TUC analysis reveals disabled workers are much more likely to be low paid than non-disabled workers

  • 11 Jul 2023

Around seven in 10 (69 per cent) disabled employees earn less than £15 an hour, according to the analysis of official statistics.

Half of non-disabled employees earn less than £15 per hour, compared to seven in 10 (69%) disabled employees, an analysis published to coincide with the TUC Disabled Workers' Conference, in Bournemouth, shows. 

Regional and gender analysis  

The TUC analysis shows that in some parts of the country, higher numbers of disabled employees earn less than £15 an hour. 

In the North-east and Wales (92% and 94%), more than nine in 10 disabled employees earn less than £15 an hour, compared to around three in five (60% and 58% respectively) non-disabled workers. 

The situation is even worse for disabled women employees. Seven in 10 disabled women (70%) earn less than £15 an hour, compared to just four in 10 (44%) non-disabled men.  

Government action needed  

To address the inequality faced by disabled workers, the TUC is calling on ministers to bring in a legal requirement for employers to regularly report on how much they pay disabled workers compared to non-disabled workers. 

The union body wants to see fines for employers that do not deliver disabled workers’ legal right to reasonable adjustments. 

The TUC says ministers must also raise the national minimum wage to £15 per hour as soon as possible and stamp out insecure work for disabled workers by banning zero hours contracts and putting an end to fire and rehire. 

Paul Nowak, TUC general secretary said:

“Disabled workers are struggling to make ends meet in this cost-of-living crisis, with rocketing bills and soaring inflation.  Every worker deserves a decent job on decent pay. Being disabled should not mean you’re paid any less or are stuck on worse terms and conditions. The government has done very little so far to support disabled workers. It’s time for ministers to increase the minimum wage to £15 per hour as soon as possible and put an end to insecure work by banning zero hours contracts. They must also introduce mandatory disability pay gap reporting to shine a light on inequality at work. Without this, millions of disabled people face a future of lower pay and in-work poverty.” 

Full TUC release

 

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