The Labour government’s new Employment Rights Bill undoubtedly heralds a significant boost in workers’ rights after 14 years of Conservative government espousal of a liberalised flexible labour market model – translated as let the market run its course/let people do as they choose. The problem with this ‘survival of the fittest’ model is that it has created too much in-work poverty, insecurity, precarity, low pay and destitution for far too many people.
As the first phase of delivering the Plan to Make Work Pay, the Employment Rights Bill contains numerous proposals on mainly individual employment rights reforms, including: a new Fair Work Agency for stronger enforcement, better statutory sick pay, protection against unfair dismissal from day one (rather than two years at present, although it seems that there will be a nine-month probationary period for new recruits), a cost of living measure for setting the minimum wage, and making flexible working the default where practical.
Regarding collective employment rights, the government has promised new rights to online union balloting, union access to workplaces, simplification of the union recognition procedure, and to repeal anti-trade union laws enacted by the Conservatives in recent years. It also contains proposals for collective bargaining/negotiating bodies for adult social care and school support staff.
Will the Employment Rights Bill support employer relations?
Elements of the employer community will likely be concerned about the extent and impact of the new rights envisaged. A more positive (or ‘beneficial constraints’) perspective is possible, however, if the new rights are framed as supporting better employers/employment relations and constraining a race to the bottom by more exploitative employers.
Nonetheless, it could take two years or more before we see some of these rights taking effect in workplaces, with further consultations likely and more detail needed to put flesh on the bones of many proposals.
What is missing or diluted in the Employment Rights Bill?
Advocates of stronger workers’ rights will also likely be wary that original proposals on banning zero hours contracts and fire and rehire have apparently been diluted under pressure from business lobbying, with potential loopholes.