Otago Daily Times

Extra $48 a week for 200,000 workers

- DEREK CHENG

WELLINGTON: More than 200,000 workers will benefit from an extra $48 a week next year in the biggest boost to the minimum wage in its history.

The minimum wage rate will rise from $16.50 an hour to $17.70, taking effect on April 1 next year, Workplace Relations Minister Iain LeesGallow­ay and New Zealand First employment relations spokesman Clayton Mitchell announced yesterday.

‘‘For a fulltime worker, this will mean an extra $48 a week before tax — enough to make a real difference for working people,’’ Mr LeesGallow­ay said.

‘‘The increase will benefit approximat­ely 209,200 workers and their families, lifting wages throughout the economy by $231 million per year and making a big difference for families.’’

Raising the minimum wage from $15.75 an hour when the Government took office, to $20 an hour by April 2021, is part of Labour and NZ First’s coalition agreement.

To stay at 80% of the adult minimum wage, the startingou­t and training wages will increase from $13.20 to $14.16 per hour in April next year.

Mr LeesGallow­ay also laid out the likely increases in coming years, subject to economic conditions, to provide businesses and workers with greater certainty.

He said the minimum wage would rise to $18.90 an hour in April 2020 and $20 in April 2021.

National Party leader Simon Bridges said the increase was ‘‘too far, too fast’’, and small businesses would feel the pinch and possibly pass the extra costs to consumers.

‘‘There will be people out there, workers who say, ‘fantastic’, but it will have an effect either in some job losses or real cost of living increases,’’ Mr Bridges said.

Act New Zealand leader David Seymour said New Zea

land already had the highest minimum wage in the OECD, relative to the average wage of $31.34 an hour.

‘‘Increasing it further shows a callous disregard for the impact it will have on small busi nesses,’’ Mr Seymour said.

Advice from Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment is that a minimum wage of $17.70 would mean that 8000 fewer people in work, and Mr Seymour said that could be ‘‘a cruel blow to young, unskilled workers looking for employment’’.

But Mr LeesGallow­ay said the MBIE advice, even allowing for fewer new jobs, still estimated about 49,000 new jobs would be created next year.

With unemployme­nt currently at 3.9%, he said the issue was not the quantity of available jobs, but their quality and the amount of pay they offered.

The Government lifted the rate to $16.50 an hour in April this year, despite advice from MBIE that it could cost up to 3000 jobs.

A regulatory impact statement from MBIE officials said the higher cost of labour could be passed on to consumers through higher prices for goods and services, but also noted that the effect on employment ‘‘is heavily debated in economic literature’’ and ‘‘there is no clear consensus’’.

The living wage — reflecting basic expenses such as the cost of food, transporta­tion, housing and child care — for 2018 is $20.55 per hour, as calculated independen­tly by the NZ Family Centre Social Policy Unit.

Half Yearly Economic and Fiscal Update figures show GDP growth was expected to be 3% over the next five years.

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Iain LeesGallow­ay

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