cost on to customers we will see.
It's closer to 8%...
I'm not disputing that minimum wage shouldn't rise. It should, maybe at 1.5-2x inflation or average earnings? But, particularly at professional careers such as nursing and teaching they are not only devaluing a persons worth but whole industries as the government are the primary employers and set national wage scales at just a 1% rise. This is going to become a very big problem over the next few years. What are they saying for people looking at coming into the industry in future?
Not everyone has the ability to progress either for one reason or another. (not skilled enough, not dedicated enough, purely not interested, etc.)
Working as intended.
I stick by my original argument. If you are concerned at this present time, that the MW rise in 5 years time is going to 'devalue your worth', then perhaps you are not as skilled as you think you are.
Snip
I'm getting a bit confused.
How are they devaluing a person's worth? They are increasing minimum wage. Effectively saying you are worth more.
The scare mongering about it being pushed all to the consumer is a bit far fetched also. Yes maybe prices will increase a little, but that is just inflation at play. Didn't the Government announce a cut to corporation to tax, to help negate the rise in MW on businesses?
Overall it's clever play by the Government. Rise in MW means people will be earning and spending more. So the people are happy. Cut in corporation tax helps businesses so they are happy, as well as people buying more of their goods/ services. Ultimately the Government are happier because it means more tax.
Smiles all round.
You can partly thank Labour for that. Inflating public sector employment to keep unemployment down. NHS was a prime example of being over staffed at managerial level, if private businesses operated at those kind of levels they would sink themselves pretty quickly.
Also, I don't know what you do, but a 'job' that only has a £5k pay band (£24k - £29k)? Doesn't sound right to me. You talking a certain level (job title?)within that job role? £29k sounds awful low for a job that requires a degree.
I'm getting a bit confused.
How are they devaluing a person's worth? They are increasing minimum wage. Effectively saying you are worth more.
The scare mongering about it being pushed all to the consumer is a bit far fetched also.
maybe prices will increase a little, but that is just inflation at play
Didn't the Government announce a cut to corporation to tax, to help negate the rise in MW on businesses?
Overall it's clever play by the Government. Rise in MW means people will be earning and spending more. So the people are happy. Cut in corporation tax helps businesses so they are happy, as well as people buying more of their goods/ services. Ultimately the Government are happier because it means more tax.
Smiles all round.
God, it must be awesome to live with such a simplistic view of life![]()
My current role is the £24K - £29K. If I were to be promoted up to the next level that will then go from £30k - £39K but that assumes that in a few years time, either they get more funding to increase the size of the team or 1 of the 6 in the role above leaves.
So in 5 years one person above you has to leave. Not exactly impossible is it? You could always move to another company as well I take it?
Basically are you worried that your salary will only increase by ~5% over the next 5 years? Or that people on MW will be that bit closer to you? Or are you confident that in the next 5 years you will be on more then 5% more than what you are now?
For me I do see opportunity for me to move up, else like you say move out and look elsewhere so that's not too much of an issue.
I'd say the first two points are my main concern. Capping at 1% a year as well as moving MW closer to me doesn't sound attractive to me. I'm not too sure that you understand that, yes although I will probably get more then 1% every year, but the "box" that I'm in is only moving at 1% and I'm just moving up inside it.
Also, I don't know what you do, but a 'job' that only has a £5k pay band (£24k - £29k)? Doesn't sound right to me. You talking a certain level (job title?)within that job role? £29k sounds awful low for a job that requires a degree.