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UK PM, Boris Johnson
Britain’s minimum wage is to increase by more than four
times the rate of UK inflation from next year, Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s
government announced Tuesday.
A 6.2-percent increase from April takes the so-called
national living wage for workers aged 25 and over from £8.21 to a minimum £8.72
($10.79 to $11.52, 9.63 euros to 10.27 euros).
Johnson, whose Conservative party’s recent general election
victory came with support from economically struggling pro-Brexit areas, said
it was the biggest increase since 2016.
The new government said almost three million people would
benefit from the increase.
UK annual inflation stands at 1.5 percent, with consumers’
purchasing power under pressure from higher import prices following the EU
referendum in 2016, which has weighed on the pound.
Johnson has been advised to repay the trust of voters in
more disadvantaged areas, particularly in northern England, after he secured
the Conservatives biggest majority since the 1980s.
The December 12 vote saw swathes of working class,
traditionally left-wing Labour-supporting places, switch to the right-wing
Tories because of Brexit.
During the election campaign, Johnson pledged more
investment to reverse nearly 10 years of austerity measures under his
predecessors.
But the British Chambers of Commerce said above-inflation
pay increases came at a difficult time for hard-pressed businesses amid
economic uncertainty.
“Raising wage floors will pile further pressure on cashflow
and eat into training and investment budgets,” said the trade body’s
co-executive director Hannah Essex.
“For this policy to be sustainable, government must offset
these costs by reducing others and impose a moratorium on any further upfront
costs for business.” (AFP)