ey_tony
Established Member
I'm neither right wing nor left so don't have a political axe to grind and I come from a background of working for myself since leaving school in the 1960s. I've been looking at the Labour government's Employment Rights plans and I can't help but think that contrary to what they hope to achieve, I suspect it could have the opposite of the desired effect but that remains to be seen.
I'd be interested what others think!
For starters I can see there being quite a rapid growth in unemployment in the part time sector if zero hour contracts are made illegal. I'm not saying ZH contracts are ideal by any means but many workers, contrary to the propaganda put out by the media, is that ZH contracts actually do suit some workers. Also many small employers will just not be able to function and therefore many small businesses especially in the services industry will simply not be able to afford to hire staff and give a contract where work is simply not regular. That is the reality. They will hire fewer staff and if it gets too expensive those businesses will likely fold!
Like millions of other self employed people, I had always worked on a 'zero hours' basis throughout my working life so they are nothing new to myself or the average Self Employed person. It's just something that one accepts if they are S/E and there is no guarantee for many that the bills will be paid at the end of the month.
There are also moves afoot (draft proposals) to make all jobs 'flexible' from day one...I can really see that one taking off with employers. The same with wage rises. Employing someone these days comes with so many responsibilities so anything that makes it even more expensive to employ people than it already is, is only going to go one way and that is in higher unemployment figures. If it doesn't manifest itself in higher unemployment figures it will manifest itself in higher prices so get ready to face increased inflation.
I'm certainly not against paying a fair wage for a fair day's work but looking at some of the proposals of the Employment Rights shake up, something tells me that we'll see a growth in unemployment which will only mean one thing and that is we the taxpayer will foot the bill if it all goes wrong.
I'd be interested what others think!
For starters I can see there being quite a rapid growth in unemployment in the part time sector if zero hour contracts are made illegal. I'm not saying ZH contracts are ideal by any means but many workers, contrary to the propaganda put out by the media, is that ZH contracts actually do suit some workers. Also many small employers will just not be able to function and therefore many small businesses especially in the services industry will simply not be able to afford to hire staff and give a contract where work is simply not regular. That is the reality. They will hire fewer staff and if it gets too expensive those businesses will likely fold!
Like millions of other self employed people, I had always worked on a 'zero hours' basis throughout my working life so they are nothing new to myself or the average Self Employed person. It's just something that one accepts if they are S/E and there is no guarantee for many that the bills will be paid at the end of the month.
There are also moves afoot (draft proposals) to make all jobs 'flexible' from day one...I can really see that one taking off with employers. The same with wage rises. Employing someone these days comes with so many responsibilities so anything that makes it even more expensive to employ people than it already is, is only going to go one way and that is in higher unemployment figures. If it doesn't manifest itself in higher unemployment figures it will manifest itself in higher prices so get ready to face increased inflation.
I'm certainly not against paying a fair wage for a fair day's work but looking at some of the proposals of the Employment Rights shake up, something tells me that we'll see a growth in unemployment which will only mean one thing and that is we the taxpayer will foot the bill if it all goes wrong.