Mandatory flexible working is a stealth tax on jobs and wages, warns new IEA report
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Governments are constantly tempted to push flexible working because
it allows them to support a popular social change without having to
pay for it themselves.
The new, stronger “right to request” flexible
working in the Employment Rights Act will be much harder
for managers to resist, and even dealing with such requests
will impose costs on companies. ...Request free trial
Flexible working has risen exponentially since Covid, and should be supported where it is genuinely voluntary between employers and staff. However, Government attempts to effectively mandate flexible working risk imposing a “stealth tax” on jobs, wages and productivity, according to a new discussion paper from the Institute of Economic Affairs.
The discussion paper,
Is Flexible
Working? by Professor
J.R. Shackleton and Annabel Denham, argues that while flexible
working can be beneficial in some circumstances, its economic
costs are
rarely Introducing the report, Lord Frost, Director General of the IEA, said: “The government always likes to legislate popular measures while asking others to pay for them. If flexible working is in all parties' interests, then nothing stops it happening now. If it isn't, but is effectively compelled by the government anyway, then it becomes a new stealth tax. The costs it imposes will show up as lower pay, fewer jobs, higher prices, or reduced investment – and eventually in lower productivity and prosperity for everyone.”
Evidence There are undoubtedly benefits to some workers from flexible working, but the authors warn that government is fundamentally incapable of weighing the trade-offs. No central authority can know how working from home, compressed hours or four-day weeks affect productivity in millions of individual workplaces. Yet recent employment legislation increasingly assumes these arrangements are broadly costless, shifting decisions away from employers and towards regulators and employment tribunals. Under the new Employment Rights Act, employers face greater legal risk when refusing flexible working requests, even where such arrangements would harm performance. The report argues this will pressure firms into accepting inefficient practices, with the resulting costs quietly passed on through slower wage growth, reduced hiring and higher consumer prices - a stealth tax borne by workers and the public. The paper also highlights that mandated flexibility disproportionately benefits higher-paid, professional and public sector workers, while the costs are spread across the wider economy, including employees and consumers who see no direct benefit. Rather than attempting to mandate how work is organised, the authors argue that flexibility should be determined through voluntary agreement at the firm level. Where flexible working genuinely improves productivity or retention, employers already have strong incentives to offer it - without the need for legislation. Professor J.R. Shackleton, co-author of the report and Editorial and Research Fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs, said: “Flexible working is rarely a free good. The costs are real, highly specific and often hidden - and government simply cannot measure them. When politicians mandate arrangements which are not freely chosen, the bill is paid elsewhere in the economy, amounting to a stealth tax on working people and taxpayers.” Annabel Denham, co-author of the report and Senior Political Commentator at The Telegraph added:
“It is a folly to assume that
Ministers and civil servants can know the best working
arrangements for every active employer and employee in the
country. Imposing |
