Irish Independent

Ireland’s minimum wage is second-highest in the European Union

Rihanna and LVMH suspend singer’s fashion line

- John Mulligan

IRELAND has the second-highest minimum wage across the EU, at €1,724 per month, according to Eurofound.

Luxembourg has the highest, at €2,202, the Dublin-based EU agency said in a new survey.

Ireland’s minimum wage was raised to €10.20 an hour from January this year for people aged 20 and over.

The rate here is recommende­d by the Low Pay Commission to the Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment.

“Decision-makers on minimum wages were faced with determinin­g the 2021 level of minimum wages in the context of challengin­g economic conditions, downward pressure on wages due to higher unemployme­nt, and great uncertaint­y about the economic projection­s for the months ahead,” said Christine Aumayr-Pintar, senior research manager with Eurofound.

“The dilemma for decision-makers – how to keep the purchasing power of the lowest paid high and ensure the adequacy of their pay, while safeguardi­ng jobs and businesses - is not a new one, but was aggravated and made more urgent during the [Covid] crisis,” she added.

The Eurofound study noted that some of the highest nominal increases in minimum wages during the past 12 months were recorded in counties where government­s had made earlier commitment­s through legislatio­n or pre-election promises, or where a pathway had been agreed in previous years with social partners.

A 16.3pc increase in Latvia, where the minimum wage is now €500 a month, had been negotiated in 2017.

Bulgaria has the lowest minimum wage amongst members, at €332 a month.

While no longer an EU member, the UK’s minimum wage stood at €1,765 a month in January, just slightly higher than that in Ireland.

In Germany, it’s €1,610 a month, while in The Netherland­s, it’s €1,685.

Since 2016, the minimum wage in Ireland has risen from €8.65 an hour to its current level.

Officials from the Irish Congress of Trade Unions walked out of the Low Pay Commission last year in protest at the proposed 10 cent increase.

LOUIS Vuitton owner LVMH and music star Rihanna have agreed to suspend her fashion line Fenty less than two years after its launch, the French luxury goods giant said yesterday.

LVMH said in a statement that Fenty’s ready-to-wear activity, based in Paris, would be “put on hold” pending better conditions – a rare setback for the luxury group, which has weathered the coronaviru­s crisis better than most rivals.

The R&B singer and LVMH launched the Fenty fashion brand in May 2019, only the second time the French group had set a label up from scratch as it looked to tap soaring demand for luxury celebrity collaborat­ions.

LVMH did not elaborate on the reasons for hitting the pause button but after a big launch and debut collection, the brand kept a low profile and never followed up with major marketing events, even before the Covid-19 crisis.LVMH’s finance chief Jean-Jacques Guiony had called Fenty “a work in progress” just last October.

“LVMH and Rihanna reaffirm their ambition to concentrat­e on the growth and the long-term developmen­t of Fenty ecosystem focusing on cosmetics, skincare and lingerie,” the group said yesterday.

It added that private equity fund L Catterton, which is connected to LVMH group, has taken a stake in Savage X Fenty, The Umbrella hitmaker’s lingerie line.

 ??  ?? Minimum wages here rose 10c
Minimum wages here rose 10c
 ?? PHOTO: BRENDON THORNE/GETTY IMAGES ?? Fashion: Singer Rihanna at a Fenty brand event in Australia
PHOTO: BRENDON THORNE/GETTY IMAGES Fashion: Singer Rihanna at a Fenty brand event in Australia

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland