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Dublin: 5 °C Thursday 23 May, 2013

Column: We can save thousands of jobs without cutting wages. Here’s how

Reducing pay rates won’t help tackle unemployment – but there is another way, argues think-tank director Nat O’Connor.

Nat O'Connor

Minister for Jobs Richard Bruton sparked controversy last month when he proposed cutting retail workers’ wage entitlements under the JLC system – which he argued would create jobs. Here Nat O’Connor, director of economic think-tank TASC, writes that there is a much better way.

RETAIL EXCELLENCE IRELAND (REI) has released a survey of their members, which they contend shows that abolition of the JLC pay rates system would lead to thousands of jobs being created in retail (Press Release, 15 June 2011). There are good reasons to believe that this is a mistaken point of view.

REI got responses from nearly half their members, 342 companies which operate 4,445 stores, who said that if the JLC system was abolished that they would save 2,896 vulnerable jobs and create another 2,888. Treating this as a representative sample, REI estimate the total number of jobs created would be four times this, as there are around 25,000 stores in Ireland.

There are three problems.

Firstly, good business sense does not add up to good economics. Say one business cuts the wages of its staff – that business has saved money and, all things being equal, should become more profitable (although staff performance might also fall). However, one stores’s employee is another store’s customer. If the 200,000-plus generally lower-paid workers protected by the JLC system all suffer pay cuts, that is going to lower demand in the economy; i.e. they are all going to have less money to spend in the local economy. And people on low wages spend most or all of their money. (All of this is basic economics). Hence, the companies consulted by REI might believe today that they could save and create jobs – but if demand falls, as it surely must from cutting the JLC system, than the same stores will find that they cannot expand employment after all.

Secondly, we cannot be sure if the 342 companies that responded to REI are in fact a representative sample. These companies have an average of 13 stores each, but there are many one-off stores among Ireland’s 25,000. We do not know if these stores would be in the same position to save or create jobs. So, REI’s multiplication by four might be over-stating the probability of job retention/creation.

Thirdly, the international evidence is broadly against any strong relationship between cutting wage levels and job creation. The strongest studies are of US states, and even counties within those states. These studies compare two areas side by side (with similar workforces, similar industries, etc) where one of them cuts wage protection and the other does not. Over time, no great difference in job creation is shown. This evidence strengthens our confidence in the theory that while individual businesses may benefit from lower wage costs, they equally suffer from the economic effects of reduced demand. (See references below)

Therefore, it is fairly safe to assume that cutting the JLCs will neither save nor create jobs in retail.

There is hope however.

REI also found that the companies surveyed would save 7,791 vulnerable jobs and create 5,072 new jobs if the Upward Only Rent Review (UORR) was abolished. Unlike the JLC system, which affects the demand that retail so badly needs, there is no such effect with rents. Most commercial landlords are higher-income individuals or companies that save rather than spend most of their incomes. Therefore, cutting those incomes will not greatly affect retail demand as they are likely to cut their saving rate before they will drop their lifestyles (spending habits).

However, we still don’t know if the multiplier of four would apply or to what extent these 4,445 stores’ experiences of UORR are representative of others. In fact, city centres (where rents are highest) tend to be dominated by chain stores. So, it is possible that many one-off local stores are less affected by UORRs; although excessively high rents can be a problem for any business.

We could be more conservative than the REI and suggest merely doubling the survey findings to estimate the likely employment effects. That would mean abolition of UORRs could lead to around 15,000 vulnerable jobs being saved and 10,000 new jobs being created.

On REI’s website, there is a banner headline stating: “High Rents Are Killing Retail Jobs”. In a similar vein, Declan Ronayne, MD of DSG Ireland (Currys, PC World, etc) spoke on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland programme (23 June 2011) that the focus on JLCs was a mistake, and that rent levels was a much more pressing issue.

Economic theory and evidence concurs with this perspective. Cutting rents, not wages, is indeed likely to save and create jobs in retail.

Nat O’Connor is the Director of TASC, an independent think tank dedicated to addressing Ireland’s high level of economic inequality and ensuring that public policy has equality at its core. This article was originally published with references at Progressive Economy.

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Comments (19 Comments)

  • I am a business Man in ireland since 1994 And My family since 1956 so all i need to’ say if in business you Keep your staff happy which they diserve your business Will benefit And what Mr. O’conner states i fully agree … Its other cuts that should be’ consider i.e. Vat prsi paye And then u Will see The differente .. Mario

    Reply
  • That beard makes me suspicious.

    Reply
  • Darren 27/06/11 #

    Sounds plausible to me and all this negativity for someone who is suggesting lowering incomes for landlords and property developers whilst protecting relatively vulnerable retail workers. Did I miss something (probably :-)).

    Reply
  • if people’s wages get reduced, the savings will just being pocketed by the business to cover other expenses. i don’t think it will create more jobs. per business, the savings won’t be substantial enough to create another post. just using the recession as an excuse to squeeze a little more joy from the lives of people on minimum wage.

    Reply
  • Why is this guy described as an economist? There’s no mention of an economic qualification on the TASC website: http://www.tascnet.ie/showPage.php?ID=3010 or on LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/nat-o-connor/18/881/b86. How can you describe him as a economist if he has no economic training or qualification?

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  • And for his next trick: he’s going to get blood out of a stone, turn water into wine and feed 5000 from a handful of fish and a basket of bread. Some call him an economist. All we know is, he’s called the Sti… I mean, he’s called a wizard.

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  • “independent” think tank me hole. They’re full of lefty socialists and trade union hacks!

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    • He is proposing something that is near enough to the economic model of Holland, Germany, Sweden and Finland and Denmark. Where as we are told that we should follow Fine Gael and FF’s approach which has brought the country to bankruptcy 4 times in 50 years, a European record. Go FF/FG/PD’s. I have do doubt that we’ll continue to discard the successful examples of Europe, many of whom are small like ourselves. We’ll continue to follow London and Washington, both of whom are mired in debt and are many multiples the size of us in economy and population, who are/were world leaders and in fact have nothing in common with our economy and never will. FG and FF are the only parties in Europe since WW2 that have managed to quadruple a states debt in one term of Govt. You can’t get more inept than those 2.

      Reply
    • Look at Switzerland. Lowest taxes in Europe, Universal Healthcare, 5th strongest current in the world, (and it’s their own currency), lowest crime rates in Europe and a tight border policy. The Nordic countries have some of the highest taxes and the highest suicide rates. No thanks!

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    • http://www.tascnet.ie/showPage.php?ID=2507

      Just some of those involved with TASC.
      List speaks for itself

      Catherine Murphy TD – Independent, formerly of Labour/DL/WP
      Fintan O’Toole – Left-wing columnist
      Prof. Kathleen Lynch – Equality Studies Centre, UCD
      David Begg – Irish Congress of Trade Unions
      Rosheen Callender – SIPTU
      Des Geraghty – SIPTU
      Paul Sweeney – Economic Advisor, ICTU
      Marie Sherlock – Researcher, SIPTU
      Mr Michael Taft – Research Officer, Unite Union
      Prof. Ivana Bacik – Labour Senator

      Case Closed!

      Reply
  • I love the joined up economics from socialists like the retail workforce are the main contributors to spending in the economy. My arse. We can increase our competitiveness through a number of means and all need to be considered.

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  • Trade Union “economists” (I use the term loosely) seem to constantly forget that prices in labour markets are joint to demand like in almost EVERY other market.

    If this weren’t the case, why not have the minimum wage at 1000 euro an hour?
    The fact is, is that the minimum wage is a price floor. When a price floor is above the market equilibrium price there is a fall in demand in that market. In this case, that market is the labour market.

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  • @Ronan Lyons

    In the year 2009/2010 commercial property represented 4% of Irish pension funds. Its likely this has since fallen to say 3%. Most commercial tenants who employ hundreds of thousands of Irish employees are significently over-rented and this extra cost is destroying thousands of sustainable Irish jobs. High street landlords are passive investors and do not create jobs or economic activity.

    Ruinous Irish commercial lease law and reckless Irish banks combined to create a monster commercial property bubble and a two-tier commercial rental market. When this bubble burst it destroyed the Irish economy.

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  • We must be very wary of seemingly “quick win” solutions that promise to create thousands of jobs without any pain. Nothing comes from nothing. In this instance, retrospectively changing legal contracts – aside from jurisprudence issues that are way outside my area of expertise – could easily undermine the value of private Irish pensions, which are often heavily dependent on commercial property.

    It’s a price we might be prepared to pay, but it’s a price we should be aware of before we do it.

    Reply

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