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Minimum wage: The Low Pay Commission backs a 3% increase | |
(35 minutes later) | |
The Low Pay Commission has recommended a 3% increase in the minimum wage to £6.50 an hour for adults, Business Secretary Vince Cable has told MPs. | The Low Pay Commission has recommended a 3% increase in the minimum wage to £6.50 an hour for adults, Business Secretary Vince Cable has told MPs. |
If the government accepts the proposal, it would be the first increase in real terms since 2008, Mr Cable said. | If the government accepts the proposal, it would be the first increase in real terms since 2008, Mr Cable said. |
"It is faster than inflation and that is the first time in six years that has happened," he said. | "It is faster than inflation and that is the first time in six years that has happened," he said. |
At present, the minimum wage is £6.31 an hour for adults and £5.03 an hour for 18 to 20-year-olds. | |
The government usually accepts the Low Pay Commission's recommendations. | |
In January Chancellor George Osborne told the BBC "I believe Britain can afford an above-inflation increase in the minimum wage, so we restore its real value for people, and so we have a recovery for all, and work always pays." | |
TUC General Secretary Frances O'Grady said: "This is a welcome increase in the minimum wage, which starts to recover some of the ground it has lost since 2008. | |
"We hope this is the first in a series of bolder increases that will give real help to the low paid, and not just a pre-election boost." | |
The British Chambers of Commerce has surveyed its member companies on their attitude towards raising the minimum wage. Its Executive Director of Policy Dr Adam Marshall said: "After years of pay restraint, companies now feel somewhat more confident when it comes to the question of pay. | |
"So while the Low Pay Commission's recommendation appears to be slightly higher than many employers had hoped, it represents a reasonable compromise." |