Can you back that up with anything?it's because wages have been decimated during the past eight years, we have the dubious honour within OECD of being second to US for percentage of workers existing on minimum wage, close to the old days of
our Eurovision winning days, an honour which is a dishonour.
Our average per capita income is just below the OECD average and while there is a big gap between the top 20% and the bottom 20% we have high welfare rates and high earners pay very high income tax rates while low earners pay almost no income tax.
The reason we have an increased proportion of people on the minimum wage is that it acts as a floor on the market. We set that floor much higher than most countries so we will have more people at that level.
If you want fewer people on the minimum wage then lower the rate. If you increase the rate then you will have more people earning it. You will also have far more people with no job but that's a different discussion.
The last time I looked there were about 5% of earners on the minimum wage. What is it now?
Average earnings have dropped by 0.5% per hour and 2.5% per week over the last 5 years due to people working fewer hours. We have seem big increases in taxation and public sector employees have been forced to make a larger contribution to their pensions (though they still come nowhere near funding them) so take home pay rates have dropped. This is due to our insistence as a state that we continue to spend so much money running the country. If you want more money in your pocket then ask the government to waste less and generally stop doing things that people would be better off doing for themselves.
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