Fair Work Agency’s priorities criticised days before its launch

A picture


The government has asked its new employment rights watchdog to reduce the regulatory burden on business, it has emerged, a request that worker advocates said risks turning the agency into “a dead duck”.The Fair Work Agency (FWA), which is being launched on Tuesday, is a cornerstone of Labour’s Employment Rights Act.It will bring together several existing labour enforcement bodies and its responsibilities will include policing the minimum wage, holiday pay and modern slavery.At a recent meeting with civil society groups, Matthew Taylor, its incoming chair, listed the five priorities the Department of Business and Trade had laid out for the FWA in its first year.These included “thought leadership” and “reducing regulatory burdens”.

But experts and trade unions say that, rather than reducing regulation, a more robust approach and greater funding for inspections is needed.Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, which represents more than 1 million workers, said the priorities showed the agency was “in danger of being a dead duck before it even begins”.“For too long, workers have borne the brunt of disreputable employers who have had carte blanche,” she said.“The government needs to urgently ensure that the FWA focuses its attention on bringing rogue bosses to heel rather than seeking ways to allow dodgy companies to continue bad behaviour.”Caroline Robinson, director of the Worker Support Centre, a charity that supports migrant workers, said the recommendations were “deeply concerning”.

“It’s contradictory to introduce a new regulator for the purpose of reducing regulatory burdens.Labour enforcement has been decimated over the past 20 years by successive government cuts,” she said.“The Fair Work Agency is our opportunity to reverse this.”The UK has among the fewest labour inspectors per worker within Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries, with different estimates putting the scale of unpaid wages in the billions of pounds.This means employers face “no credible threat of inspection, investigation or enforcement,” said Prof David Whyte, of Queen Mary University.

Whyte will publish a report with the Institute of Employment Rights on Monday with recommendations for the FWA, including adequate funding, unannounced inspections and prosecutions for wrongdoing.The government has yet to announce the budget it will allocate to the FWA.“It’s fantastically depressing,” said Nick Clark, who previously sat on the board of the government’s agricultural exploitation watchdog, which was then named the Gangmasters Licensing Authority.He said it was remarkable that none of the government’s priorities, which also include “intelligence and data” and “public awareness and stakeholder engagement”, mentioned improving conditions for workers.As part of the legislation, an advisory board with representation from business, unions and independent experts has been set up to inform the FWA’s work.

They have yet to meet and were not consulted on the government’s priorities,Tuesday’s launch will be followed by a more substantial kick-off in October, it is understood,The first full strategy for the agency will be published in April 2027,“The message that I’ve heard so far has been that they’re still working on the very basics, that they want to be really consultative and collaborative,” one board member said,“Let’s give them the benefit of the doubt.

”A government spokesperson said: “The new Fair Work Agency will end the current fragmented system of enforcing employment rights, making it easier for workers and victims of exploitation to get the rights they’re entitled to,“The agency will take tough action against businesses that deliberately flout the law while supporting employers who want to do the right thing and strengthen workers’ rights,”
recentSee all
A picture

Oil rises above $110 as Trump deadline looms for Iran to reopen strait – business live

In other news, the American billionaire Bill Ackman’s hedge fund has offered to buy Universal Music Group (UMG) in a deal that values the world’s biggest music company at more than €50bn (£44bn).Pershing Square, the New-York based hedge fund, has offered to buy the business, which is home to artists including Taylor Swift and Elton John, in a cash and stock deal.Ackman said in a statement that while the company, which is led by the British-born Sir Lucian Grainge, had done “an excellent job nurturing and continuing to build a world-class artist roster and generating strong business performance”, its share price had lagged owing to issues “unrelated to the performance of its music business”.Shares in UMG, which have been listed in Amsterdam since 2021, have lost more than a quarter of their value in the past year alone.The company is one of the “big three” record labels, alongside Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group

A picture

Universal Music receives takeover offer from Bill Ackman’s Pershing Square

Billionaire Bill Ackman’s hedge fund has offered to buy Universal Music Group (UMG) in a deal that values the world’s biggest music company at more than €50bn (£44bn).Pershing Square, the New-York based hedge fund, has offered to buy the business, which is home to artists including Taylor Swift and Elton John, in a cash and stock deal.Ackman said in a statement that while the company, which is led by the British-born Sir Lucian Grainge, had done “an excellent job nurturing and continuing to build a world-class artist roster and generating strong business performance”, its share price had lagged owing to issues “unrelated to the performance of its music business”.Shares in UMG, which have been listed in Amsterdam since 2021, have lost more than a quarter of their value in the past year alone.The company is one of the “big three” record labels, alongside Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group

A picture

An AI bot invited me to its party in Manchester. It was a pretty good night

Two weeks ago, an AI bot invited me to a party it was organising in Manchester. It then promptly lied to dozens of potential sponsors that I’d agreed to cover the event, and misled me into believing there would be food.Despite all this, it was a pretty good night.In early February, a class of new, powerful AI assistants went viral. The assistants, called OpenClaw, represented a step change in the rapidly improving capabilities of AI – in large part because, unlike other AI agents, they could be untethered from guardrails and set loose upon the world

A picture

Kurt Strauss obituary

My father, Kurt Strauss, who has died aged 95, was a senior engineer who worked for more than two decades at the Electricity Council, the government body that coordinated electricity supply in England and Wales before privatisation in 1990.He worked for all of that time within the council’s overseas relations branch, managing international relationships, technical exchanges and consultancy services while rising steadily through the ranks to associate director. German by birth but brought up in the UK, he was a passionate European who spoke French and German, and was therefore well suited to those responsibilities.Kurt was born in Degerloch, a suburb of Stuttgart, into a Jewish family. In 1937 his parents, Viktor, who worked in the family down and feather business, and Marianne (nee Melzer), sent Kurt’s older brother, Helmut, to safety in Britain, where he ended up at a boarding school, Sidcot, in Somerset

A picture

The Masters is a welcome oasis in golf’s fractious world, despite its stuffy foibles | Ewan Murray

It is easy to poke fun at the prissy traditions of the Masters. Golfers, never mind spectators, enter a state of panic over what horrible fate may befall them should they break the rules inside Augusta National. It is preposterous in so many ways; adults consumed by fear over missteps at a golf tournament. People do not typically feel this way inside the Sistine Chapel.This year, there are reasons to be grateful for Augusta’s unapologetic approach

A picture

Michigan defeats UConn to win NCAA men’s basketball championship – as it happened

I’m waiting for a Final Four MVP (or MOP, as they call it – Most Outstanding Player) announcement. And here it is …It’s Elliot Cadeau. Well deserved.On that note, we’ll wrap this college basketball season. Back again in November