The National Minimum Wage in France

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The National Minimum Wage in France Timothy Whitton To cite this version: Timothy Whitton. The National Minimum Wage in France. Low pay review, 1989, pp.21-22. <hal-01017386> HAL Id: hal-01017386 https://hal-clermont-univ.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01017386 Submitted on 3 Jul 2014 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés.

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3 WHITTON Timothy, The National Minimum Wage in France, Low Pay Unit, Low Pay In France, the first step taken to help low-paid workers came in 1848 under the Second Republic. Parliament decreed that the wages of subcontracted labour were to be investigated if the competent authorities deemed that workers were being unfairly remunerated. Fifty years later, wages paid on all government subcontracting were established "at the local average rate". It was not until 1915, however, that a minimum wage was fixed by law and although it only covered homeworkers in the textile industry when it was passed, the effects rapidly spread to other homeworkers. The next major step came in 1950 when the S.M.I.G. was introduced (salaire minimum interprofessionnel garanti) which guaranteed a statutory minimum wage for all professions. This was based on the standard budget of an unmarried unskilled worker living in or near Paris and although it represented an important landmark in the history of wage negotiations, it soon became apparent that the initial budget was unrealistic. Further modifications were implemented leading to a national statutory minimum wage calculated using the retail price index. At first, 213 articles from the "housewife's shopping basket" were considered as suitably reflecting the basic needs and included rent, transport, clothes etc. In 1957, the number of articles was changed in order to relate to a family's needs. The S.M. I.G. was reviewed from time to time and each time the total price of the shopping basket rose by at least 2%, the S.M.I.G. automatically increased by the same amount. In 1970, the S.M.I.C. was introduced (salaire minimum interprofessionnel de croissance) and index-linked to the now 259 articles in the shopping basket but also to the "general economic situation". To this end, although the S.M.I.C. is subject to the automatic 2% increase, it is reviewed annually on the 1st of July to decide whether prevailing economic conditions justify a non-index-linked increase. The government can also decide to modify the S.M.I.C. at any time on the advice of a specialist committee comprised of civil servants and union officials. In 1985, some 1.4 million workers were earning the basic S.M.I.C. out of an economically active population of 21 million. Most of these were concentrated in the catering and textile

industries, where collective bargaining is virtually non-existent (no surprise to anyone familiar with the low-wages climate in Britain!). The major drawback of the S.M.I.C. is the definition of the housewife's basket. Even so, the statutory minimum wage is widely accepted as being the minimum necessary barrier between more unscrupulous employers and their workers and is recognised by the unions as being the socially accepted minimum upon which careful collective bargaining can lay its foundations. For French workers, especially at the beginning of their careers, the S.M.I.C. is one of the reliable parameters in a maze of contract legislation quite often beyond many people s understanding. 4