The Socialist

The Socialist 11 October 2003

Bosses Get Rich - Workers Get 30p

Bosses Get Rich - Workers Get 30p

Fighting For A Living Wage

Postal strike solid

Model resolution


Union Leaders On The Wrong Track

New Labour and asylum: Blunkett's Callous Plans

"Tough With The Workers, Toadying With The Millionaires"


Foundation Hospitals: An Attack on the Heart of the NHS


Anti-bin tax campaign: A Decisive Stage In The Struggle

Ireland - Free the bin tax twelve

Scotland: Nursery Nurses Forced To Strike Again

Fighting tuition fees in the USA

Europe protests at anti-worker governments

Syria Bombing Ratchets Up Middle East Tensions

Iran 1988: A bloody chapter in the workers' movement remembered

 
 
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Bosses Get Rich - Workers Get 30p

THE MINIMUM wage for over 21s went up this month by 30p to a measly £4.50 an hour (only £3.80 an hour for 18-21 year olds).

Tony Blair says this is an example of Labour's fairness. But the gap between rich and poor has increased under New Labour. Research carried out by the London School of Economics found a growing polarisation between "good" high-paid jobs at the top and "bad" low-paid jobs at the bottom.

Workers employed by Rentokil know all about that. Last year Rentokil's chairman Sir Clive Thompson was paid £2,891,000 - 247 times the average wage of one of his employees.

Also in the top five bosses paying themselves loads more than their workers was Sir Terry Leahy, chief executive of Tesco.

An average Tesco worker earns £13,598 - 181 times less than Sir Terry.

The gap is also widening in the public sector. Last year the average public-sector chief executive was on £100,000 a year. The average wage rise for a chief executive was 7.1% - nearly double that of ordinary public-sector workers.

Blair told the Labour Party conference that continuing to "reform" the labour market was essential. This is window dressing for maintaining a low-wage, hire and fire capitalist economy.

Low-paid public sector workers in London have had enough of trying to survive on poverty wages. Postal workers, council workers, teachers, college lecturers and support staff have all taken strike action for a living wage.

The socialist is campaigning for workers to come together in a one-day London wide public-sector strike.

It's only by getting organised that we can fight low pay and inequality. All of the major political parties have held their national conferences. All support privatisation of our public services; all put the interests of big business before those of ordinary working people.

If we want a living wage, if we want decent public services then we have to organise in the workplaces and build a new party that will fight for us in the same way that the other parties stand up for the bosses and the rich.


In this issue

Bosses Get Rich - Workers Get 30p

Fighting For A Living Wage

Postal strike solid

Model resolution


Labour and the unions

Union Leaders On The Wrong Track

New Labour and asylum: Blunkett's Callous Plans

"Tough With The Workers, Toadying With The Millionaires"


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Foundation Hospitals: An Attack on the Heart of the NHS


International socialist news and analysis

Anti-bin tax campaign: A Decisive Stage In The Struggle

Ireland - Free the bin tax twelve

Scotland: Nursery Nurses Forced To Strike Again

Fighting tuition fees in the USA

Europe protests at anti-worker governments

Syria Bombing Ratchets Up Middle East Tensions

Iran 1988: A bloody chapter in the workers' movement remembered


 

Home   |   The Socialist 11 October 2003   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Rich:

triangleFat cat tax-dodging: 200 lorry loads of lolly!

triangleTimes Rich List: Super-rich get richer ... again

triangleAnother Dooh Nibor budget - stealing from the poor to give to the rich

triangleForbes Rich List exposes obscene inequality

triangleCarlisle: Demands to 'tax the rich' hit a nerve

Labour:

triangleWales TUC: no fight against austerity

triangleTUSC builds support in Leicester byelection

triangleSocialist Party meeting against cuts

triangleUsdaw ADM - fightback begins

Public-sector:

trianglePreparing for the showdown

triangle30 June pension strike reports

triangleModel resolution

London:

triangleWest London Socialist Party: Immigration and racism

triangleWest London Socialist Party: Today's capitalist economy