An exploration of the extent to which low-paid workers manage to avoid poverty, and if so, how this is achieved.
Although low pay is associated with an increased risk of poverty, not all people in low-paid jobs are poor. This report looks at the relationship between low pay, other sources of household income, and poverty.
It covers four main topics:
Using data from the annual Family Expenditure Survey, it examines households' various sources of income - earnings, income from other household members, and benefits/tax credits - to build up a picture of how some low-paid people avoid poverty.
The authors found that most manage to avoid poverty because they live in households with employed partners or with other adults in work. Couples with just one low-paid earner have a high poverty risk. Lone parents are the most likely to have been helped out of poverty by tax credits supplementing their wages.
Since 1997, the Government has been pursuing a policy agenda to promote paid work, to make work possible and to make work pay. Wages play a major part, but are not the only factor, in lifting working households out of poverty. This study, by Jane Millar and Karen Gardiner, investigates the extent of low pay in the UK, and explores the relationship between individual low pay and household poverty, hours of work, benefits and tax credits and other sources of household income. The analysis, based on the latest available figures from 2000/01, shows that:
- Just 8 per cent of low-paid people have wages that on their own are enough to avoid household poverty; this compares with 53 per cent of all employees.
- Among single people on low pay, the incomes of other people in the household, typically parents, are most likely to prevent them being poor.
- Low-paid people in dual-earner couples most commonly avoid poverty because of their partners' earnings. Where partners do not work, tax credits and benefits can help, if the couple has children. However, a couple with a single earner on low pay remains at very high risk of poverty.
- Low-paid lone mothers are more likely than other groups to escape poverty by means of tax credits and benefits. Living with others, typically adult children, is also important. Poverty among low-paid lone mothers has fallen since the mid-1990s.
Low hourly pay: incidence, trends and characteristics
'Low pay', defined as gross hourly pay of less than two-thirds of the median for all employees, affected 5.4 million or 23 per cent of UK employees in 2000/1 (see Table 1). These are workers earning less than £4.86 per hour, a threshold higher than the adult rate of the National Minimum Wage of £3.70 at that time.
The trends differ for men and women. For employed men, the proportion with low pay rose from about 14 per cent in the mid-1990s to about 18 per cent at the end; for employed women, it fell from 33 to 30 per cent.
Low hourly pay, family and household type
The risk of low pay is highest for women, for young people and for single people. But many low-paid people do not fit these categories: half are aged 21 to 49, half are married or living with a partner, and a third have dependent children. Over half have people in their household other than their partner or dependent children, compared with about a third of all employees. Single low-paid people often live with their parents. Low-paid lone parents often live with their adult children. Couples are least likely to live with others who might contribute to household income. Furthermore, low-paid people living in couples are more likely than other workers to have a non-employed partner or a partner who is also low paid.
Those who are hourly low paid also tend to work fewer hours, with mean weekly hours of 30.5 compared with 37.5 for those who are not low-paid. The average weekly earnings of the low paid are less than a third of those who are not low paid (£115 and £405 respectively). However, about a quarter of hourly low-paid men are not low paid on a weekly basis. These men work very long hours (over 52 hours per week on average) in their main job; some also have subsidiary jobs.
The overlap between low pay and poverty
Defining poverty as net equivalent household income below 60 per cent of the median, the researchers estimated that about 20 per cent of all individuals - adults and children - lived in poor households in 2000/1. Employed people have a much lower risk of living in poverty, with five per cent living in poor households. Low-paid workers have a much higher likelihood - 14 per cent - of living in poor households. Low-paid men have a higher risk of household poverty than low-paid women (17 per cent compared with 13 per cent).
So most low-paid people - 86 per cent - do not live in poor households. However, the overlap between low pay and poverty is much higher than previously. In the 1970s and 1980s, the risk of a low-paid employee being in poverty was about three to four per cent. This started to increase by the late 1980s. Since 1994/5, the overlap between low pay and poverty has increased slightly from 11 to 14 per cent in 2000/1. The only low-paid group for whom the risk of poverty has fallen significantly is lone mothers: the proportion living in household poverty fell from 28 per cent in 1994/5 to 20 per cent in 2000/1.
Avoiding poverty: State transfers and other household income sources
How do low-paid people avoid household poverty? The study calculated which income sources, if any, take the household over the poverty line, looking at, in order: own market income, partner's market income, non-means-tested social security benefits, tax credits, means-tested social security benefits, the market incomes of other household members and other household income (see Table 2). The poverty calculations assume that all income contributes to the living standards of all household members equally; such an assumption may be more realistic for some household types than others.
For just over half of all employees their own market income is sufficient to enable their households to avoid poverty. This market income is almost entirely earnings, but also includes self-employment and investment income. Another 21 per cent avoid poverty by means of partner's market income. Benefits and tax credits play a relatively minor role in taking these households out of poverty, less so than income from other household members.
However, only eight per cent of low-paid employees can take their households out of poverty with their market incomes alone: again earnings are most important. Partners' incomes take another 32 per cent across the poverty line. Benefits and tax credits take another 13 per cent above the poverty line, and 30 per cent avoid household poverty due to the incomes of people in the household, other than their partner.
The situation differs for men (see Figure 1) and women (see Figure 2). For single men, income from other household members (e.g. parents) is very important. For men with partners, a second earner is a key factor. Benefits and tax credits play an important role for low-paid men with partners and children. Nevertheless, these families are the least likely to avoid poverty.
For single women, as for single men, the income of other household members plays an important role. For women in couples, living with a partner is again the best way to avoid poverty. For low-paid lone mothers, benefits and tax credits are very important, taking about half out of poverty, including 25 per cent by means of tax credits. Another 19 per cent of lone mothers avoid poverty because of the contribution of other household members (e.g. grown-up children), and a further six per cent as a result of other household income (probably maintenance payments from an ex-partner).
Discussion and policy issues
In terms of regular household income, paid work is the best way to avoid poverty. But this does not necessarily mean individual earnings. About a quarter of all employees have hourly earnings which are insufficient to keep them out of poverty, unless they work very long hours each week. For sole earners in low-paid work, the risk of living in household poverty is high. The risk is much reduced for those living with other earners. In-work benefits and tax credits can help some families - particularly lone parents - but not to the same extent as market income. Thus, for low-paid workers, the statement that 'work is the best route out of poverty' needs to be modified: 'having a job and living with other people in work is the most effective way to avoid poverty'. And even this conclusion should be weighed against potential disadvantages to a reliance on paid work, such as what happens when households split up, or how to combine paid work and care for children or other household members.
The study shows clear differences between different groups.
The stated goal of the Working Tax Credit - to make work pay - means that a number of policy aims are rolled up in this one transfer. For example, a flat-rate, time-limited benefit or tax credit might better help people to make the transition into work. A protected system of paid parental leave might better help families where one parent is providing full-time childcare. Such measures would make the in-work financial system more complex: there is a trade-off between a single system trying to cover lots of needs and a more differentiated system. But as in-work supplementation comes to occupy a more central place in policy it will be increasingly important to address directly these questions of goals and targeting.
About the project
The analysis is based on the Family Expenditure Survey (now called the Expenditure and Food Survey) for the years 1994/5 to 2000/1; this collects detailed income and expenditure data annually from a sample of households. For this study, a sub-sample of about 5,700 employees was selected for each year.