IFS - Introduction of National Living Wage followed by strong pay growth for low-paid workers but little change in their average living standards

19 Jun 2018 09:10 AM

The introduction of the National Living Wage (NLW) in April 2016 meant a sharp increase in the minimum wage for employees aged 25+ from £6.70 to £7.20.

These are the key findings of a pre-released chapter of IFS’ flagship annual report on living standards, inequality and poverty, funded by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. The full report will be published on 20th June.

The new research finds:

Agnes Norris Keiller, a Research Economist at the IFS and an author of the research, said:

“The wages of low-paid employees have grown strongly since the introduction of the National Living Wage but improvements in their average living standards have been much more modest. In part this is because the pay of higher-earning partners fell in 2016‒17. However, low-wage employees who live in households with below-average income did tend to see growth in their living standards, reflected in falls in poverty.”

Book chapter

Living standards and the National Living Wage

This chapter of the flagship annual publication 'Living standards, poverty and inequality in the UK' examines how the hourly wages, weekly earnings and living standards of people with low hourly wages have changed in the years after the introduction of the NLW.