Substantial minimum wage rise needed to boost spending – First Union

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Substantial minimum wage rise needed to boost spending

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In the run-up to the annual minimum wage announcement, a union representing low paid workers is calling for a substantial increase to help boost spending and guard against deflation.

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โ€œA 25 cent or 50 cent increase wonโ€™t cut the mustard for working people and their families,โ€ says Robert Reid, General Secretary of FIRST Union.

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โ€œAnd nor will it help lift the economy.โ€

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โ€œNew Zealand is in a unique situation: we can substantially increase the minimum wage to both boost spending in the economy (as the Reserve Bank has called for) and reduce inequality.โ€

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โ€œIn our submission to the Minimum Wage Review in October 2015 we called for a minimum wage thatโ€™s at least two-thirds of the average wage, or $19.46.โ€

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โ€œThe government can implement this in three stages: $16.50 this year; $18.46 in 2017; and up to the anticipated level of the average wage in 2018 of $20.65,โ€ explains Reid.

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โ€œBut since submissions last October the spectre of deflation continues to grow.ย Governments and Reserve Banks both here and across the world are searching for ways to restart their economies and lift inflation into their target bands.โ€

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โ€œA significant increase to the minimum wage ticks all boxes,โ€ says Reid.

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โ€œWhen inflation is at or near the top of the band the government and the Reserve Bank have called for wage restraint because they say itโ€™s inflationary. With inflation now at 0.1% and enforced restraint on low wages over the last decade, the Government has an opportunity to โ€œrevive two birds with one policyโ€ by increasing the minimum wage by at least $1.75 to $16.50 per hour on 1 April this year.โ€

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2 COMMENTS

  1. The average rent in Akld is $617 a week.

    Yet people trot out “grow your own gardens” when families work 2 & 3 jobs to make ends meet.
    How can they grow gardens when the 90 day employment laws mean they must move every couple of months for work and housing?

    • Then I would suggest a seed collection. Also micro gardens which can consist of herbs, even bulbs.

      Growing food is a licence to print money.

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