Amid the hubbub of the holiday shopping season, activists in the
United Kingdom have been surreptitiously calling on the nation's largest
retailers to raise their wages and "stop scrooging" their employees.
Activists with the campaign, which launched in early December and
will continue through the New Years shopping rush, are replacing the
price tags at Britain's most profitable chains with fake labels
demanding corporate store owners adopt a live wage, which they estimate
is £7.85 in the UK or £9.15 in London (which roughly equals $12.21 and
$14.23). The national minimum wage in the UK is £6.50, or about $10, an
hour.
According to one of the campaign organizers, the UK-based group Share
Action, retail is responsible for 28 percent of the more than 5 million
workers in the UK who are paid less than a living wage.
"Many of these hard working people are managing two, even three jobs, as well as trying to raise a family," said
St. John's Reverend Graham Hunter, a living wage campaigner with the
civil society coalition Citizen UK. "The living wage rewards people with
a fair day’s pay for a hard day’s work, and is calculated using a
social consensus on what people need to live, not simply exist hand to
mouth."
Among the companies being targeted in British luxury purveyor Marks
& Spencer, international clothes retailer Primark, and supermarket
giant Morrisons.
"The companies being targeted in #StopScrooging
are part of this global trend of stripping working rights and holding
down pay at the lower end — whilst at the same time happily lavishing
executive bonuses on people at the top," Luke Hildyard, the deputy
director of the High Pay Commission, told VICE News.
Since the campaign began, two of the targeted retailers have agreed to discuss the possibility of joining the over 1,000 UK-based businesses that
have pledged to pay the living wage. The wage is calculated annually by
the Center for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University.
The Center first determines a 'poverty threshold wage' and then adds a
15 percent margin to ensure that the recipients do not fall to the level
of poverty wages.
Vice News reports: "While
the UK's government has been furiously cutting the welfare bill in an
attempt to tackle the budget deficit, which is at £14.1 billion ($22
billion), and talking up the amount of new jobs that have been created,
the reality is that despite record employment levels, 14 million people
now live in poverty, and rely on in-work benefits to survive, instead of
just out of work benefits."
from here with photos
This account mirrors those from the Americas, Europe, Asia, Africa - anywhere you care to mention. Problems with wages. We all live within the capitalist system and, as workers, we are the producers of all the wealth that is created. Socialists call for equal access to that wealth for everyone, regardless of the particular work they do. The division in world society is that between the capitalist minority and the rest of us - the vast majority, not between different sectors of the working population.
Let's make 2015 the year that we, the workers of the world, stand in solidarity and call not for a hike in wages but for the abolition of the wages system altogether - and a world in common.
JS
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