Article 66X2H These strikes are telling us something: the era of low wages may be over | Andy Beckett

These strikes are telling us something: the era of low wages may be over | Andy Beckett

by
Andy Beckett
from on (#66X2H)

Higher salaries would boost the UK economy and bring us in line with many other rich countries

For almost half a century, in other words within the limits of political memory, Britain has been a country where the priority of most governments has been to keep a few key economic numbers low. Income tax, interest rates, inflation and most people's wages: all were deliberately suppressed by Downing Street and its collaborators in business and the Bank of England. By doing so a space was created - in theory at least - for certain interest groups to flourish: employers, entrepreneurs, shareholders, top earners, homeowners and consumers. Together, they were supposed to boost our previously sluggish rate of economic growth.

It hasn't quite worked out like that. Britain is on the brink of recession yet again. Interest rates, taxes and inflation are all high. Only average wages are still low. And even that dubious achievement of British government and capitalism since the 1980s now feels fragile, with strikes solidifying and spreading across both private and state sectors, determinedly driven by workers who have finally had enough of years of falling pay. As Mick Lynch of the RMT union put it with characteristic pithiness on the Today programme last week: The price of labour isn't at the right price in this country."

Andy Beckett is a Guardian columnist

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