Low-wage Work in United Kingdom by Caroline Lloyd

Low-wage Work in United Kingdom by Caroline Lloyd

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Low-wage Work in United Kingdom by Caroline Lloyd

The United Kingdom's labor market policies place it in a kind of institutional middle ground between the United States and continental Europe. Low pay grew sharply between the late 1970s and the mid-1990s, in large part due to the decline of unions and collective bargaining and the removal of protections for the low paid. The changes instituted by Tony Blair's New Labour government since 1997, including the introduction of the National Minimum Wage, halted the growth in low pay but have not reversed it. Low-Wage Work in the United Kingdom explains why the current level of low-paying work remains one of the highest in Europe. The authors argue that the failure to deal with low pay reflects a policy approach which stressed reducing poverty, but also centers on the importance of moving people off benefits and into work, even at low wages. The U.K. government has introduced a version of the U.S. welfare to work policies and continues to stress the importance of a highly flexible and competitive labor market. A central policy theme has been that education and training can empower people to both enter work and to move into better paying jobs. The case study research reveals the endemic nature of low paid work and the difficulties workers face in escaping from the bottom end of the jobs ladder. However, compared to the United States, low paid workers in the United Kingdom do benefit from in-work social security benefits, targeted predominately at those with children, and entitlements to non-pay benefits such as annual leave, maternity and sick pay, and crucially, access to state-funded health care. Low-Wage Work in the United Kingdom skillfully illustrates the way that the interactions between government policies, labor market institutions, and the economy have ensured that low pay remains a persistent problem within the United Kingdom.

A Volume in the Russell Sage Foundation Case Studies of Job Quality in Advanced Economies

CAROLINE LLOYD is a senior research fellow at the Economic and Social Research Council Centre on Skills, Knowledge, and Organizational Performance. GEOFF MASON is senior research fellow at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, London. KEN MAYHEW is fellow in economics at Pembroke College, Oxford.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780871545633
ISBN 10 0871545632
Title Low-wage Work in United Kingdom
Author Caroline Lloyd
Series Russell Sage Foundation Case Studies Of Job Quality In Advanced Economies
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Russell Sage Foundation
Year published 2008-04-03
Number of pages 312
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.