DaveO wrote:
I don't see how that is relevant.
There have always been the odd employer who wasn't out to exploit their staff and offer good wages. And yes these attract lots of applicants.
The trouble is there have never been enough of them so why getting rid of in-work benefits is going to give us enough good employers I don't understand unless as I said it becomes an employees market, which it isn't going to and never has been.
Yep. I'd also just add that this issue along with the argument over the minimum wage v living wage can often be discussed as just being about wages. Whereas minimum wage jobs in a lot of cases can be made a lot more attractive to people not by a wage rise but by better working conditions.
To take Jerry's example of warehousing jobs, there's a similar warehousing site in Sherburn not far away from York. The jobs are advertised at minimum wage rate but they still get more than enough applicants. But then the problems begin. You aren't working for the company who's name is on the side of the building, you're working for an agency.
Zero hours contract (or a guaranteed low hours + extras contract, the typical amount seems to be 8 hours).
Sod all terms & conditions that benefit you, but plenty that benefit the agency such as conditions that say you can be moved to another warehouse or another site entirely at a moments notice.
You have to buy your own PPE. I'm pretty sure that's against the law, or it was the last time I ran a warehouse anyway (admittedly only a small one, nowhere near the size of these).
An "interview" that consists of a mass (20-30 people at once) signing up to the agency.
Long working hours with few breaks and unpaid lunch.
Sod all holidays.
Strict time & motion practices.
Fines for breaking these practices or not working at the correct rate.
Fines for breakages or missing items.
Regular physical searches.
And then they wonder why all but the Eastern Europeans drop out at the stage where you are told/figure all that out. But my point really is that people will work, often happily, for minimum wage. What breaks the camels back is minimum wage plus frankly horrible & what I would describe as robotic & inhumane working conditions.