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The Taylor review on modern employment practices launches with a regional tour to discuss the UK’s labour market.
First published during the 2016 to 2019 May Conservative government
Young workers earning the National Minimum Wage are set to receive a pay rise of up to £450 a year from today (1 October 2016).
The largest list of employers to be named and shamed for failing to pay their workers the National Minimum Wage has been published.
It's been 2 years since the government extended the right to apply for flexible working to all employees.
First published during the 2015 to 2016 Cameron Conservative government
The Low Pay Commission (LPC) has launched an invitation to tender for research on the impact of minimum wages.
The Trade Union Bill receives Royal Assent and becomes the Trade Union Act.
The government has confirmed that it is pressing ahead with plans to reduce Britain’s reliance on migrant workers through a new skills charge.
The government has announced the appointment of Michael Clancy as a new member to the Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service Council.
Workers are urged to take simple steps to make sure they receive the government’s new National Living Wage next month.
The Single Source Regulations Office has announced that Clive Tucker will serve as the organisation’s Interim Chair while a permanent replacement for Jeremy Newman is sought.
Employers who have failed to pay their workers the National Minimum Wage have been named and shamed.
Ballots for industrial action in important public services will need at least 40% of union members to have voted in favour of them before disruptive strikes can go ahead.
From 1 April 2016 workers in the UK aged over 25 earning the minimum rate of £6.70 per hour will see a 50p increase.
What will jobs be like twenty years from now? Will designers work from hover-desks? Could engineers be repairing fusion engines? Or will pharmacists 3D print your nano-medicine?
How does the minimum wage affect you? Low Pay Commission visits Essex
New report shows women working in financial and insurance sectors among the worst affected.
National Minimum Wage goes up by 57 pence to £3.30 for apprentices and rises by 20 pence to £6.70 per hour for adult workers.
The Low Pay Commission (LPC) is interested in your views.
Today (30 July 2015) Business Minister Nick Boles has named 75 employers who have failed to pay their workers the National Minimum Wage.
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