- 1 in 4 employees in Wales currently have to wait three days before receiving statutory sick pay
- TUC and Centre for Progressive Change make joint call for sick pay entitlement from day one of illness and sick pay rights for low earners
- Many workers face “a financial cliff edge if they get ill,” says TUC Cymru
- “The next government must change our broken sick pay system”, says Centre for Progressive Change
Over 300,000 working people in Wales would benefit from making Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) available from day one of sickness, according to new analysis published today (Monday) by the TUC and the Centre for Progressive Change.
The analysis shows that if the law was changed, 337,000 employees in the country would be able to claim SSP from their first day of illness instead of having to wait until the fourth day of illness before getting any support.
This is over a quarter (26%) of all employees in Wales – and in some local authorities the proportion who will benefit is even higher.
The TUC and Centre for Progressive Change warned that without reform workers across the region will continue to face “a financial cliff edge” if they become sick at work.
Lowest earners hit hardest
The organisations highlighted how under Britain’s current sick pay system those on the lowest pay are hit hardest.
In Wales, over 20,000 workers get no SSP at all as a result of not meeting the lower earnings limit which currently stands at £123 a week.
And the vast majority of those missing out due to the lower earnings limit are women.
Fair sick pay rights
The TUC and Centre for Progressive Change are calling on all the political parties contesting the General Election to commit to:
- Ending the four-day wait for statutory sick pay, so that it is paid from day one of sickness (benefitting seven million workers).
- Giving sick pay protection to low earners, by removing the lower earnings limit (benefitting around one million more workers, over two thirds of whom are women).
Both of these measures are part of the Labour Party’s New Deal for Working People and are supported by range of organisations including Mind and Young Lives vs Cancer.
The TUC and Centre for Progressive Change say these reforms would make a material difference to workers.
SSP is currently worth £23.35 a day for an employee working a typical five-day week. With 1 in 8 working-age people having less than £100 in savings, every extra paid day of sick leave would make a big difference to many families.
Improved sick pay would also help improve public health by reducing the risk of people going into work when sick and spreading infections.
TUC Cymru General Secretary Shavanah Taj said:
“Nobody should be plunged into hardship when they become sick. But hundreds of thousands of workers in Wales face a financial cliff edge if they get ill.
“Making people wait three days before they get any support is just plain wrong – especially in the current cost of living crisis.
“That’s why it is essential that SSP is available from day one and available to all.
“Being forced to work through illness is bad for workers and bad for public health.
“Labour’s New Deal for Working People would fix this problem. With sick pay rights from the first day of sickness, you will know that your family is protected. And you can take the time you need to recover.”
Amanda Walters, Director of the Centre for Progressive Change, which coordinates the Safe Sick Pay campaign said:
“The three unpaid sick pay waiting days means a full-time worker on SSP gets an effective sick pay rate of just £1 an hour. Charities, workers, businesses and trade unions are calling for the next government to change this broken system.
“Sick pay that supports workers financially to take the time off they need means they’re at less risk of being forced back to work before they are ready, spreading bugs or harming their own long-term health. This is good for workers, employers and the economy alike.”
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