The TUC today (Friday) welcomed the increase in the amount of an employees’ weekly earnings which counts towards statutory redundancy pay from £330 to £350, which takes effect this Sunday (1 February).
Although the £20 increase will be welcome to the thousands of people who find themselves joining the dole queue each week, the £350 is still far lower in real terms than the original value of statutory redundancy pay when it was introduced in 1965. The TUC would like to see the weekly limit increase to at least £500 to provide a financial cushion for the newly unemployed.
Official statistics show that 46.2 per cent of UK employees earn more than £350 a week, so a significant amount of the workforce will still be losing out with a statutory limit of £350 for redundancy pay.
To ensure that workers are properly compensated when they lose their jobs, the TUC believes the Chancellor should increase the weekly limit on statutory redundancy pay to at least £500, to help restore the real value of the limit.
The current weekly rate severely limits the amount of redundancy pay available as the calculation, which is based on pay and length of service, ignores any weekly pay above £350.
To further assist those who have been made redundant, the TUC believes the amount that people receive in redundancy pay before they have to pay tax – frozen at £30,000 since 1989 – should now be increased to £50,000. This would have been the current level had the tax threshold increased in line with inflation.
Midlands TUC Regional Secretary Roger McKenzie said: “With unemployment soon due to exceed two million, more than 1,500 people a week are losing their jobs. Many will be facing redundancy and unemployment for the first time in their lives.
“There can be no assumption that the people who are losing their jobs will find it easy to get new ones, and they will need all the help they can get with redundancy pay, retraining and personal advice.
“They will also need resources to pay their housing and food bills.
“Many decent employers, especially those that recognise unions, already offer their staff more generous redundancy payments than the statutory limit. The statutory limit should be raised to reflect more closely the real cost to the individual of losing their job.
“Ministers must increase minimum redundancy pay to at least £500 a week and let people take up to £50,000 of their redundancy pay tax free.”
The TUC recently launched a package of support for workers who have been made redundant, or are at risk of redundancy or of losing their homes due to the economic downturn.
The package includes two new free booklets – Coping with the Economic Downturn and Facing Redundancy – as well as updated information about redundancies, how to use JobCentre Plus, how to look for a new job, and what training and benefits individuals are entitled to on www.worksmart.org.uk, the TUC’s website for people at work. The website not only has downloads of both leaflets, but also contains questions and answers on all aspects of redundancy.
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