Taylor Review of Modern Working Practices Statement 3.11 pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (Lord Prior of Brampton)
(Con) My Lords, with the permission of the House, I would
like to repeat a Statement made in the other place by the
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Small Business,
Consumers and Corporate...Request free
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Taylor Review of Modern Working Practices
Statement
3.11 pm
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (Lord Prior of
Brampton) (Con)
My Lords, with the permission of the House, I would like to
repeat a Statement made in the other place by the
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Small Business,
Consumers and Corporate Responsibility, , on the independent
review of modern working practices, which was led by
and published
earlier today. The Statement is as follows.
“Mr Speaker, the review sets out that British business is
successful at creating jobs, enhancing earning power and
improving life chances across the UK. Employment rates are
the highest since records began. Unemployment and economic
inactivity are at record lows. More people are in work than
ever before and minimum wage rates have never been higher.
This is a story of success and one which this Government
will seek to sustain.
The UK economy’s continued success is built on the
flexibility of our labour market, which benefits both
workers and business. Businesses can create jobs and
individuals can find work because our labour market
regulation balances the demands of both. Minimum standards
set a baseline, beyond which there is flexibility to set
arrangements to suit all parties. Our dynamic approach
responds well to fluctuations in the economic cycle without
the structural weaknesses present in some other countries.
It is important that we preserve this success but also
enhance it further. While the majority of people employed
in the UK are in full-time, permanent employment,
globalisation, demographics and especially technology are
changing the way in which we work. We need to make sure
that the British labour market stays strong and that
everyone in the UK can benefit from it.
That is why, last year, the Prime Minister asked , chief executive
of the Royal Society of Arts, to lead an independent review
of employment practices in the modern economy. That review
has now been published and I am delighted to lay a copy in
the House Library today. It is a thorough and detailed
piece of work, for which I am very grateful not only to
Matthew and his panel members but to the numerous
businesses, trade unions, organisations and individuals who
have provided their views on this very important topic.
The review has a strong overarching ambition: that all work
in the UK should be fair and decent with realistic scope
for fulfilment and progression. Matthew has outlined seven
principles to meet this ambition, and I urge honourable
Members to examine these principles and the rest of the
report in detail, since it is an important contribution to
a critical subject.
In summary, these principles are: that our national
strategy for work should be explicitly directed towards the
goal of good work for all; that platform-based working
offers welcome opportunities for genuine flexibility but
there should be greater distinction between workers—or as
the review suggests renaming them, “dependent
contractors”—and those who are fully self-employed; that
there should be additional protections for this group and
stronger incentives for firms to treat them fairly; that
the best way to achieve better work is through good
corporate governance, good management and strong employment
relations; that it is vital that individuals have
realistically attainable ways to strengthen their future
work prospects; that there should be a more proactive
approach to workplace health; and that the national living
wage is a powerful tool to raise the financial baseline of
low-paid workers but it needs to be accompanied by sectoral
strategies, engaging employers, employees and stakeholders
to raise prospects further.
This is an independent review addressed to government.
While we may not ultimately accept every recommendation in
full, I am determined that we consider the report very
carefully, and we will respond fully by the end of the
year.
has been clear:
the UK labour market is a success; the “British way” works.
But he has also said that there are instances where it is
not working fairly for everyone. For example, he highlights
where our legislation needs updating or where flexibility
seems only to work one way, to the benefit of the employer.
We recognise the points he makes. We accept that as a
country we now need to focus as much on the quality of the
working experience, especially for those in lower-paid
roles, as on the number of jobs we create, vital though
that is.
This Government have made a commitment to upholding
workers’ rights. The Prime Minister has said repeatedly, in
this House and elsewhere, that as we leave the EU there
will be no rollback of employment protections. The Queen’s
Speech also sets out that this Government will go further
than that and will seek to enhance rights and protections
in the modern workplace. Today’s publication of the Good
Work review, and the public consideration of Matthew’s
recommendations that will follow, will help to inform the
development of our industrial strategy in the autumn. I
commend the Statement to the House”.
3.17 pm
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of Kentish Town
(Lab)
I thank the noble Lord for repeating the Statement on the
review of modern working practices. We all look forward to
studying it carefully and working with all concerned to
respond to these new ways of working, as over time we have
done with the invention of printing, photocopying,
computers, mobiles and the internet. Working together we
can make new technology and changing demands work for the
whole of society.
However, I fear that the Government’s Statement looks only
at two parts of the market: workers and business. There is
in fact a vital third limb: the consumer or customer. I
happen not to use Uber, one of the best known of the gig
institutions, but many consumers do, including women, who
often do not like to hang around on street corners trying
to hail a taxi and who appreciate not having to carry cash
in order to hire a cab. But it is not in their interest for
a driver to be overtired, unwell or underinsured, and at
work only because of pressing economic needs. Consumers
need to feel safe, with a driver who is fit and healthy,
awake and concentrating, and not worrying about their next
fare. And they want to know that the driver is getting a
fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work.
Other parts of the Gig economy may not have
face-to-face consumers in the same way, but all have
customers of the firm’s business, who similarly need to be
assured of the quality of the work, which is highly
dependent on the motivation and decent conditions of what
the report calls “dependent contractors”. It is true that
contented workers make for higher quality work. So as the
Government digest the report, will they involve the
consumers and customers of such services in addition to the
other key players?
Will the Minister also undertake to involve trade unions
fully in this work, which would help the Government as well
as the people concerned? Traditionally, of course,
vulnerable and exploited workers have had their standards
raised and their rights protected through the intervention
of trade unions. But as we know, for obvious reasons
workers in these sectors are a real challenge to recruit.
There have been other similar areas in the past where wages
councils played an invaluable role. While I hope that the
unions will seek to represent this group, we should be
realistic and acknowledge how difficult that is and
therefore we need other avenues for unions to be able to
speak on behalf of these workers. The report calls for
additional protections for gig workers and greater
incentives for firms to treat them fairly, including
through strong employment relations, but this will need
trade union input. I hope that the Minister can give a
clear assurance that this will happen.
I want to make one other point. The report does little to
strengthen the ability of workers to enforce the rights
they already have, beyond shifting the burden of proof in
one case when determining the employment contract. The
Minister and this House know that the level of employment
tribunal fees is a real barrier to justice, so we will
continue to press for the fees to be abolished. The
Minister has repeated the commitment to workers’ rights,
but without their ability to enforce them through
tribunals, those rights are really just pieces of paper. It
is in no one’s interest for this group to be exploited, but
it will need a commitment on the part of the Government to
ensure that that does not happen. This is an important area
for the future of the economy, for the workers concerned,
and for us as consumers.
At first read—and it is only a first read—the report does
seem to be somewhat tame and appears to be a missed
opportunity to grasp the challenge looking forward to the
rest of this century of the contribution that
the Gig economy can make. ‘The
Government need to take up the challenge of grounding in
the expectations of all employers the need to treat this
group of workers fairly and preserve their rights. We will
be looking to the Government to work with all stakeholders
to ensure that the change in culture as well as regulation
will ensure that this part of the economy is fair for all
concerned.
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(LD)
My Lords, this report is welcome as it frames the need to
reconsider working conditions in a clear manner. I should
like to quote from it:
“while having employment is itself vital to people’s health
and well-being, the quality of people’s work is also a
major factor in helping people to stay healthy and happy,
something which benefits them and serves the wider public
interest”.
This is an important and true statement that we should bear
in mind when considering not only this report but the wider
realm of employment and industrial strategy. We are living
in a time of huge change in the world of work, so the Prime
Minister was right to ask to carry out an
independent review and produce a report. As noble Lords
will have noted when I dropped it just now, the resulting
document is comprehensive and hard to absorb in the short
time we have had to do so.
The Government’s Statement points out that the report
highlights the need to deliver additional protection to the
increasing number of people we describe as platform-based,
or rather, what we know as the Gig economy. The most important
distinction to make is between the creation of a new group
of workers or dependent contractors and those who are truly
self-employed. While this may seem to be tame to some, it
is starting to move down the road of classifying people in
a way that enables them to have the rights they deserve. So
it should be no surprise that the Liberal Democrats broadly
welcome the recommendations in the Taylor review. The right
to request fixed hours and employment rights for those who
are now classified as dependent contractors was set out in
the Lib Dem manifesto, so obviously we support that. If
enacted, it will provide additional protections for this
group as well as strong incentives for firms to treat these
workers fairly. It is clear that these rules will have to
be backed up by policing. That will improve workers’ rights
in the Gig economy while maintaining
flexibility for those who want it, and that is the key.
Some people want flexibility, but others have it thrust
upon them. Noble Lords may remember that the Government
opposed these proposals during the coalition Government.
We should also remember of course that workers’ rights are
ultimately underpinned by EU law. This is backed up by the
UK’s ability to create and protect high-quality jobs, which
in itself is dependent on the UK being part of the single
market. As noble Lords would expect me to say, under
’s Brexit plans we will
continue to see falling real wages and slowing economic
growth, and jobs will begin to fall back. This is bad for
all workers but it is worse for these workers. Furthermore,
there are some people—including on the Benches opposite—who
will seek to use Brexit not to strengthen workers’ rights,
but to weaken or even abolish some of them.
That is why it is important for the Government not to get
bogged down in this report and to move swiftly. The
Minister has pledged to respond by the end of the year. We
look forward to the industrial strategy and how that will
play into this. We believe it is important that the
Government proceed rapidly to a conclusion that accepts the
clear direction of this report and brings forward proposals
that will enact its substance. The longer the Government
delay, the longer this important and growing band of
workers will be deprived of justified employment rights.
The longer the Government delay, the more suspicions will
be raised that Brexit will be used to water down people’s
rights. As the report says:
“All work in the UK economy should be fair and decent with
realistic scope for development and fulfilment”.
We hope the Government accept that point and bring forward
rules and laws that help to bring it about.
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My Lords, I shall first respond to the two asks from the
noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, the first of which was that we
should take into account the consumer. She is absolutely
right. I read the report fairly rapidly myself and she is
right about that. Thinking about it, it is very much
focused on workers and businesses. We ought to look at it
through the eyes of the consumer, such as the lady waiting
for her Uber late at night who wants to know that the
driver is indeed safe, healthy and wide awake. That is
certainly something we will feed back into the consultation
over the next few months.
Secondly, the noble Baroness raised the involvement of
trade unions. They have been fully involved in this whole
process. has been
exemplary in reaching out to all kinds of people, not least
the trade unions. As she knows, trade unions these days are
very much focused on public services. Their representation
not just in the Gig economy but in the private
sector as a whole is much diminished. In part that is
because many companies in the private sector have exemplary
employee relations and have done an extremely fine job.
There is much the public sector can learn from the private
sector in some of these areas. Nevertheless, I assure the
noble Baroness that has indeed
reached out to the trade unions.
The noble Baroness also raised employee tribunals. I have a
note on that, but maybe, since it is a fairly narrow area,
I will write to her about it. She knows we are consulting
on this to reduce the threshold to enable help for
industrial tribunal fees, but I will write on that point.
The noble Baroness ended by saying that she thought this
was a slightly tame report—I think that is the word she
used. I argue, as I think the noble Lord, , would, that it is a
balanced and fair report. It is not sensational, in part
because the system is working quite well. The statistic
that really surprised me on reading the report was that
there has not been nearly as much change in the labour
market over the last 20 years as I thought. Actually, 63%
of people in full-time employment are on a conventional
employment contract, and 20 years ago the figure was 64.6%.
I thought a bigger change had happened. Nevertheless, as
the noble Lord, , commented, this is an
important and growing part of the economy. It is quite
right that we should look at this issue now and get the
balance right between flexibility on the one hand and
proper job security on the other. It is an extremely
important balance to get right.
I assure the noble Lord that the Conservative Party and the
Prime Minister are not using Brexit as any excuse for
watering down employee rights. The Prime Minister has been
absolutely clear that she wishes to maintain and even
enhance employee rights, and this is an area where maybe we
can enhance employee rights.
The noble Lord asked for a rapid response. Of course, that
is tempting, because I think we all agree with the spirit
of the report. It is easy to talk in generalisations today,
but it may take a little longer to get some of the
distinctions right between employee, self-employed, worker
and dependent contractor, and nail them down so they have
legal validity.
I think we all agree with the noble Lord that all
employment should be fair and decent, with scope for
fulfilment. It is easy to say that that is just motherhood
and apple pie, but there is no doubt that companies that
treat their employees fairly and decently and as proper
colleagues have much better results.
3.30 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, the remarks of the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter,
about Uber were extremely important. They illustrate that
quality, reliability and excellence of products and
services are essential. Does my noble friend accept that
there is a real threat to the quality, reliability and
excellence of taxi services in London, which, in black
cabs, enjoys the finest service in the world? Whatever is
done as a result of this report, it should try to ensure
that there is proper equality of treatment between those
who provide a service as well.
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My Lords, I concur entirely with part of what my noble
friend said: that black cabs in London provide a remarkable
service. However, Uber provides a remarkable service in
many respects. As the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, said, it
is now an extremely valuable and important service. I do
not think that there is any contradiction in having a
successful Uber service, or one similar to it, running
alongside the excellent black cab service in London.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I think it is apparent that this side of the
House would not agree with the Minister’s throwaway line
that,
“the system is working quite well”.
That is not the theme of the report. Nor is it true, if one
looks at manifold evidence from public opinion polls, that
job security is not prevalent as an issue and a worry for
almost all classes of worker. It is being economical with
the truth to make generalisations about workers preferring
casual hours to guaranteed hours. There may be some
people—students are a good example, out of term time or
even in it in some cases—who prefer such hours, but does
the Minister accept that you cannot get a mortgage on a
zero-hours contract? Has the Minister done any research on
whether that is true? If not, will he do some research and
let the House know, perhaps in a letter? Is it possible to
get a mortgage on a zero-hours contract? If it is not, does
that not mean that we live in a two-class society—with
different types of contract of employment —in respect of
one of people’s most vital needs: to be able to get a
mortgage, with those on such contracts falling away
financially from people who are able to buy a house?
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My Lords, on the noble Lord’s general point about the
underlying theme of the report, I shall quote to him from
the beginning of it—these are ’s words and not
mine—where he says of our flexible labour market that,
“the British way is rightly seen internationally as largely
successful”.
Everything that comes through this report tells us that
while the system is not perfect it is actually working
quite well.
The noble Lord is right that even where people are working
quite a few hours under a zero-hours contract they still
find it very difficult to get a mortgage because the
mortgage company sees it as zero hours. That is why one
recommendation of the report, and it is an eminently
sensible one, is that where an individual consistently
works a number of hours on a zero-hours contract, after a
year they can request that it be converted to a fixed-hours
contract. That is one of the report’s recommendations that
we will take extremely seriously.
-
(Con)
My Lords, it seems that both the noble Baroness on the
Opposition Front Bench and my noble friend are under some
misapprehension regarding the relationship between Uber and
black taxis. It is now perfectly easy, on a free app, to
summon a black taxi on one’s iPhone and there is no
competitive advantage, as far as Uber is concerned, in that
respect. It also emerged from the debate the other night
that it is very necessary for there to be some control over
the number of minicabs. At the moment, neither Transport
for London nor this House nor anyone else has any control
over the number of minicabs given licences.
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My noble friend makes an interesting point which is
slightly outside the remit of the report but is something
that I am sure will be drawn to the attention of the
mayor—I think it is the mayor’s responsibility.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I think it is right to say that students and
early-retired people welcome flexibility, but there is a
real problem for people, particularly lone parents with
children and so on, in maintaining an acceptable and
predictable income in a zero-hours contract economy. Many
retailers use zero-hours contracts, yet senior managers in
retail have said that because demand is predictable,
zero-hours contracts in retail are lazy management. What
will the Minister say to the lone parent who, as a cinema
usherette, does not know from week to week whether she is
going to work four hours a week or 34? Will he, in that
case, take it up with his colleagues in the DWP, because
the benefits which make her income possible are always
falling behind her hours and she therefore never knows from
week to week whether she can afford to get the fridge
repaired or buy her son his trainers?
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The noble Baroness makes a very good point. Certainly, some
20% of those on zero-hours contracts are students who are
using it to top up. Equally, people who have retired use it
to top up, and it is much less satisfactory for people for
whom it is their main source of income. One point that
makes in his
report, and it is a good point, is that some employers are
quite lazy about this: they do not have to schedule the
hours properly because they know that they have people on
tap. One of his recommendations in the report is to address
that issue.
-
(Con)
My Lords—
-
(Con)
My Lords—
-
(Con)
My Lords, I think my two noble friends are capable of
resolving this in some logical, courteous order. To be
clear, ladies before gentlemen.
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Normally I would not respond to that but I think perhaps
the noble Baroness would recognise the seniority of a privy
counsellor in this House. However, I will stand by and sit
down for a second. Go on, get up.
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I thank my noble friend. I congratulate on his excellent
report and I particularly congratulate the Government on
achieving record levels of employment and record low
unemployment. It is important that we recognise the
benefits to this country’s employment market of
flexibility. We have achieved great success; indeed, I
point out that when I was business champion for older
workers, I found that it is not only students who welcome
zero-hours contracts, it is also older people. Does the
Minister agree that we need to recognise the increasing
importance for people in a pre-retirement phase of being
able to work flexibly, part-time and zero hours? Indeed,
when McDonald’s offered all its workers on zero-hours
contracts the opportunity of fixed contacts, 80% said they
wanted to stay on the zero-hours contracts.
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I thank my noble friend for her contribution. Of course,
flexibility suits older people greatly and is something
much to be encouraged. The great success of the British way
is that we have very high levels of employment. The great
weakness of the British way is that we have very low levels
of earnings, and that is something that we are going to
address through the industrial strategy.
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(Lab)
My Lords, does the Minister share my view that the term
“Gig economy” is unfortunate? It implies
that people willingly embrace insecurity at work when they
do not, and seems to trivialise the issue.
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Possibly it trivialises the issue, but it does reflect the
fact that these new, app-based jobs are different. I suppose
that “gig” is possibly an unfortunate word.
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Is the Minister aware that I had the privilege of working
with on the child trust
fund? I put it to the Minister that this report is excellent.
Do the Government recognise that there are three levels—or
parties—involved, and that, as the noble Baroness, Lady
Hayter, said, the consumer is one? Clearly the workers are
absolutely fundamental as well, but fair competition among
employers is the third dimension. Is this not an opportunity
for Her Majesty’s Government to act almost as a referee by
looking at all these aspects and making sure that at every
single level there is now fair competition, fair wages and a
fair opportunity for all parties to work together?
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My Lords, as the noble Lord said, there are three parts to
this. The report focuses very much on workers and business,
and, as the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, said, we ought
possibly to look at this issue also through the eyes of the
consumer. This is an ideal opportunity for the Government to
act, if you like, partly as a referee: ultimately, we do have
a clear responsibility in this area and when we have had a
chance to consider the report I am sure that we will not
disappoint my noble friend.
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of Handsworth
(Lab)
My Lords, the House at this stage will naturally want to
reserve judgment on the totality of the report and its
recommendations. That said, at face value it is an important
and positive step. Of course, one of the major deterrents to
a good workplace is the issue of discrimination. Will the
Minister say at this stage what the report indicates in terms
of race and sex discrimination, and discrimination against
people with a disability? If the report has tackled those
issues, will he say what remedies are suggested?
-
My Lords, the terms of the report did not include
discrimination. Unless I have missed something in the
report—I read it last night—it does not come with up
recommendations around discrimination but looks purely at new
forms of employment: that is, the relationship between
self-employment and people working in the Gig economy, who may now be called
dependent contractors. It does not deal directly with the
issues that the noble Lord raised.
-
(Lab)
I welcome the statement that,
“the best way to achieve better work is through good
corporate governance, good management and strong employment
relations”.
That is an extremely good summary, and if that is what the
eventual recommendations and implementation achieve, it will
have been a historic report. I have three brief questions.
First, one of the problems about our low-wage economy is that
we are getting a lower tax base. Therefore, this is not
necessarily good news for HMRC; a lot of the so-called
independent contractors and bogus self-employed do not pay
very much in the way of income tax.
Secondly, there has been increasing confusion between the
statutory national minimum wage and the national living wage;
people are getting very confused about those two things, to
the detriment of both issues. Thirdly, there are
recommendations about changing the remit of the Low Pay
Commission—I declare an interest as one of the founding
commissioners in 1998. One of the reasons for the tripartite
success of the commission is that it has focused on a fairly
narrow range of issues. My concern is that if these were
widened to include quality of work on a sectoral basis, it
might eventually weaken the power of its recommendations.
Would the Minister care to comment on that?
-
My Lords, the noble Baroness is clearly right about the lower
tax take. Clearly, if earnings are higher, the tax take will
be higher. It is rather shocking. These are the figures in
America: in 1970 the average median salary among the
lowest-paid 90% of people was $34,000; in 2013 it was
$31,000—it has gone down. This is the problem that all
western economies face: earnings are stagnant and falling.
Our children’s generation may be facing a less prosperous
future than we do. This is the huge dilemma that we all face.
When she says there will be a lower tax base, she is
absolutely right. The whole point of improving productivity
is to improve earnings. It is in all our interests to improve
earnings—to see wages grow.
The noble Baroness also talked about the confusion between
the living wage and the national minimum wage. She has now
confused me so I shall have to write to her. She went on to
talk about the Low Pay Commission. When the previous
Government brought in the living wage and the trajectory for
it, that was a political decision; it was not made by the Low
Pay Commission. One of the criticisms of the minimum wage is
that politicians cannot resist the temptation to get involved
in it. To some extent, the Low Pay Commission has been
subverted by politics. I guess that was inevitable. Actually,
the increase in the living wage was one of the great triumphs
of the coalition Government.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I have not read the report yet, so I would be
grateful if the Minister could put me right. Not all western
countries are in the difficulties that the States and the
Anglo-Saxon type economies are in. Sweden does not have the
kinds of problems that we have. It has some, but not on the
scale that we have. The major difference between Sweden and
similar countries is that the difference in income between
those at the top and those at the bottom has not widened in
the way that it has in the UK and the States. To start to
address this, we have to look at that as well—not just the
quality of the work but the totality of the distribution of
income in the workforce. Do the Government have any plans for
doing that?
-
The noble Lord is right that the disparities in Sweden are
smaller than in the US, the UK and other parts of the world.
They are smaller but they are not non-existent. It is a big
issue in the Scandinavian countries as well. We intend to
address that through our industrial strategy. The second
issue that the noble Lord touched on is that growth in
productivity, in so far as there has been any, used to
trickle down into the incomes of all people—everyone was
brought up by improvements in productivity. That link seems
to have been greatly weakened over the years, so that when
there is growth, it goes to the top 10% and not to the 90%.
The noble Lord is quite right that we need to look at that
very carefully.
-
(Con)
My Lords, one of the protections we offer workers is through
employment agency legislation, but this legislation does not
apply to many of the organisations that get gigs for gig
workers. Do the Government intend to extend the protections
of employment agency legislation to those who supply gigs?
-
I am not sure I can do that question justice. I would like to
think about it and respond to my noble friend. Is he talking
about gig workers supplied through employment agencies?
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Agencies such as Upwork, for instance.
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I will have to respond to my noble friend by letter.
-
(Lab)
The Minister expressed surprise that there had been so little
change in employment over the period: 63% and 64% were the
figures given. But that masks the fact that currently in the
north-east something like 70% of all new work—jobs growth—is
defined as insecure work. Does that not indicate the need for
more assertive action from the Government to address what is
very rapidly coming round the corner at us?
-
I assume that the noble Lord means that what is coming around
the corner are the new technologies and artificial
intelligence—the digital economy, if you like—which are going
to have a big impact on the labour market. Andy Haldane, the
chief economist of the Bank of England, is predicting that, I
think, 17 million existing jobs will disappear as a result of
new technologies. Other people say that the new technologies
are nothing like as profound as some people think they are
and that the impact will be a lot less. Nevertheless, if we
are going to thrive in this digital age, we have to skill
people to do so. We need a much more digitally literate and
technically well-trained workforce. I am sure that that will
be something that will be a key part of our industrial
strategy.
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