Labour losing race to the top on employment rights policy

So, the supposedly free-market Tories have had their Stalinist-sounding ‘long-term economic plan’, and now Labour has a ‘better economic plan’. Towards the end of the latter, a chapter entitled ‘Supporting firms to win the race to the top, not get dragged into a race to the bottom’, states:

Too often it is assumed that the only way for firms in sectors such as retail, hospitality and social care to compete is by cutting employee pay and conditions. But many firms in these sectors want to be able to compete through higher skill, higher wage business models, without being undercut and dragged into a race to the bottom.

The [Coalition] Government has actively encouraged a race to the bottom by weakening the UK’s enforcement regime and promoting a hire-and-fire culture: doubling the qualification period for unfair dismissal, introducing fees for employment tribunals, and setting up a controversial scheme whereby employees trade their employment rights in return for a share in the company.

[Labour’s new industrial strategy] is about giving employers the tools they need to raise standards, and also protect them from being undercut, by raising the minimum wage, ending the abuse of zero-hours contracts, and making it illegal to use agency workers to undercut wages and conditions.

Bafflingly, there’s no further mention of – let alone any pledge to reverse – that doubling of the unfair dismissal qualifying period. Nor is there any mention of Labour’s previous pledge to reform the tribunal fees that have done so much damage to the ‘enforcement regime’. Given that employer lobby groups such as the CBI and FSB have openly called for the hefty fees to be substantially lowered, this is an astonishing omission from what is clearly intended to be a business-friendly document.

Indeed, once you cut through the rather repetitive references to ‘the race to the bottom’ and ‘raising our ambitions for the domestically-traded sectors’, there are precious few commitments to policy reform that might actually help achieve the plan’s lofty goals. Apart from reiterating both welcome plans to “encourage more employers to pay a living wage” and the disappointingly modest pledge to “increase the minimum wage to £8 an hour before 2020”, the 80-page document sets out just three broad policy pledges specific to “reducing the pressures employers face to get dragged into a race to the bottom”:

1. Banning the abuse of zero-hours contracts: giving workers on zero-hours contracts new legal rights to be protected from employers forcing them to be available at all hours, insisting they cannot work for anyone else, or cancelling shifts at short notice without compensation, and giving workers on zero-hours contracts who are actually working regular hours week-in week-out a right to a contract with fixed minimum hours. We will also introduce a new Acas Code of Practice [on zero-hours contracts].

This is all very well, but – as I’ve previously noted elsewhere and the document itself recognises just two paragraphs later, in relation to enforcement of the minimum wage – there is no point having rules if they are not enforced. And, presumably, the only way to enforce these proposed new rules would be for individual workers to pursue a tribunal claim against their abusive employer. Which very few workers would be likely to do, even without the fees of up to £1,200 on which the document is so surprisingly silent. So, new Labour ministers could huff and puff all they like, but their shiny new rules wouldn’t blow many rogue employers down.

2. Tackling undercutting by rogue employment agencies: taking action to crack down on rogue agencies that exploit workers illegally for profit – for example through a licensing system that ensures agencies are complying with basic standards or stopped from operating; extending the Gangmasters Licensing Authority approach to cover sectors where there is evidence of high levels of migrant labour and exploitative working practices; and closing the loophole in the Agency Workers Directive that allows agency workers to be used to undercut employees.

This is more encouraging, even if it is somewhat ill-defined. However, both the employer lobby groups and past Labour ministers have been strongly against extending the GLA’s licensing regime to other sectors – with good reason. And, since 2010, Coalition ministers have reduced the BIS employment agency standards inspectorate to a rump of just three staff. So it’s not at all clear who Ed Miliband, Rachel Reeves and Chuka Umunna think would do all the cracking down. In short, there’s a lot of work yet to be done on this policy pledge if it’s to become more than a vague sop to the TUC, which has stuck rigidly to its call to extend the GLA regime.

3. Ensuring proper enforcement of the rules: there is no point in having rules if they are not enforced. Under this Government, the number of inspections into whether the National Minimum Wage was being paid has more than halved and there have been just two prosecutions since 2010. There is widespread agreement that better enforcement would support employers that play by the rules. Labour will improve this by: increasing the fines for breaching the minimum wage to £50,000; extending the remit of the HMRC minimum wage unit to cover holiday pay; giving councils a role in enforcement; and trebling the fines for knowingly employing illegal migrants.

The last of this third set of policy actions is little more than dog whistle politics, but there’s a good case for capitalising on the local, front-line knowledge of councils in order to improve enforcement of the NMW. And extending the HMRC unit’s remit to cover holiday pay is something I suggested in 2011, as an obvious first step in incrementally fusing the HMRC unit and the GLA into a genuine fair employment agency; more recently, it was a recommendation of the June 2014 report on low pay by Alan Buckle.

But Labour are kidding themselves – and the voting public – if they think that increasing the maximum penalty for breaching the NMW to £50,000 will have more than a marginal impact. For the penalty is set at 100 per cent of the total arrears owed, and in all but a handful of cases that sum is relatively small, and certainly well below £50,000. For example, among the 162 NMW-flouting firms named and shamed by BIS to date, including the tranche of 70 named today, the total arrears owed – and so the penalty imposed – was less than £10,000 in 154 cases, and exceeded the current maximum of £20,000 in just four cases. And, as they each involved a number of workers, those four cases would have been more than adequately covered by the Government’s proposed new maximum penalty of £20,000 per underpaid worker, set out in the Small Business, Enterprise & Employment Bill and almost certain to become law before Parliament is dissolved on 30 March.

Of course, Labour could increase the penalties by increasing the penalty rate from 100 per cent of the arrears owed to, say, 200 per cent. But that’s quite different to what Labour are saying they would do, and might be quite hard to justify when, in the vast majority of cases, the total sum owed in underpayments is relatively small, and the employer is a (very) small business. Among the 162 firms named and shamed by BIS, the average underpayment per worker was just £306.11, and no fewer than 35 of the 162 firms are hairdressers or beauty salons. We’re (mostly) not talking big corporates here.

All in all, Labour’s ‘better economic plan’ is depressingly short on credible, fully-formed (and costed) policy ideas for halting the race to the bottom in pay and working conditions. The good news is that I’m available to help sort that out, and my daily rate is a lot less than Jack Straw’s.

Waiting for your call, Chuka.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Labour’s contract killing

Earlier this week, I was offered a contact. Which, sadly, doesn’t happen as often as my bank manager or my family would like. And, in any case, there wasn’t any money involved. At least, not for me.

On the plus side, the contract was offered to me by none other than the leader of the Labour Party, Ed Miliband. Yes! Me and Ed, bound together by a contract signed in brotherly blood. Well, me, Ed and a few thousand other people. Maybe tens of thousands. Quite a lot of brotherly and sisterly blood, then. Ed might need a transfusion.

As contracts go, it’s quite short – just ten brief clauses, each one a policy pledge by Ed. And, being a workplace rights nerd, I was pleasantly surprised to find that no fewer than three of the pledges relate to workplace rights. However, the wording of those three clauses left me with both a sinking feeling in my stomach, and a strong desire to bash my head against the nearest wall. Let’s take each of the workplace rights pledges in turn.

Ban exploitative zero-hours contracts

Well, I’ve already written elsewhere about Labour’s fumbling towards a credible position on the exploitative use of zero-hours contracts, so I’m not going to add much here. Suffice to say, Ed and his team are going to have to wake up to the fact that, whilst it’s very easy to make speeches criticising the exploitative use of zero-hours contracts, in practice (and in law) it is not so easy to distinguish between the exploitative and the fair use of such contracts. The very same paper zero-hours contract could be used entirely differently by two separate employers – one in a way that benefits both the employer and the employee, and one in a way that benefits only the employer and simply exploits (and quite possibly brings severe hardship to) the employee. That’s a conundrum that won’t be solved by sloganeering.

Make work pay by strengthening the Minimum Wage

Well, yes, but what does ‘strengthening’ the NMW actually mean? In the hope that someone in Labour might provide an answer, earlier this week I put the question out on Twitter. And Antonia Bance – a former Labour parliamentary candidate – promptly responded by suggesting that it means “raising & enforcing [the NMW]”.  Well, yes, but raise it by how much, and better enforce it how? To which Antonia’s response was: “I don’t think we ‘ll know the answers to questions of detail unless Labour get into government”, and “broad promises that show direction of travel & values are thought more effective than detailed pledges”.

So it would seem. But to my mind, the votes of the more than one million workers paid at or just above the NMW rate are much more likely to be captured by a specific promise of a new, higher rate than they are by a ‘broad promise showing direction of travel’. George Osborne is on record as saying he believes Britain can ‘afford’ a rate of £7.00 per hour, without any significant negative labour market consequences, and if George Osborne thinks that then it’s surely not too much to expect a Labour government elected in May 2015 to go at least that far. Furthermore, from £7.00 per hour it’s really not that far to the Living Wage rate (outside London) of £7.65 per hour. So why not make an explicit commitment to an immediate hike in the NMW rate to £7.00 or even £7.50, and to achieving parity with the Living Wage by 2020?

Yes, that would imply making the Low Pay Commission redundant. But perhaps the Commission’s budget would be better spent enforcing the NMW, rather than just talking about it and (mostly) recommending below inflation increases. Government ministers routinely make decisions with far greater economic implications than what the NMW rate should be, and the long-term future of the NMW rate could be secured by writing into legislation an annual uprating at least as great as inflation. It’s really not rocket science.

Tackle the abuse of migrant labour to undercut wages, by banning recruitment agencies that only hire foreign workers

This is the one that really made me want to bang my head against a brick wall. For, leaving aside (for Jonathan Portes and others) the question of whether migrant labour does actually  ‘undercut wages’, the proposed ban is so patently nuts that this clause of Ed’s contract looks like nothing more than a shameful case of dog-whistle politics. Because, if hiring only foreign workers were to become illegal, what proportion of indigenous workers would a recruitment agency have to hire to be legal? One per cent? Ten per cent? Fifty per cent? Fifty-one per cent?

And, were any such arbitrary figure to be (foolishly) enshrined in law, who would police it? Under the Coalition, the BIS Employment Agency Standards Inspectorate has been reduced to a rump of just two inspector-level staff. Would Ed’s contract deliver any more human and other resources for enforcement of new (and the existing) rules?

Again, earlier this week I put these questions out on Twitter, in the hope that someone in Labour might be willing to provide some answers. When they didn’t, I put my questions direct to John McTernan, the fearsome Labour thinker and strategist with the self-appointed task of keeping Tony Blair’s halo shiny and bright. And, whilst first noting that he is “not my brother or sister’s keeper”, John was frank enough to say: “I think there are worse things than foreign workers. Like non-enforcement of [the] NMW”. Hear hear to that.

So, I will keep on posing these (and other) questions, in the hope that someone in Ed Miliband’s team might stop and think these silly contract promises through before they find their way into the manifesto for May 2015. Because, to my mind, that would be a serious mistake that might just blow up in some shadow minister’s face at some point during what is clearly going to be a tough and dirty election campaign. Or maybe Antonia is right when she says the party manifestos “will be meaningless this time because of possible coalition”.

Now that really is a depressing thought.