Section 3: Wages, Household Income and Employment

The Minimum Wage, the National Living Wage and the Living Wage Foundation

Table 3.1

Year REAL

LIVING WAGE

NATIONAL

LIVING WAGE

NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE
By April Living Wage (21 and over) 21 to 22** 18 to 20 Under 18 Apprentice
2024 £12.00 £11.44 £11.44 £8.60 £6.40 £6.40
To April 2023 Living Wage (23 and over) 21 to 22 18 to 20 Under 18 Apprentice
2023 £10.90 £10.42 £10.18 £7.49 £5.28 £5.28
2022 £9.90 £8.91 £9.18 £6.83 £4.81 £4.81
2021 £9.50 £8.91 £8.36 £6.56 £4.62 £4.30
To April 2020 Living Wage (25 and over) 21+ /21 to 24** 18 to 20 Under 18 Apprentice
2020 £9.30 £8.72 £8.20 £6.45 £4.55 £4.15
2019 £9.00 £8.21 £7.70 £6.15 £4.35 £3.90
2018 £8.75 £7.83 £7.38 £5.90 £4.20 £3.70
2017 £8.45 £7.50 £7.05 £5.60 £4.05 £3.50
2016 £8.25 £7.20 £6.70 £5.30 £3.87 £3.30
2015 £7.85 n/a £6.70 £5.30 £3.87 £3.30
2014 £7.65 n/a £6.50 £5.13 £3.79 £2.73
2013 £7.45 n/a £6.31 £5.03 £3.72 £2.68
2012 £7.20 n/a £6.19 £4.98 £3.68 £2.65
2011 n/a n/a £6.08 £4.98 £3.68 £2.60
Sources:

·       Real Living Wage – Living Wage Foundation (Oct 2023)

·       National Living Wage and Minimum Wage – Low Pay Commission via Gov.uk (Nov 2023)

*For simplicity, the table shows that these rates are likely to be in place by April that year, but please note:

·       The Real Living Wage is announced in November and recommended to be implemented within 6 months,

·       The National Living Wage is announced at Autumn Statement but must be implemented in April the following year

·       The National Minimum Wage is announced at Autumn Statement and must be backdated to October the same year.

**The 21-24 age category came into effect in October 2015, once the National Living Wage was introduced for those aged 25+. In April 2021, the age threshold was lowered from 25 to 23 years old, From April 2024 The National Living Wage threshold changes to age 21+.

In April 2016 the government introduced a higher minimum wage rate for all staff over 25 years of age (reduced to over 23 years in 2021) and call this the ‘National Living Wage’. However, the government’s ‘National Living Wage’ is different to the ‘Real Living Wage’ set by the Living Wage Foundation.

The government’s National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage rates are set by the Low Pay Commission. The UK’s Real Living Wage rate is set annually by the Living Wage Foundation and calculated by the Centre for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University (and is informed by the Minimum Income Standard). The figure is announced every November and employers are advised to implement the new rates within 6 months of the announcement.

The National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage set by government are compulsory for employers while the Real Living Wage is voluntary.  The government rate is based on median earnings while the Living Wage Foundation rate is calculated according to the cost of living.

From April 2024, the Real Living Wage for outside of London is £12.00 per hour. The London Real Living Wage is £13.15 per hour; this figure is set annually by the Greater London Authority and covers all boroughs in Greater London. The National Living Wage for people over 23 is £10.42 per hour. From April 2024 the National Minimum Wage age threshold has changed from age 23+ to 21+ and has been set to £11.44 per hour. Workers aged 18-20 wages have been set to £8.60/hour and workers aged 17 and under, or apprentices have minimum wages set to £6.40/hour.

Leeds hourly wage rates

Table 3.2

Residents Job count Lower 10% Earners Lower 20% Earners Lower 25% Earners Lower 30% Earners Lower 40% Earners Median Earners Top 10% Earners
FTE 314,000 £10.55 £11.36 £11.87 £12.44 £13.63 £15.43 £30.20
Part-time 78,000 £10.00 £10.42 £10.50 £10.77 £11.00 £11.64 x
Full Time 236,000 £11.10 £12.50 £13.03 £13.60 £15.11 £16.85 £31.33
Workers Job count Lower 10% Earners Lower 20% Earners Lower 25% Earners Lower 30% Earners Lower 40% Earners Median Earners Top 10% Earners
FTE 375,000 £10.71 £11.57 £12.03 £12.67 £13.91 £15.62 £31.81
Part-time 83,000 £10.17 £10.42 £10.53 £10.87 £11.01 £11.69 x
Full Time 292,000 £11.24 £12.51 £13.13 £13.68 £15.13 £16.93 £33.31
Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), Nov 2023

x = data was not statistically reliable

For Leeds residents, the median average full-time equivalent (FTE) wage is £15.43, the median full-time wage is £16.85 per hour; the median part time wage is £11.64 per hour. With regards people who work in Leeds (not all of which are resident in Leeds); the median average full-time equivalent wage is £15.62, the median full-time wage is £16.93 per hour; the median average part time wage is £11.69 per hour.

People in Leeds earning below the Living Wage Foundation’s Real Living Wage

Table 3.3

2023 (RLW = £10.90)
Residents Job count No of residents % of residents
FTE 314,000 44,968 14.3
Part-time 78,000 27,809 35.7
Full Time 236,000 23,175 9.8
Workers Job count No of workers % of workers
FTE 375,000 45,785 12.2
Part-time 83,000 26,679 32.1
Full-time 292,000 28,317 9.7
Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), Nov 2023

Estimates for people earning below the Real Living Wage (RLW) have been calculated using the 2023 Living Wage figure of £10.90 which was in place during the survey period of the latest ASHE data released in 2023.

It is estimated that 14.3% of all Leeds working residents earned less than the Real Living Wage in 2023, affecting 44,968 FTE residents. When this figure is broken down, 9.8% of full time working residents (23,175) and 35.7% of part time working residents (27,809) are earning below the Real Living Wage in Leeds. With regards workers in Leeds, 12.2% earn below the real living wage, impacting 45,785 FTE workers. This affects 9.7% (28,317) full-time workers and 32.1% (26,679) part-time workers.

Hourly Wages; Leeds and UK comparisons

Table 3.4

Median  Lower 10% Top 10% Median Annual Change
£ %
Leeds Residential £15.43 £10.55 £30.20 +£0.92 +6%
Leeds Workplace £15.62 £10.71 £31.81 +£1.07 +7%
UK £15.88 £10.70 £32.42 +£1.09 +7%
Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), Nov 2023

Median hourly wages were £15.43/hour for people in work, residing in Leeds compared with £15.62/hour for people working in Leeds (i.e. whether residents or not). Across the UK, the median hourly wage is £15.88/hour. For the lower 10% of earners, residents in Leeds are paid £10.55/hour compared to £10.71/hour for those who work in in Leeds. The top 10% of earners living in Leeds earn over £30.20/hour compared to £31.81/hour for those who work in Leeds.

Median earnings have risen 6% on 2022 for resident workers and 7% for workers in Leeds. Median wages have increased by 7% across the UK.

Weekly Wages; Leeds and UK comparisons

Table 3.5

ASHE Median  Lower 10% Top 10% Median Annual Change
£ %
Leeds Residential £572 £190 £1,097 +£35.90 +7%
Leeds Workplace £581 £219 £1,166 +£44.60 +8%
UK £575 £197 £1,170 +£41.20 +8%
Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), Nov 2023

Median weekly earnings were £572 for people in work, residing in Leeds compared with £581 for people working in Leeds (i.e. whether residents or not). The median weekly wage in the UK was £575. For the lower 10% of earners, residents in Leeds are paid £190/week while workers in Leeds are paid £219/week. The top 10% of earners living in Leeds earn over £1,097/week compared to £1,166/week for those who work in Leeds.

Median earnings have risen 7% on 2022 for residents and 8% for workers in Leeds. Median wages have increased by 8% across the UK.

Annual Salaries; Leeds and UK comparisons

Table 3.6

ASHE Median  Lower Top  Median Annual Change
10% 10% £ %
Leeds Residential £29,000 x x +£424.00 +1%
Leeds Workplace £29,767 £10,997 x +£1,010.00 +4%
UK £29,669 £10,186 £60,506 +£1,895.00 +7%
Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), Nov 2023

x = data was not statistically reliable

Median annual earnings were £29,000 for people in work, residing in Leeds compared with £29,767 for people working in Leeds (i.e. whether residents or not). The median annual salary in the UK was £29,669. Median earnings have risen by 1% on 2022 for residents and by 4% for workers in Leeds. Median wages have risen by 7% across the UK.

For the lower 10% of earners, workers in Leeds are paid £10,997/year compared. The estimates for lower 10% residents and for the top 10% earners (workers and residents) were deemed not statistically reliable in this year’s ASHE data for Leeds and have not been available for our analysis.

Impact of Inflation on Weekly Wages

Table 3.7

ASHE UK Leeds
FTE Median Median Lower 10% Top 10%
2022 Weekly Earnings £533.70 £536.40 £187.30 £1,060.50
2023 Weekly Earnings £574.90 £572.30 £189.70 £1,097.30
Nominal Change £41.20 £35.90 £2.40 £36.80
Nominal % Change 7.7% 6.7% 1.3% 3.5%
Real Change -£0.43 -£5.94 -£12.21 -£45.92
Real % Change -0.1% -1.0% -6.0% -4.0%
Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE), Nov 2023

ONS CPIH Inflation Rate for April 2023 = 7.8%

Table 3.7  provides the inflationary impact on median weekly earnings for Leeds residents and the UK. Real term estimates have also been provided for Leeds’s lowest 10% earners and top 10% earners. In order to estimate the impact of inflation, real term wages have been calculated by using the UK CPIH inflation rate for April 2023 on Leeds and UK wage rates, as published by the ONS in this dataset.

Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) report that for full-time equivalent employees in the UK, median weekly earnings in April 2023 increased to £533.70 by 7.7% (£41.20) from a year earlier on a nominal basis, and when adjusted for inflation (7.8%), it fell by 0.1% (down 43p per week).

In Leeds; full-time equivalent resident employees, median weekly earnings increased to £572.30 by 6.7% (£35.90) from a year earlier on a nominal basis, and when adjusted for inflation (7.8%), it fell by 1% (down £5.94 per week). Looking at the real term impact on the lower 10% of earners, it is estimated that Leeds residents saw a weekly loss of 6% (£12.21) and the top 10% of earners are losing 4% of their income in real terms, (down £45.92 a week). This analysis highlights how it is those on lowest income being hit the hardest by the inflationary impacts and the cost of living.

Employment Trends

Table 3.8

Year Leeds UK
No % No %
2008 355,800 71.5 28,735,700 72.1
2012 344,000 68.6 28,535,500 70.5
2013 342,700 68.2 28,846,600 71.2
2014 347,400 68.9 29,369,200 72.2
2015 378,500 74.9 30,018,200 73.5
2016 374,200 74.1 30,299,400 73.9
2017 390,800 76.6 30,750,500 74.7
2018 388,900 75.0 30,933,500 75.0
2019 384,800 74.6 31,266,400 75.6
2020 413,900 80.6 31,177,800 75.3
2021 374,400 72.7 30,839,900 74.7
2022 398,100 77.3 41,514,600 75.5
Source: ONS Annual Population Survey, (Jan-Dec 2022),quarterly release, April 2023

Care should be used in interpreting the Leeds data year on year because it is sample based and with at least a 2% confidence interval in each year.

In the year to December 2022, employment in Leeds was estimated at 398,100. This is a rate of 77.3%, and is 1.3 percentage points above the national level.

Estimates of people on Zero Hour Contracts

Table 3.9

% on zero hour UK employees on zero hour Leeds employees on zero hour*
2008 0.5% 143,000 1,779
2009 0.6% 189,000 2,072
2010 0.6% 168,000 2,062
2011 0.6% 190,000 2,030
2012 0.8% 252,000 2,752
2013 1.9% 586,000 6,513
2014 2.3% 699,000 7,986
2015 2.5% 804,000 9,468
2016 2.8% 907,000 10,478
2017 2.8% 902,000 10,942
2018 2.6% 844,000 10,111
2019 3.0% 974,000 11,544
2020 3.1% 995,000 12,831
2021 3.2% 1,034,000 11,981
2022 3.4% 1,133,000 13,535
Source: ONS Labour Force Survey, Oct-Dec 2022, Employees on Zero Hour Contracts , released May 2023

*Leeds figures are estimated using the national percentage rates on Employment figures from the APS, April 2023

National figures from the Labour Force Survey (LFS) show the number of people who report that they are on a zero-hours contract in their main employment. In Dec 2022, 3.4% of those surveyed reported being on a zero hour contract.  This equates to 1.13m people in the UK. On the assumption 3.4% of people in employment are on zero contracts in Leeds, using Employment figures for Leeds of 374,400 (Jan-Dec 2022), it is estimated that 13,535 workers are on zero hour contracts.

Unemployment Trends

Table 3.10

Year Leeds UK
No % No %
2008 24,100 6.3 1,633,300 5.8
2012 37,300 9.8 2,510,700 8.0
2013 35,900 9.5 2,486,200 7.7
2014 33,100 8.7 2,088,100 6.4
2015 23,500 5.8 1,704,700 5.4
2016 16,700 4.3 1,588,200 5.0
2017 18,100 4.4 1,441,100 4.5
2018 13,400 3.3 1,374,600 4.3
2019 16,700 4.2 1,290,300 4.0
2020 17,800 4.1 1,515,400 4.6
2021 22,000 5.5 1,457,800 4.5
2022 10,300 2.5 1,173,500 3.6
Source: ONS Annual Population Survey, (Jan-Dec 2020),quarterly release, April 2022

In Leeds 10,300 people were unemployed in 2022, (a rate of 2.5%) down from 22,000 in 2020 (5.5%). In the same period nationally, 3.6% of the UK were unemployed and had decreased from 4.5% on 2021.

Further Information: ASHE data

The Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) is based on a 1% sample of employee jobs taken from HM Revenue & Customs PAYE records. ASHE does not cover the self-employed or employees not paid during the reference period. The 2023 ASHE data provides earnings data during April 2023. The data splits the job count sample into percentiles which provides insight into the lowest and top earning residents and workers in Leeds. The ONS state that the job count figures are intended to provide a broad idea of the numbers of employee jobs but they should not be considered accurate estimates and caution should be applied when using these numbers. Job count data is based on survey data within a standard variance level of +/-5%. Therefore the same caution should be applied when referencing the estimates for Leeds.

In addition, over the coronavirus pandemic period, earnings estimates were affected by changes in composition of the workforce and the impact of the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (furlough) making interpretation difficult; also data collection disruption and lower response rates mean that, for 2020 and 2021, data were subject to more uncertainty and should be treated with further caution. Data from 2022 and 2023 are deemed more reliable, although sample sizes are not as large as they were prior to the pandemic.

Further Information: Living Wage and Minimum Wage Definitions

In April 2016 the government introduced a higher minimum wage rate for all staff over 25 years of age (reduced in April 2021 to staff over 23 years of age) and call this the ‘National Living Wage’. However, the government’s ‘National Living Wage’ is different to the ‘Real Living Wage’ set by the Living Wage Foundation.

The government’s National Minimum Wage rates change every October and is set by the Low Pay Commission. The National Living Wage rates for those over the age of 23 change every April. The UK’s Real Living Wage rate is set annually by the Living Wage Foundation and calculated by the Centre for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University (and is informed by the Minimum Income Standard). The figure is announced every November and employers are advised to implement the new rates within 6 months of the announcement.

The National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage set by government are compulsory for employers while the Real Living Wage is voluntary.  The government rate is based on median earnings while the Living Wage Foundation rate is calculated according to the cost of living.

Further Information: Zero Hours Contracts

National figures from the Labour Force Survey (LFS) show the number of people who report that they are on a “zero-hours contract” in their main employment.
As part of the survey the LFS asks people in employment if their main job has flexible working and, if so, to choose from a list of employment patterns those which best describe their situation. Only those people who select “zero-hours contract” as an option will be included in this analysis. The number of people who are shown as on a zero-hours contract will therefore be affected by whether people know they are on a zero-hours contract and also by how aware they are of the concept. The increased coverage of zero-hours in the latter half of 2013 may have affected the response to this question.
From January 2020, LFS collection was changed to ask about flexible working in all quarters. This has resulted in a change to the way the number of people on zero-hours contracts are calculated. Estimates in this dataset from January to March 2020 onwards are now based on the new methodology, resulting in a break in the series between October to December 2019 and January to March 2020. More information about the change in methodology and its impact on published estimates can be found here.