Employers have responded to the new
National Living Wage (NLW) by raising prices or reducing profits rather
than cutting jobs, according to a survey from the Resolution Foundation.
The wage, which requires employers to pay staff aged 25 and over at least £7.20 an hour, was introduced in April.
This report is the first snapshot of how firms have reacted to the NLW.
It comes after the Office for Budget Responsibility predicted it would lead to 60,000 job losses by 2020.
Impact of Brexit
Five
hundred companies, covering a range of UK businesses, were questioned
just before the referendum on Britain's membership of the European
Union.
Some 36% of those affected by the NLW said they had put
up their prices to compensate for the higher wage cost, while 29% said
they had reduced their profits.
Despite reports of some employers
cutting back on staff terms and conditions, the survey found that only
8% had cut paid breaks, overtime or bank holiday pay.
Separately,
the not-for-profit Resolution Foundation think tank warned the UK's
decision to leave the EU could affect the government's new wage policy.
It
said the so-called Brexit would be likely to reshape the landscape in
which many low pay sectors operate, creating huge uncertainty about the
outlook for earnings over the coming years.
Weaker wage growth, it said, could reduce the current projected real terms value of the NLW by up to 40 pence an hour by 2020.
The
policy was announced in last summer's Budget by Chancellor George
Osborne, in what he said was a move to create a higher-wage,
lower-welfare economy.
Workers aged 21 to 24 continue to be paid the National Minimum Wage of £6.70 an hour.
The
DIY chain B&Q, supermarket Tesco, coffee chain Caffe Nero and the
John Lewis Partnership have all this year reduced some staff payments or
perks, but most have said the moves were unrelated to the 50p-an-hour
increase in the National Living Wage (NLW).
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