Thursday 27 February 2014

Should we increase the minimum wage?


Switzerland is considering a minimum wage equivalent to £14.81 per hour, reports The Daily Express.


As I know little of life in Switzerland, I will consider the likely impact of such a move here in the United Kingdom.


The minimum wage became law in this country back in the late 1990s, and currently stands at £6.31 per hour.  This equates to an annual pre-tax salary of around £9800 for someone normally working thirty hours each week, or roughly £11,500 for someone normally working thirty-five hours each week.


Whether or not £9800 can be regarded as a comfortable salary depends on personal circumstances.  A young adult living with parents might not need much of an income, and likewise a married person whose spouse also has an income.  Nevertheless many people find it very hard to subsist on the minimum wage.


I can remember the debate in the 1990s about whether or not Britain should have a minimum wage.  Opponents offered various arguments, one of which was that it would result in either unemployment rising or else unemployment falling only very slowly.  I accept that there is something in that argument, but all the same I have a strong objection to working people living in poverty when they could be earning a comfortable wage.


If you are earning a low salary, then it is possibly because your employer has very little money.  Alternatively it might be because your employer has lots of money but prefers to spend its money on fat cat salaries for senior staff rather than on a comfortable salary for everyone.


If the United Kingdom had a minimum wage of £14.81 per hour, then someone who normally works thirty hours per week would earn an annual pre-tax salary in the region of £23,100.  On the one hand there would be far less poverty among working people if the minimum wage were higher, but on the other hand it is hard to avoid the conclusion that a higher minimum wage would make it very hard for unemployed people to find jobs.


Opponents of a minimum wage often argue that the way to combat poverty among the poorly paid is to have a system of in-work benefits such as tax credits, but I have two objections to this.  The first is that in-work benefits cannot be relied upon as a source of income, because the government can easily cut the amount of help available to the impoverished members of the work force.  The second is that tax credits are unfair to people whose income varies throughout the year.  It is easy to end the year having received too much money in tax credits, even if you were entirely honest about your income.  Having to repay tax credits feels like a gross insult, especially when the overpayment was accidental.


Rather than increasing the minimum wage, a sensible government should look towards a more flexible approach.  Employers should be banned from paying large salaries to senior staff unless not one of their employees earn less than – let us say – 140 percent of the minimum wage.  (This would currently equate to £8.83 per hour – roughly £13,800 per annum for someone working thirty hours each week.)


Such a system would not be perfect, but would have obvious benefits.  First, it would reduce the number of working people who would live in poverty.  Second, it would not apply to companies which were genuinely short of money, and so would be unlikely to push up the level of unemployment.


Some readers might be thinking that such a system would remain unfair.  Someone who works for a company with little money might still earn a salary which makes it hard for them to subsist, and that is true.  It is highly unlikely that any one system will completely eradicate poverty.  The ideal solution is to have a system which minimises poverty.

Tuesday 25 February 2014

Our fellow-travelling national press

I have just spent some time reading some comments on The Guardian website by one of their established writers.  It is interesting.

This man - I do not care to name him - openly despises the British National Party, the National Front, the English Defence League, and the now-defunct British Freedom Party.  However he does not appear to despise the Labour Party, even after its links to the Paedophile Information Exchange have been widely publicised in the national press.  Here are some examples of his point of view.

Reporting on a demonstration by the BNP, he condemns the police for arresting members of a communist counter-protest after they dared to move out of an area allocated to them by the police.  However this condemnation appears to derive not from any sense of fairness, but rather from a belief that communists should be allowed free rein.  I have known of instances of BNP supporters - and National Front supporters - being harrassed by the police, and yet I do not see the national newspapers offering them any sympathy.

Reporting on the austerity crisis in Greece, he condemns the fact that the political party Golden Dawn organises food banks for Greeks only.  However he does not condemn the mainstream political parties for creating the situation in which people are forced to rely on food banks.

I am British.  If I lived in Greece I would be a foreigner.  I would not object to Golden Dawn or anyone else giving priority to the native population when it comes to helping ordinary people to cope with the evil effects of misrule by evil politicians.

This journalist also praises the communist organisation Hope Not Hate, but does not comment on the inanity of its name.  I am not the first person to point out that hope is the opposite not of hate but of despair.  For me, the name suggests that we should not hate the evil politicians who have ruined the lives of so many ordinary people, but rather we should hope against hope that things will improve if we keep on voting for communist trash.

I never buy a copy of any national newspaper, and neither will I pay to read any of them online.  I hope that every single one of our national newspapers will either start to talk sense or else go out of business.  Maybe one day the people who write for our national newspapers will find themselves relying on food banks.  But whose fault would that be?

This previous post is on a similar theme:
Police and muslims: get real

Friday 21 February 2014

Do fat cats suffer from depression?



White Dee from Benefits Street is supposedly suffering from depression, but some people argue that she is not.  Meanwhile the chief executive of Somerset County Council has quit her job by mutual agreement.


According to The Daily Mail, Sheila Wheeler was absent from her desk from mid-November up until her recent departure.  So far no clear explanation has been offered for either her absence or her departure, and it appears that legal proceedings make it unlikely that a clear explanation will ever be offered.


It is reported also that her salary was £160,000 per annum, which by my reckoning is close to thirteen times the minimum wage.


The job market is not fair.  If you are unable to read, then you will not be employed as a postman, and clerical work will probably be off limits as well.  If you are tone deaf, then no one will employ you as a musician.  If you are unable to walk, then your employment opportunities are also limited.


And so I come to depression, which is hard to define.  Physical ailments generally have physical symptoms and bio-chemical causes which can be studied and understood.  By contrast, depression is hard to study with any precision.  Indeed it is very hard to be certain that someone is suffering from depression, and certainly a lot of people do not believe that White Dee is depressed.


Of course it is hard to be absolutely certain that someone is illiterate or tone deaf, but people do not tend to use either condition to justify taking time off work.  By contrast it is common for people to use depression and stress as reasons not to work.  Consider this testimony regarding a company founded by Samantha Brick:


Making close to half a million in our first year should have meant profit, but this was wiped out by high salaries and accounting errors by staff. Then, when we began having cash-flow problems, Sarah [the general manager] signed herself off sick with stress for a month. She also confessed she'd been dodging calls from people who were due payment, thus ruining my firm's reputation.

Another thing we do not know is whether or not some people are more susceptible to depression than other people.
 
I repeat that we do not know for certain why Sheila Wheeler was off work for three months, or why she left.  What we do know is that when we add in her payoff equivalent to three months’ salary, she has effectively deprived the council of six months’ salary – and this is a fat cat salary we are talking about.


People who earn fat cat salaries should not be allowed to take time off work suffering from depression except in very restricted cases.  If you are going to pay someone a large salary, then it should be on the basis that they deserve a large salary.  It is only fair that people who are deemed to deserve large salaries should be largely immune to depression.  If we have to suffer the existence of fat cats, then at least they should not also be prima donnas.

As a final point, it is utterly wrong that we are not allowed to know the reason for Sheila Wheeler's departure.  It is common for workplace disputes to be resolved in a way that binds both parties to confidentiality, but that should not apply in the public sector.  We have the right to know what our money is being wasted on.

Related previous posts include:
Fat cats in Cambridgeshire
The way out of Benefits Street

Tuesday 18 February 2014

Denmark joins the renegades

A renegade is someone who walks away from a collective identity, such as a religion or nationality.  Denmark is not strictly a renegade nation.  It was a founder member of the Council of Europe and joined what is now the European Union in 1973.  It remains a member of both, but has recently taken the decision to outlaw halal and kosher slaughter.

These methods of slaughter are both required by religious custom - Islamic and Jewish respectively.  Both are widely perceived to be cruel.  An animal in a slaughterhouse is normally stunned prior to being killed, but both of these methods of slaughter require that the animal is either not stunned or else not adequately stunned.  Halal killed animals are sometimes stunned lightly so as to prevent them from resisting when their throats are cut, but they regain consciousness as they bleed to death.

I welcome this new law in Denmark not merely because I happen to oppose these methods of slaughter, but because it is a law which has been opposed by certain interest groups who tend to get far too much their own way.

Russia has strict laws about homosexual propaganda, and Uganda is considering bringing in even more strict laws about homosexuality.  The Gambia left the Commonwealth last year, apparently because its president objected to the British government promoting sodomy among member states.

I care little about whether or not these various laws make sense in themselves.  After all there is perhaps not one country in the world which does not have some laws I might find offensive.  The important thing for me is that these countries are prepared to defy international pressure to make laws which make sense to them - or at least to their governments.

These countries are the renegades.  They have walked away from international consensus, and dare to think for themselves.  Maybe the United Kingdom could now do the same.

Related previous posts include:
Why only three hours Mr Putin?
Vlad, get a life.

Monday 17 February 2014

The archbishop speaks out

I have long since become accustomed to Britain's church leaders speaking out on some political topic or another, and time and again I find myself not in any way surprised that church attendances nowadays aren't what they were.

Archbishop Vincent Nichols has recently been speaking out against the government's welfare reforms, and he has been rewarded with the invective of tabloid journalist Dominic Lawson.

Dominic Lawson is the son of the evil former government minister Nigel Lawson, but of course he is not responsible for his parentage.

The archbishop has quite rightly observed that many people in Britain are going hungry as a result of welfare reforms.  In reply, Lawson notes that the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Iain Duncan Smith, is himself a practising Catholic.  I have some questions for him.

If the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions is really a Catholic, then why does he serve in a government which condones abortion on demand?  And what about homosexual marriage?

I do not know where the Roman Catholic Church stands on mendacity, but the present government tells one lie after another.  For example a senior civil servant recently maintained that benefits sanctions are imposed only as a last resort.  That is utterly not true.  They are commonly imposed as a first resort.

Lawson continues:

It’s nonsense to say that there is no longer ‘a safety net’ when the state is currently spending £94 billion a year on working age benefits; and the time processing benefits claims — the most cited reason for destitution — has actually improved over the past few years.  The official figures are that 92 per cent of them are processed on time; in 2009/10 it was as low as 86 per cent.


Maybe Dominic Lawson would like to discuss his views with some of the many victims of benefits sanctions.  Also, if the number of benefits claims being processed in good time is as low as 92 percent, then surely someone somewhere should be held to account.

Lawson also suggests that food bank dependency is linked to fixed odds betting terminals, but he does not call for these  dreadful machines to be outlawed.

Lawson attempts to justify the welfare reforms by making reference to the public sector net debt of over £1.2 trillion - but he does not mention the fact that the government was only recently trying to commit this country to yet another illegal war.
Maybe Dominic Lawson would like to explain why the government cannot seek to reform its finances by adopting a stance of armed neutrality, abolishing overseas aid, and not paying excessive salaries to government ministers and civil servants who cannot work out how to assess welfare claims in good time.

I somehow suspect that Mr Lawson is no more of an economist than his evil father.  As for the archbishop, I will admit that he is right on this occasion.

Related previous posts include:



Friday 14 February 2014

The weather, dear boy, the weather

One of the most frequently heard quotes in British politics is the one attributed to Harold Macmillan (who was our Prime Minister more than fifty years ago): events, dear boy, events.  It is not known for certain that he ever uttered those words, but they are words that anyone who is interested in politics needs to learn about at some point.

As I write, the coalition government is in a mess.  The Conservatives  and Liberal Democrats have both seen their vote share fall in the recent by-election in Greater Manchester.  Both parties were outpolled by UKIP who took second place, and the Liberal Democrats failed to reach the five percent threshold needed to recover their deposit.

There will be a general election next year, and it is looking very much as though the Conservatives will lose a lot of seats, while the Liberal Democrats could realistically lose all of their seats.  The next big test of public opinion in this country will be the local elections and the European Parliament elections, both of which are expected to take place late in May.  UKIP are expected to poll well in the European Parliament elections, and so the Tories and LibDems will presumably be hoping for a favourable outcome in the local elections.

There are a number of factors which influence the popularity of the ruling party, but right now the floods are a major factor.  Much of Britain is affected by flooding, notably the south coast, the south west, and the Thames valley - and yet the weather still refuses to improve.  Rain and high winds are forecast for many areas.

The government cannot control the weather, although a lot of politicians clearly expect us to think otherwise.  What governments can do is to take seriously the likelihood of severe weather.  A lot of the victims of the recent flooding have been protesting that the government failed to dredge rivers.  While dredging rivers can make a difference though, the difference is often minimal.  It can reduce the severity of flooding, but is unlikely to prevent it altogether.

There have been calls for money currently being spent on overseas aid to be used instead to help flood victims, and yet the government offers us platitudes instead.  Then again, I wonder how many of the flood victims voted at the last general election for a political party which sought to abolish overseas aid so that the money could instead be spent in this country to the benefit of our own people.

I strongly suspect that the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties are doomed to fare very badly in the elections in May.  Even if the weather were to take a turn for the better in the next day or two, they would probably be on course for a setback.  Every day the severe weather continues is likely to translate into an extra dozen or so Conservative or Liberal Democrats losses in the local elections - not that I care of course.

Relate previous posts include:
The politics of flooding
Somerset matters more than Sochi
The road to Wythenshawe

Thursday 13 February 2014

Are private school fees a waste of money?

For a nine-year-old, my daughter Matilda has very clear and precise ambitions. ‘When I grow up I’m going to marry a rich man,’ she declared last week. 'Then I’m going to have six children, two dogs and some ponies, and I’m going to live on a farm with a cottage for you in the garden.'

So writes Rachel Ragg in The Daily Mail today.

It appears that like so many people today Rachel Ragg and her husband are living close to the edge of their finances.  Yet while many people do so because they are genuinely short of money, this couple are struggling with the cost of sending their two children to fee-paying schools.  Their hope is that their son will one day be able to earn enough to allow him to support a non-working wife, and that their daughter will one day meet and be able to marry a man who will earn enough to support her as a non-working wife.

I will say nothing against women aspiring to be stay-at-home mothers, but I cannot help but wonder to what extent it makes sense for people to struggle with money.

Take the Kercher family for example.  They struggled to meet the cost of putting their four children through private schools, and yet one of those children is famous for drowning in her own blood in Perugia.

While it is unusual for ex-public school pupils to be murdered at a young age, it is far more common for people - including graduates - to struggle to find work.  It is also common for people who do find work - including graduates - to struggle with money - even if they do not put their children through expensive schools.

Let us consider some hard facts.  Your chances of earning a large salary are perhaps improved by going to an expensive school, but they are also dependant on the state of the job market when you graduate.

If you graduate when the economy is doing well, then you might well be able to find work, even if you do not have a particularly good degree, and then perhaps be in full employment for life.  By contrast, if you graduate during a recession, then you might struggle to find work, even if you have a good degree.

If you are lucky enough to find work, then you might struggle to afford somewhere to live, especially given that a lot of jobs tend to be in the overcrowded south east of England.  It is therefore unsurprising that very few women graduates nowadays end up as stay-at-home mums.  Far too many of them need to work because their husbands do not earn enough to pay all of the bills.

It is common for people to make money through entreprise, and almost anyone can achieve - or fail - in business.  Having a public school education and a good degree are unlikely to be of much use to you if you are running a restaurant or a shop or a property development company.

Instead of squandering money on school fees, Rachel Ragg and her husband could save up money so as to help their children to be able to start up in business when they leave school at the age of sixteen.  Their school fees appear to be £3000 per term, which for two children is presumably £18,000 per annum.  Over twelve years of schooling - reception through to year eleven - that's in the region of £200,000.  You could do a lot with that sort of money at the age of sixteen.

Also, Rachel Ragg and her husband could perhaps make a donation of maybe a few hundred pounds each year to a political party whose policies include running the economy so that everyone can have a job and so that every family with children can afford to buy a house with just one salary coming in.

I don't expect they will.

Related previous posts include:

Monday 10 February 2014

A large family versus private landlords


A couple on benefits are being pursued by three private landlords for unpaid rent.


Amanda and Derek Finnigan, both 35, have seven children.  In recent years they have lived in a four-bedroom house (seven children share three bedrooms), a seven-bedroom house (seven children share six bedrooms), and a five-bedroom bungalow (seven children share four bedrooms).


I will not pretend to know the truth of the matter, but the Finnigans claim that at least one of their former landlords failed to carry out maintenance.  This I fear is a common failing of private landlords.


The fourth episode of Benefits Street shows the interior of the house formerly occupied by the man known as Fungi.  (He has since left the street.)  The house was in a dreadful state of disrepair.

Fungi was in receipt of housing benefit, but his landlord was the true beneficiary of that money.  In other words, the landlord is a huge benefit scrounger, who laps up taxpayer’s money while forcing his tenant to live in misery.

It is possible that Fungi’s landlord was Paul Nischal, who according to The Daily Mail owns houses on James Turner Street.  They quote one of his tenants (who works in a factory) as saying that his house is so damp that a cupboard fell off the kitchen wall, and so cold that his children have to go to bed fully dressed.

The Finnigans have predictably attracted a lot of bile from people who object to families raising children on benefits.  A common argument is that people should not have children unless they can afford to support them, but it is fair to say that according to that logic almost no one outside of the royal family should ever have children.  After all, a family who earn a large salary today might be living on benefits tomorrow.   Prosperity is seldom carved in stone.

Britain needs children.  Any society does.  Children today provide the work force of tomorrow.  Do we really want people not to have children?  Generally speaking, making nasty remarks about families on benefits is akin to stupidity.

An interesting feature of the Finnigans’ case is that it appears that their housing benefit was sometimes paid to them rather than directly to their landlord.  The government is currently in the process of bringing in a new benefits system known as Universal Credit.  So far as I can make out, one aspect of Universal Credit is that housing benefits will normally, perhaps invariably, be paid to the benefit claimant rather than to the landlord.

Maybe the government should amend the rules to ensure that housing benefit can still be paid directly to the landlord - but only if the landlord actually maintains the property.

Related previous posts include: