Co-sign Ed's letter to the Guardian on the Living Wage
In Britain in 2010, over 5 million workers are paid under £7 an hour. And yet, studies show that people need £7.60 -- at the very, very least -- to fulfil their most basic needs: food, clothing and housing. The Labour Party, even in opposition, is in a position to do something about this injustice -- and to campaign to transform the lives of some of the lowest paid workers in the country. Please co-sign Ed's letter, below, to the Guardian:
Dear Sir,
With the coalition government set on jeopardising the anti-poverty gains made under the last government, it will increasingly fall to Labour councils to show what tackling poverty should look like.
It is no great mystery why 57% of children living in poverty do so despite having at least one member of their household in work. Endemic low pay and working poverty continue to blight the lives of millions of ordinary working people across Britain.
Paying a Living Wage is one solution to the problems of working poverty and a means of moving away from a labour market defined by a large number of low-paid jobs.
Labour Councils have led the way, with local authorities including Camden, Ealing, Glasgow, Greenwich, Hackney, Islington, Lambeth, Lewisham, Oxford, Preston, Southwark, Tower Hamlets and Waltham Forest already moving towards becoming Living Wage employers.
These and other pioneering Labour Groups have taken up the Living Wage not only because of the concept’s moral force and the dignity it provides to those in work, but because of the strong economic case underlying it - increased productivity, lower staff turnover, fewer sick days taken by staff and the benefits that flow to local businesses when low-paid workers have more income to spend on the necessities of life.
Many will question whether implementing the Living Wage is possible in the context of the coalition’s deep cuts to the public sector. There is no doubt it will be a long and hard journey. But we feel that making a commitment to getting there is not only a moral imperative but an essential step in tackling Britain’s low pay culture and the poverty that too often accompanies it.
Signed:
Ed Miliband
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