The Malta Business Weekly

Zero-hours workers ‘face £1,000 pay penalty’

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Workers on zero-hours contracts typically earn £1,000 a year less than permanent employees, according to Resolution Foundation research.

People on the controvers­ial contracts face a "precarious pay penalty" of 6.6%, or 93p an hour, the think tank has estimated.

For those who earn the least, the size of the gap is even greater, at 9.5%.

The foundation backed the government's decision, announced last month, to hold a review into modern working practices.

"Understand­ing the reasons behind this pay penalty will be crucial in order to tackle some of the challenges raised by new forms of employment, without jeopardisi­ng the success of the UK's flexible jobs market," it said in a statement.

Laura Gardiner, senior policy analyst at the Resolution Foundation, added that the "pay penalty" of zero-hours contracts was "a big price to pay for work that too often lacks the security workers desire".

She said: "Zero-hours contracts have hit the headlines in recent months for their widespread use in Sports Direct and JD Sports.

"But concern about the use and abuse of zero-hours contracts goes far wider than a few notorious firms. There is mounting evidence that their use is associated with a holding down of wages.

"As new ways of working continue to grow - from [zero-hours contracts] and agency work to the gig economy and wider selfemploy­ment - we need a better understand­ing of how they help or hinder people's earnings and career prospects.

"Policymake­rs must also tread a careful path between getting to grips with the living standards challenges thrown up by new and often insecure forms of employment, without jeopardisi­ng Britain's recent job-creating success."

Mathew Taylor, chief executive of the Royal Society for the Arts, has been appointed to lead a government review into how the socalled "gig" economy is affecting workers' rights.

It will look at how new technology, combined with new business models, has led to a rise in workers doing short-term, casual work.

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