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| Britain |
More than 1.4 million
people will benefit when the change comes into effect in October, raising the
hourly minimum for workers over 21 by 20 pence to Euros 6.70 (9.30 Euros, $
9.90).
The announcement,
which comes on the eve of the government’s final budget before May’s general
election, is in line with recommendations made by the independent Low Pay
Commission last month.
The government also
raised the minimum wage for apprentices 20 percent to Euros 3.30 an hour,
significant higher than the Euros 2.80 recommended by the commission. “At the
heart of our long-term economic plan for Britain is a simple idea—that those
who put in, should get out; that hard works rally rewarded; that the benefits
of recovery are truly nations,” Prime Minister David Cameron said.
But the opposition Labor party, which has not warned that
the recovery has not resulted in a rise in living standards, said the increase
fell short of the Euros 7 minimum wage promised by the government more than a year
ago.
“Ministers have misled working families who
have been left worse off…. We need a recovery for working people,” said Labor
business spokesman Chuka Umunna.
The international Labor Organization warned in December that
real wages in Britain in 2013 fell below levels seen in 2007, at the start of
the global financial crisis.

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