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Pivot or Pilot?: The Role of the Independent Members of Wages Councils*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2009
Abstract
Britain has no statutory minimum wage. There is a system of wages councils responsible for fixing statutory minimum rates in forty-one trades where wages are low relative to the average, opportunities for working overtime are variable and no adequate machinery for collective bargaining exists. A peculiar feature of this system is the presence of three independent members who form a third ‘side’ in council negotiations. This article looks back briefly over the seventy years of the existence of wages councils (originally trade boards) and the changes in function which have occurred albeit by implication rather than overtly. It then proceeds to examine the role of the independent members within the system as it is now. Do these ‘conciliators with a casting vote’ fulfil a useful function? The main problem facing them today is seen as the need to reconcile the original purpose of helping to fix a just (or less unjust) wage translated into contemporary terms with a remuneration which is reasonable and feasible under the circumstances prevailing within the trades covered by wages councils.
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References
1 “The fixing of a maximum wage was one of the functions of local bodies in the first half of the fourteenth century in England…But it was the Australian legislation of 1894 and 1896 that gave the impetus to the modern minimum wage legislation movement’ – Sells, Dorothy, The British Trade Boards System, P. S. King and Son, London, 1923, p. 1.Google Scholar
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