Pay-Setting Among Employers in Low-Paying Sectors

Through interviews with employers, the project aims to explore pay-setting in low-paying sectors, especially in the context of the pandemic, rises in prices, labour shortages, and Brexit.

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Summary & aims

The research was commissioned by the Low Pay Commission, an independent body that advises the Government about the National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage rates. The research will inform their annual report to the government making recommendations on the future level of the rates.

The research will explore pay-setting among employers in low-paying sectors, including pay levels, factors affecting pay, pay-setting, pay reviews, annual pay rounds, and their use of the National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage rates. It will also explore how this may have been impacted by Covid, rises in prices, staff shortages, and the new UK trading relationship with the EU.

Methodology

The research will be based on semi-structured interviews with 30 employers and a workshop with employers, employer bodies, trade unions and LPC commissioners. We will focus on four sectors: hospitality, retail, agriculture and cleaning.

Findings and Recommendations

The key findings of this research are:

  • Employer pay-setting behaviours varied by employer size and sectors, with smaller employers in particular having more informal and relatively unstructured pay-setting processes. Some employers interviewed reported paying employees above the NLW rates, with key reasons for that being staff recruitment and retention, and a desire tomake employees feel valued.
  • Some employers reported not using the NMW youth rates, due to concerns around fairness. Others chose not to use the NMW youth rates or specifically target younger workers in their recruitment as they felt that younger workers were not as productive as more senior workers and required more training. Those employers specified that they would not employ apprentices due to the extra responsibilities this would put on the staff in charge of training them.
  • The strategies that employers mentioned they use to absorb the NLW/NMW increases included increasing prices, reducing their workforce size, reducing pay rises or staff hours, finding efficiencies to reduce overheads, and using their own time or money to cover the gaps. Small and medium-sized employers reported finding it harder to absorb the annual increases in the NMW/NLW rates. Smaller employers were more likely to use short-term strategies or invest their own time and money, while some larger businesses spoke about more long-term solutions such as investing to improve productivity.
  • Employers described increasing challenges they experienced in the contexts of rising prices, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and Brexit. Some of those challenges included staff shortages, complications of supply chains, increasing costs and bureaucracy of exporting goods to Europe, operational difficulties, increasing costs of operating and changes to customer spending habits.
  • Employers found contextual challenges hard to disentangle. They instead reported it was the high rates of increase to the NMW/NLW, alongside compounding contextual impacts, that had made pay setting and employment more challenging of late.
  • Some employers reported having already recovered or found strategies to offset contextual challenges, while others, particularly small employers, raised concerns about their ability to absorb NMW/NLW increases in this context, and subsequently concerns for the future of their businesses.

Overall, the findings of this research highlight some challenges that employers, particularly small businesses, face in relation to NMW/NLW increases, with some reporting facing potential business closures or employment cuts. As this study is qualitative and based on a small sample, the findings are not quantifiable or generalisable. However, as the findings suggest that it is small employers who report potential business closures, it could be argued that this is unlikely to have an impact on employment on the aggregate level. This would be the case if workers were then moving to larger companies, as was observed by Dustmann and colleagues (2021). This research highlights some areas where further attention may be needed to support small businesses in managing the NMW/NLW increases, particularly in relation to impact on small business owners and safety of operations for workers.

Principal Investigator

Pay-Setting Among Employers in Low-Paying Sectors
Principal Social Researcher

Co-Investigator

Katharine Stockland
Senior Social Researcher
Ekaterina Aleynikova
Senior Social Researcher
Jasmin Rostron
Associate Social Researcher
Sophie Kitson
Assistant Social Researcher