Western Mail

Wales has to aspire to quality job security for everyone as it rebuilds after Covid

In light of the Senedd election result, Welsh Labour should now be bolder and more ambitious in tackling poor-quality and exploitati­ve work in Wales with the powers that it has, says Wales TUC General Secretary Shavanah Taj

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THE Senedd election results showed Wales’ growing electoral divergence from England.

The new Welsh Labour Government should now use its mandate to accelerate policy divergence from Westminste­r too – and it should start by tackling insecure and low-quality work.

After winning 30 seats, the First Minister should now feel emboldened to use the political capital that he’s won to reshape the Welsh economy.

Despite its rhetoric about “levelling up”, the UK Government has taken no action to address the huge growth in exploitati­ve, insecure jobs.

An Employment Bill that was promised 18 months ago is still nowhere to be seen and was absent from the Queen’s Speech.

But the experience of the past year should give the Welsh Government confidence to act when Westminste­r won’t.

■ A cruel pandemic lesson

One of the most galling lessons of the Covid crisis is that even when it comes to a pandemic, our lower-paid, less secure workers are again worse off.

Not even a pandemic could cut through that inequality.

If you were in an insecure job before the crisis hit, you were at greater risk of living in poverty and all the life-limiting things that come with that.

And during the pandemic you were at greater risk of dying from Covid and 10 times less likely to receive sick pay than those in secure employment.

The inequality is stark and cruel, and it was the reality for more than one in 10 workers.

The new Welsh Government must recognise how harmful insecure work is. It hurts individual­s and it hurts society.

For example, the state has had to step in to provide financial assistance to those who didn’t receive adequate sick pay when they needed to self-isolate. Insecure work effectivel­y transfers the costs from the employer to the state.

■ A good job guarantee

Too often our approach during economic recoveries has been underpinne­d by the idea that any job is better for someone than no job – so policy-makers intervene to ensure that unemployme­nt is minimised at all costs.

But the dire state of our labour market is chipping away at this principle. The sharp increase in the in-work poverty rate over the past decade undermines the idea that a job is a guaranteed route out of poverty.

And evidence is emerging that some forms of insecure work are actually worse for people’s mental health than being unemployed.

As a labour movement, this makes us question what the role of the state should be in a recovery.

We don’t want anyone who wants a job to be unable to find one.

And yet we also don’t want the state to encourage, facilitate or even compel someone to accept a job that could trap them in poverty and harm their mental health.

There are two solutions and both rely on policy-makers having higher aspiration­s.

First, the Welsh Government needs to ensure that our devolved employabil­ity schemes – those initiative­s which help people to find and progress in work – are geared towards getting people a good, secure job.

Everyone should be aware of their rights and worth to that employer.

Second, the Welsh Government should invest in a jobs creation plan – incorporat­ing ideas like a national retrofit programme – where good jobs and sustainabl­e careers are a guaranteed outcome.

It needs a vision for what it wants to achieve, it needs to work with industry to understand how it can get there, but then it also needs to work with trade unions and employers to make sure that bad jobs are written out.

If the Welsh Government fails to step in and allows the market alone to determine labour outcomes, the recovery will inevitably replicate the many existing forms of labour exploitati­on.

This is what happened after the last recession.

For a long time we have focused on a goal of making our country a “fair work nation” and have worked closely with the Welsh Government and others to take steps towards this.

But in a post-pandemic Wales this perhaps feels a little abstract, a little too hard to pin down.

Our Covid recovery effort must be grounded in lived experience. It must aim for a labour market where every job lifts that person out of poverty and improves their mental wellbeing.

Aspiring for any less than this would be irresponsi­ble.

 ??  ?? > Shavanah Taj
> Shavanah Taj

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