Author:
Yao Christian,Parker Jane,Arrowsmith James,Carr Stuart C.
Abstract
Purpose
A “living” wage (LW) is conventionally defined as enabling meaningful participation in society above subsistence through, for example, recreation, supporting a family, and savings. There is increasing debate over LWs due to growing inequality, rising living costs and welfare reform but this remains largely framed by the econometric cost-benefit parameters that apply to minimum wage regulation. The capabilities approach advocated by Sen (1999) offers a different perspective that is inclusive of choice, contingencies and the inter-connections between quality of (paid) work and private life. The paper aims to discuss these issues.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper adopts this framework and utilises a qualitative exploration of the narratives of 606 New Zealand employees to understand perceived wage effectiveness. The results suggest that a focus on a specific LW rate might be conceptually limiting, in comparison to a LW range.
Findings
First, the findings indicate that there is a pivot range in which people move from self-assessed “survival” to “decent” income. Second, a LW may have more than a simply monetary effect in better meeting employees’ living costs; it can also improve well-being through subjective perceptions of valued freedoms to do with job satisfaction, equity and security.
Originality/value
The results thus draw attention to a wider notion of a LW in terms of personal and family well-being, utilising a capabilities approach, with implications for organisational practice, policy and theory concerning sustainable livelihood and the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Subject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Industrial relations
Reference45 articles.
1. Arrowsmith, J. (2009), “Regulating pay: the UK’s national minimum wage”, in Corby, S., Palmer, S. and Lindop, E. (Eds), Rethinking Reward, Palgrave Macmillan, London, pp. 120-138.
2. The ‘living wage’, low pay and in work poverty: rethinking the relationships;Critical Social Policy,2014
3. The presentation of interpretivist research;Qualitative Market Research: An International Journal,2006
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