By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
1

The ‘living wage' and low income: can adequate pay contribute to adequate family living standards?

Bookmarks
Article

Hirsch, Donald

Critical Social Policy

2017

38

1

1-20

living wage ; minimum wage ; working poor

Wages and wage payment systems

10.1177/0261018317729469

English

"The success of the contemporary ‘living wage' movement has been highlighted by the UK government's decision to increase the statutory minimum wage for over-25s sharply, in the name of improving living standards. This breaks with neoliberal reluctance to intervene in labour markets, yet raises difficult issues centring around whether minimum hourly pay rates are suited to promoting adequate household incomes. At worst, ‘living wages' could distract from other policies with this objective. This article acknowledges recent critiques of the living wage as an anti-poverty measure, but demonstrates that, in combination with other policies, wage floors can play a crucial role. It shows that low pay and inadequate working incomes overlap substantially. The article argues that governments promising that work will deliver adequate living standards need a clearer narrative in which pay, public transfers/subsidies and sufficient levels of employment combine to deliver minimum acceptable living standards for working families. "

Digital



Bookmarks