From April, 2.7 million workers will get one of the biggest pay rises in UK history as the National Living Wage rises to £11.44 an hour. But will they feel better off?
It's 25 years since the National Minimum Wage was introduced. During that time it's credited with putting billions of extra pounds in the pockets of low-paid workers. But, despite that, according to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, two thirds of households living in poverty have at least one adult in work. And, according to the Institute for Fiscal studies, far from cutting the annual benefits bill, the cost of benefits paid to working families has ballooned since 1999 to about 50 billion pounds a year. So what's behind this low pay puzzle? And what can employers, governments and workers do to ensure that work pays? Pauline Mason investigates.
Presenter: Pauline Mason Producer: Ravi Naik Editor: Clare Fordham.
Contributors: Kate Bell, TUC Assistant General Secretary and former low pay commissioner Damian Grimshaw, Professor of Employment Studies, Kings College London and London & South Forum Co-Lead at the Productivity Institute Patricia Findlay, Distinguished Professor of Work and Employment Relations, University of Strathclyde, and Director of the Scottish Centre for Employment Research Matthew Fell, Low Pay Commissioner and Director of Competitiveness at BusinessLDN Nye Cominetti, Principal Economist, the Resolution Foundation James Cockett, Labour Market Economist, CIPD Margaret Esapa, Managing Director and owner, Cherry Care Services, Oxfordshire Conor Taylor, Director, Foresso
Will George Be King?
Scotland's Radical Land Reform
The Iran-Iraq War's Legacy
Can We Learn to Live with Nuclear Power?
What's Housing Benefit For?
Free Movement: Britain's Burning EU debate
Populism
Why do American police kill so many black men?
Samuel Scheffler on the Afterlife
Is it Time for the Internet to Grow Up?
How Gay Became OK
Making Invisibles Visible
Is the Pope a Communist?
Ritual Sexual Abuse: The Anatomy of a Panic (Part 2)
Ritual Sexual Abuse: The Anatomy of a Panic (Part 1)
The Edge
Company vs Country
Two-Nation Britain
Caring in the New Old Age
The End of Development
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Global News Podcast
The Infinite Monkey Cage
Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4
You’re Dead to Me
Elis James and John Robins