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Can more inclusive wage-setting institutions improve low-wage work? Pay trends in the United Kingdom's public-sector hospitals

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Article

Grimshaw, Damian

International Labour Review

2009

148

4

December

439-459

conditions of employment ; hospital ; low wages ; public sector ; wage determination

United Kingdom

Wages and wage payment systems

English

Bibliogr.

"International research findings highlight the important role of institutions in shaping the wage structure of an economy. Evidence from a sample of seven public hospitals in the United Kingdom confirms those findings, suggesting that a more coordinated and centralized system of wage-setting (including extension of public-sector conditions to outsourced workers) improves pay for low-wage cleaners and assistant nurses. Renewal of wage-setting institutions provides a necessary but insufficient foundation for the elimination of low-wage work. Employee investment in skill development, career advancement and skill-based pay require management's commitment to the design of new, higher-skilled jobs and the strengthening of internal labour markets "

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