December 14, 2022
2 mins read

417,000 working days lost due to strikes in UK

Following prolonged disputes over pay and working conditions, companies and the UK government still lock horns with the country’s unions…reports Asian Lite News

A total of 417,000 working days were lost because of labour strikes in the UK in October, the highest number since November 2011, official statistics revealed.

This winter’s widespread strikes are expected to increase this figure further, reports Xinhua news agency.

Some of the strikes were suspended in September for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II, but the number of working days lost rose again in October, Sam Beckett, head of economic statistics at the Office for National Statistics (ONS), said on Tuesday.

The largest wave of labour actions in a decade came off the back of persistently low real wage growth for public sector workers coupled with high inflation, Nye Cominetti, senior economist at the think tank Resolution Foundation, said.

Average regular pay growth was 6.9 per cent for the private sector and 2.7 per cent for the public sector between August and October, which “is among the largest differences between the private sector and public sector growth rates we have seen”, the ONS said on Tuesday.

When adjusted for inflation over the year, total and regular pay among employees both fell by 2.7 per cent, which remained among the largest falls in growth since comparable records began in 2001, the ONS added.

Further strikes are scheduled for December, to be staged by more than 40,000 railway workers from the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT), ground handlers at the country’s biggest airport Heathrow, Border Force workers at major airports, and postal workers, nurses, ambulance workers, among others.

More than one million working days will be lost to industrial action across a range of sectors in December, making it the worst disruption in any month since July 1989, analysts said.

Following prolonged disputes over pay and working conditions, companies and the UK government still lock horns with the country’s unions.

“We are now on the brink of a damaging recession with the threat of one million lost jobs,” Frances O’Grady, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress, said on Tuesday.

O’Grady urged Ministers to “act now to put money in people’s pockets — starting with boosting the minimum wage and giving our public sector workers a pay rise to match the cost of living”.

RMT members from Network Rail, the owner of most of the railway network in the UK, have voted to reject the latest offer from the company, the union announced, noting that strike action this month remains on.

But the government said that the pay rises are unaffordable and higher pay will not help fight inflation.

“Any action that risks embedding high prices into our economy will only prolong the pain for everyone, and stunt any prospect of long-term economic growth,” Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has said.

ALSO READ-Hunt unleashes tax rises

Previous Story

Reliance tops Wizikey’s Newsmaker charts

Next Story

Dina Boluarte seeks early polls amid protests in Peru

Latest from -Top News

Child Marriage Still Plagues Bangladesh

The UNICEF report highlights that Bangladesh has the highest rate of child marriage in Asia, with over 50 per cent of girls being married off before the age of 18 A recent

UK appoints special envoy for women 

The UK government’s Plan for Change, which forms the foundation of this initiative, is designed to foster a strong economy by creating opportunities for working women   In a landmark move aimed

Protests Sweep Pakistan Over Sindh’s Rights

Latest attacks came hours after Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin was ‘doing what anybody would do’  Russia launched a devastating attack on Ukraine on Saturday, killing at least 14 people and injuring

Zelensky Rallies Allies for War-Ending Deal

This will be the first high-level gathering of US and Ukrainian officials since the February 28 meeting between Zelensky and US President Donald Trump. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has shared details of
Go toTop

Don't Miss

UK records highest daily Covid-related death toll since March

Another 26,852 people in Britain have tested positive for Covid-19,

Ukraine extends martial law, military mobilisation

A new mobilisation law aimed at recruiting more troops for