Workers in the North West still £38 a week worse off than before the crash, says TUC
Date published: 27 October 2017
New figures published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that North West workers are still £38 a week worse off than they were before the financial crash.
The ONS figures show that for the year to April 2017 real wages in the North West were 8.5% below their 2008 level.
Nationally, inflation has overtaken wage growth for the last 6 months, so the TUC is concerned that next year could be even worse.
TUC Regional Secretary for the North West Lynn Collins said: “Most families still haven’t recovered from the financial crash, yet their pay packets are now taking another hammering. It’s leaving millions of working people facing hardship and getting deeper into debt.
“Public sector workers have had it especially hard, with real pay cuts for seven long years. The Chancellor must use next month’s budget to give them the pay rise they’ve earned.
“He should also use the budget to help bring great jobs to the North West, by investing in skills and infrastructure. And he must help low-paid workers by raising the minimum wage to £10 an hour as soon as possible.”
Most Viewed News Stories
- 1Woman left in Oldham hospital corridor with disconnected oxygen mask dies after pulmonary embolism
- 2Oldham man says cancer charity support helped rebuild his life alongside NHS care
- 3Oldham leaders warn women face growing health inequality as healthy life expectancy falls
- 4Oldham Social worker ‘pondered’ baby’s welfare before death, murder trial hears
- 5What the political groups are going to do about the borough’s ‘toxic politics’
