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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
Ben Glaze

10,000 firms back Real Living Wage - but 4.8 million workers still paid below threshold

Real Living Wage campaigners have today announced they had reached the milestone of 10,000 firms agreeing to pay staff boosted rates.

Research shows the drive has put more than £1.8billion in extra wages into the pockets of low-paid grafters since the crusade began 20 years ago.

But, as the campaign enters its third decade, some 4.8 million workers - one in six - is still paid below the Real Living Wage, as families battle the cost-of-living crisis.

Living Wage Foundation director Katherine Chapman said: “Reaching 10,000 Living Wage Employers is an historic milestone for the Living Wage movement.

“Since the campaign’s beginnings 20 years ago, Living Wage accreditation has become a benchmark of responsible business in the UK, shaping the debate on low pay and changing the lives of hundreds of thousands of people across the country with a wage that delivers dignity.

One in three have no idea what they pay monthly for bills (In Pictures Ltd./Corbis/Getty Images)

“As inflation hits new highs, the Living Wage movement is more vital than ever.

“We are facing the worst income squeeze on record and no one will feel it more sharply than the nearly five million people in low-paid and insecure jobs, already struggling on tight budgets.

“It's crucial that employers who can afford it protect those who will be most affected by price rises by paying a wage based on the cost of living.”

Hailing the 10,000th landmark, Trades Union Congress general secretary Frances O’Grady said: “This is an important milestone – every worker should be paid a decent wage they can build a life on.

“But millions are in jobs that don’t pay the bills or put food on the table, and successive Conservative governments have overseen a decade of standstill wages and cuts to social security, leaving millions at the mercy of soaring bills and prices.

“With Britain in the middle of a cost-of-living crunch, it’s time for the Government to act.”

The voluntary rate paid by organisations accredited with the Living Wage Foundation is £9.90 an hour, rising to £11.05 in London, where costs are higher.

Analysts calculate the level by taking into account costs like housing, travel and healthy food, and extras like kids’ birthday presents.

In contrast, the legal minimum rate for over-25s across the UK is £9.50 through the National Living Wage.

Nearly 350,000 employees work for Living Wage Foundation accredited organisations.

The movement has pumped an extra £1.8bn in extra wages into workers’ wallets since 2002, according to a Cardiff Business School study.

Latest organisations to accredit with the Foundation include Greater Manchester-based social care charity The Fed and the Royal Albert Hall.

The Hall’s chief executive Craig Hassall said: “We know that staff who feel supported at work provide the best experiences for our customers and visitors to the Hall, and paying the London Living Wage is a way for us to demonstrate to our staff that we really value them.”

The Fed’s boss Mark Cunningham said: “We believe, certainly from working over the last two years through a pandemic, that the people who work in social care are heroes all the time.

“It’s a difficult job, it’s an amazing job - and we wanted to make sure that we were alongside other employers in Greater Manchester in paying the Real Living Wage.”

A Government spokesperson said: “The Government is determined to make work pay and in April we increased the National Living Wage to £9.50, the largest ever increase since its introduction in 2016. Thanks to the action we’ve taken, unemployment continues to fall and there are more employees on payrolls than ever before.

“In the long-term, we are committed to building a high skilled, high wage economy that delivers on our ambition to make the UK the best place in the world to work.”

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