World

The Telegraph
Labour is living in the past – and will destroy the economy to get there
Sir Keir Starmer Angela Rayner
The party's employment reforms will decimate what little remains of the UK's once world-leading flexible labour market - Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire

As it prepares for office later this year, the Labour Party, and especially its leader Sir Keir Starmer, has been busily trying to reassure corporate leaders that the planned overhaul of employment law will be significantly watered down.

Zero-hours contracts may be allowed to continue, at least with a few extra rights. The unions won’t be invited back in to help run the government, and some of the extra employment rights will be ditched.

No one should be fooled. The most significant reform by far is an extension of collective bargaining agreements. They might sound technical, but in practice they would amount to the Government setting wage rates right across the bulk of the private sector.

And if it happens, it will destroy what little remains of the UK’s once world-leading flexible labour market – and destroy tens of thousands of small businesses as well.

There are plenty of headline-grabbing proposals in Labour’s plans for reform of employment law.

Zero-hours contracts will be banned. Fire-and-rehire will be outlawed. Parental leave will be extended, flexible working will be encouraged, gig work will be regulated for the first time, and there may even be a few fashionable reforms such as “a right to switch off”, a right to “work from anywhere”, and perhaps even statutory sabbatical leave without any loss of pay or employment rights.

They are the kind of reforms that generate plenty of support on social media, and will please the party’s mainly professional, public sector base that is always happy to award itself some more time off so long as everyone’s pay and pensions benefits remain just as generous.

Over the last few weeks, the party has been busily watering down many of the reforms, with pledges for extra legal rights replaced with vague commitments to best practice. The party’s leadership is desperate to keep big business on board as it heads into an election.

According to the Unite union, the latest version of the package is “totally unrecognisable”, while its general secretary Sharon Graham described it as a “betrayal”. The final version of the plan is set to be hammered out over the next few weeks, and we will see what is included in the final manifesto when the general election is called.

It won’t be the headline rights that really matter, however. The meat of the plan will be in the detail. The most significant reform is also the most technical. In its 2021 policy outline, the party committed itself to “sectoral collective bargaining” for the whole economy.

As the law firm Lewis Silkin put it in an analysis of the plans, this is “the single most radical proposal in its 2021 Green Paper”.