Eagle wrote:Londoners cannot afford to accept low paid jobs. If that were the case how come immigrants happy to fill these jobs.
Building work , I would have thought , would not pay lowest wages.
I used to think the same but you would be very suprised at lower level of pay in much of the construction industries these days Eagle, times have really changed a lot!
Sometimes this can be due to Eastern European workforce who will live 8 workers sharing a rent to take money back home where this level of pay would be considered good in their homeland economy, they help drive wages down for native workers in the long run. Some disappear before taxman gets his chunk too, as not always PAYE or CIS registered.
Workers with family and children in London should not be expected to share a rent with 7
others under one roof, this is one way that many immigrant workers make working here worthwhile.
I was self employed in the building trade for a while , unlike the good old days it has become
far more regulated, certificated, registered meaning that you can't legally work for 'Cheap'
which is what many customers want, I moved onto other 'employed' work which I assume many others have done as well. This is why it's not always so easy to track down plumbers, sparks, etc..
Eagle wrote:
London has a hard core of people who seem to be unemployable or do not appear to want a job , or a job that is on offer.
London also has many struggling to find a job that will support 'Living in London' costs too,
some of these in lower paid work at the moment and not an easy hole to climb out of. There
are of course the element of 'Workshy' that you
occasionally bring to our attention
they do exist, have always existed and always will but we can't base solutions to employment solely around punishing these people..
Eagle wrote:
Amazed travelling round The Borough in working hours how many gents of working age appear not to be working.
Are you of working age (men up to 65 yo and rising) and are you working? I work a split shift
and often wander around the shops during my break, maybe you have spotted me?
Others work night shifts, have non-work days during the week. It's a lot different from the Mon-Fri / 9-5 many of us used to know.
Are more jobs being created for a swelling population? Are you better off in low paid work or
of living on benefits? Many other reasons too. Some of these gents, as you point out, are probably unemployed as well.
Eagle wrote:
Cannot believe you would have had the same results in the 60's.
There's a few good reasons for this: It was much easier to find a job, expectations have moved on quite a bit too, rents, etc were often not as expensive (in relative terms)..
Eagle wrote:
We do need some new houses for people prepared to work and I appreciate this is a very serious problem.
We need more economical housing for everyone. Getting people working has it's own problems
and issues to overcome..
Sorry to deviate OP away from housing TIm, I agree with Eagle - It's a serious problem!