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Tory conference: National Living Wage to rise to £ 10.50, says chancellor – BBC News, BBC News

Tory conference: National Living Wage to rise to £ 10.50, says chancellor – BBC News, BBC News


        

            

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Media captionChancellor Sajid Javid: “We are the workers’ party “

Chancellor Sajid Javid has pledged to raise the National Living Wage to £ 10. 50 within the next five years.

He will also lower the age threshold for those who qualify from 25 to 21.

Speaking to a packed hall at the Tory Party Conference, Mr Javid said the policy would “help the next generation of go-getters to get ahead”. )

The current rate for over 25 s is £ 8. 21 – but the Living Wage Foundation says it should already be £ 9 across the UK and £ 10. 55 for those in London.

Earlier this year, Labor pledged to raise the National Living Wage to £ 10 an hour in 2020 and toinclude all workers under 18– who currently get a minimum wage of £ 4. 35

Labor’s shadow chancellor, John McDonnell, called Mr Javid’s announcement a “pathetic attempt at catch-up”.

Mr Javid also confirmed £ 25 bn for road projects, £ 220 m for bus improvements and £ 5bn for digital infrastructure in his speech, along with extra funding for youth services.

The Tories have made a raft of spending announcements so far at their party conference in Manchester.

But the conference has been overshadowed by allegations that Boris Johnson squeezed the thigh of a journalist during a lunch in 1999 – which the prime minister denies.

Charlotte Edwardes made the claims in a column in the Sunday Times, and said the PM did the same to another woman in the room.

The BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg said a rumor had been circulating at the conference the other woman was journalist Mary Wakefield – the wife of the PM’s chief adviser Dominic Cummings – but she released a statement saying “nothing like this ever happened to me”.

‘Party of labor’

With the prime minister looking on from the audience, Mr Javid told his party the living wage pledge would make the UK “the first major economy in the world to end low pay altogether”.

And he said cutting the threshold to 21 would “reward the hard work of all millennials”.

“The hard work of the British people really is paying off,” he said.

“It’s clear it’s the Conservatives who are the real party of labor – we are the workers’ party.”

                                                                                                      Image copyright                 PA Media                                                      
Image caption                                    Boris Johnson watched the speech from the audience in the conference hall                             

Business groups sounded a note of caution about the potential effects of the policy.

The CEO of the British Retail Consortium, Helen Dickinson, said there was “nothing wrong with targeting higher wages”, but “all of this adds to the cumulative pressures you have seen take their toll on the retail sector “.

Neil Leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance, a charity which represents nurseries, said:” A rise in the national living wage is fantastic for younger workers, but for the early years sector, this could be an additional cost that many providers will not be able to afford to bear. “

TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said the chancellor’s promise “should be taken with a huge bucket of salt.”

“This pledge would be overwhelmed by a no-deal Brexit,” she added. “If we leave the EU without a deal, jobs will be lost, wages will fall, and our public services will suffer.”

The National Living Wage was introduced by then Chancellor George Osborne in 2016, but the Living Wage Foundation argues the level should always have been higher in order to cover the real needs of employees and their families.

Director of the organization Katherine Chapman said nearly 6, 000 employers across the UK were already “going further than the legal minimum and paying a real Living Wage that covers the cost of living “.

Other pledges from the chancellor

Other pledges made by the chancellor included:

  • Confirming provisional pledges made by his predecessor for £ 25 bn to upgrade England’s road network
  • Funding of £ 220 m to improve bus networks
  • A £ 5bn boost to digital infrastructure, with an ambition to connect the hardest-to-reach 20% of the country – upping the earlier target of 10%

He also confirmed £ 500 m for youth services.

The Youth Investment Fund will be focused on building up to 60 new centers and refurbishing 360 old ones so that young people have “somewhere to go, something to do and someone to talk to”.

However, funding for youth services has fallen in real terms from more than £ (m in) / 12 to £ (m in) / 18 – meaning the pledge still does not return spending to the level of eight years ago.

                                                                                                                      
                                                                                                                      

“I’d guess that some businesses will worry this is the return of the magic money tree. But with them being asked to grow it … “

That was the response from one UK trade body boss to Sajid Javid’s announcement that he would give four million workers a pay rise by increasing the National Living Wage to £ 10. 50 an hour over the next five years.

Business leaders here at the Conservative Party conference are loathe to publicly object to the elimination of low pay (defined as anything below 66% of the median national average).

However, they are worried that the government is making eye-catching and vote winning promises while handing the bill for them to business.

In truth, the government wage promise is not as generous as it first looks. A promise made in 2018 to set the National Living Wage at 60% of the median income would have seen wages rise to nearly nearly £ 9. 50 by 2023 – so targeting £ 10. 50 by 2025 is fairly close the trajectory they were already on.

The biggest disappointment was the lack of detail on how exactly the government intends to cushion business against the costs of no-deal disruption.

Having talked this up in recent days, the head of the CBI, Carolyn Fairbairn, was not alone in saying she thought there had been a page missing from the Chancellor’s speech.

However, for the Chancellor to put numbers around an emergency package would have been to put a hefty price tag on no-deal. Something the government is understandably reluctant to do.

                                                                                                                      

‘It’s a matter of days’

Mr Javid also reiterated his government position of leaving the EU on 31 October, echoing the conference slogan of “Get Brexit Done”.

“We are leaving the European Union,” he said. “It’s not a matter of if, it’s a matter of days – 31 days, deal, or no deal. “

Earlier, in an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today program, he said the government had been working on “mitigations” which would allow it “to deal with many of the disruptions” of a no-deal.

He also promised ” a significant economic policy response “in such circumstances.

The BBC’s Norman Smith said that could mean tax cuts to help ease the potential impact.

            

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