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Understanding the marginalisation and pay differentials within the UK social care sector, exploring workforce characteristics, pay structures, and factors influencing hourly pay rates among direct care workers.
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Marginalisation and pay differentials in the UK social care sector DrShereen Hussein King’s College London
What is social care? • Social care supports people of all ages • With needs arising from physical, cognitive or disabilities • Assist in carrying out personal care or domestic routines (activities of daily living). • Helps sustain paid or unpaid work, education, learning, leisure and other social support systems. • Supports people in building social relationships and participating fully in society. shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Why is social care so important? • Complex interactions of political, economical, sociological and demographic factors • Role of state, society and individuals • In the forefront of political debates • reforms, big society, mutuals, personalisation etc. • Value of emotional work • Duties and responsibilities • In the heart of demographic forces • Strong business case! shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Formal and informal spheres of care • Sociology of care • Norms and traditions • Individual, society and government responsibilities • Working with other forms of support (social security, health and housing) • Complement, intersect but do not substitute one another • Interaction with health care shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Marginalisation of the social care as a labour market sector • Dealing with a special kind of ‘commodity’ • Value of ‘care’ work to the society • Gendered; emotional; for granted ! • Responsibilities and duties of care • The role of the welfare state (means tested) • Assumed or planned • Pricing ‘emotional’ work shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
The position of the care sector and labour dynamics • Changing structure; place; nature, interaction with health services • Domiciliary, residential • Individual budgets • Links to government funds • Interactions with other markets • Role of the private and voluntary sector • Secondary labour position • Migrants and BME workers contribution • Pay and working conditions • Possible other rewards • Flexibility • Satisfaction • Stepping stone • Only job! • Temporarily or continuous shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Characteristics of the care sector • Means tested, state-funded, less than 12% of users • Private sector major supplier of services (75% of services) • Different types of settings- with domiciliary care workers accounting for 48% of the workforce • Increase policy emphasis on personalisation and user choice • Wages are a major cost component • Growing demand- high vacancy and turnover rates- almost a recession proof sector • No signs of funding reforms! shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Workforce structure • Gender (80% women), age (mid 40s) and education (minimum skills required) • Migrants and immigration policies • International and local supply • Grey economy and domestic work • Lack/unclarityof career path • Marginalisation within a marginalised sector shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Pay structure shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Marginalisation in pay • One of the main low paying sectors (LPC) • Before and after the introduction of the NMW • Two tier pay levels; with direct care and ‘other’ workers paid on, below or just above the NMW • ‘Top’ tier includes professional workers (SW, OT ect.) and managers • Pay rates are significantly lower in the private sector and in domiciliary care settings • Ethnic pay-gaps also exist • BME workers paid lower than white workers after accounting for other factors • More people leave care work due to low pay from the private than statutory sector shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Sector effect: hourly pay rate statistics for different job groups working in different sectors, SCWP 6 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Setting effect: hourly pay rate statistics for different job groups working in different settings, SCWP 6 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Investigating pay differentials in the sector • Using mixed-effect models • Controlling for measured and unobserved factors and cluster effects at different levels of hierarchy • Separate models for different job role groups • Managers/supervisors • Ancillary • Direct care • Professional shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Direct care workers pay differentials • Significant and large in magnitude effect of individual providers (55% of variance) • Sector variations are large and significant • Large regional effects • Significant fixed effects: • Type of care setting/service type • Ethnicity • Interactions between age and setting • Interactions between gender and setting • Interactions between sector and setting shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Descriptive: Variations in hourly pay of adult direct care workers by some selected individual and employer-level characteristics, SCWP 7 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Results of final mixed-effect model of hourly pay of adult direct care workers, SCWP 7 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
But ..Available data don’t represent accurate figures • Data provided by employers (NMDS-SC) • One figure for hourly rate (no indication of ‘enhanced’ rates etc.) • Sector is not very well defined (LFS) • Over represent higher wages and more stable workforce (ASHE) • Unrecorded ‘working’ time • Travel between clients • Extra work • On call – sleep in duties etc. shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Attempt to improve estimates of those paid under NMW • Combining different data sources • Adjusting for unpaid travel time • Adopt a methodology that maximises the benefit of prior knowledge • Focus only on direct care workers (majority of the workforce) shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Recent estimates and analysis • Approach • Sector specific data (provided by employers; NMDS-SC) adjusted by other sources (provided by workers; LoCSsurvey) • Accounting for previously published estimated by the LPC and small surveys (Bayesian approach) • Assumptions • Very small adjustments (average of 22.7 minutes of unpaid work and 4.8 min of travel time per week) • Findings • From (9.2% to 12.9%) or 156,673 to 219,241 ‘direct care’ workers in the UK are paid under the NMW shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Pay distribution of direct care workers Source: Hussein (2011); SCWP Issue 16 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Posterior distributions of being paid under the NMW shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Risks- what to be aware of • Pay distributions are borderline with NMW in most cases • Any unpaid time likely to cause hourly pay rates to move under the NMW • Any changes in the NMW rates will have a large impact • Larger numbers of workers are likely to be affected if • we include ‘other’ workers- 14% of the total workforce • we include unreported work; especially through direct payment/personalisation schemes • Main risk areas for underpaying includes travel time/cost and night shifts • Innovative ways to cut costs: • reducing number of staff in shifts; increasing duties of lower paid ranks (care workers to give injections instead of nurses); shorter shifts (forcing some to work extra unpaid time); ‘real time’ shifts by the minutes etc. shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
MarginalisionMigrant workers shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Migrant workers • Continue to constitute a considerable part of the workforce • Majority non-EEA migrants (usually with nursing qualifications) • Large regional variations • Concentrated in certain jobs • No large variations in pay levels • Linked to immigration status- minimum wage> NMW • Usually given ‘harder’ shifts which may pay more, e.g. night/weekend • Discrimination • Immigration policies: • Differences between EU and non-EU migrants • Attachment to employer • Qualifications • Choice and mobility • Language shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Experience of racism • Many experience racism and or discrimination • Then I noticed some of my colleagues started to, you know, I don’t know kind of my colleagues then so I think I noticed that, you know, people really sometimes they bully especially if you’re a different colour (Site 06, Migrant worker, Asian man 607). • Most are fine, but some clients can be rude and swear at you they can use racist comments: colour plays a big part. The excuse is often their mental health (Site 01, Migrant worker, black African woman 137). • Differential experiences of different ethnic groups • Visible social markers • Being ‘foreign’ • The ‘time’ factor Source: Stevens, Hussein and Manthorpe (2012) shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Top nationalities of migrant workers Source: Hussein (2011); SCWP Issue 11 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Trends of number of migrant workers (in the care sector) entering the social care sector from 1995-2010 by nationality groups Source: Hussein (2011); SCWP12 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Migrants and pay shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Another Advantage of many migrants “...are less likely to quibble and will accept worse conditions than established citizens; getting on with the job and not complaining too much.” (Refugee organisation director) Source: Hussein, Stevens and Manthorpe 2010 shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Next steps • Examine the profile of those likely to be paid under the NMW • Using sector specific data complemented by other national data • Sector differences • Type of settings • Providers/employers characteristics associated with very low pay • Investigate pay and conditions among workers employed directly by users (personal budgets) • Partnership/collaborative approach • Policy, research and practical knowledge • Understand, educate, regulate and penalise shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
References • Hussein, S., Manthorpe. J. and Stevens, M. (2011) The Experiences of Migrant Social Work and Social Care Practitioners in the UK: Findings from an Online Survey. European Journal of Social Work, 14(4): 479-496. • Hussein, S. (2011) ‘Estimating probabilities and numbers of direct care workers paid under the National Minimum Wage in the UK: A Bayesian approach. Social Care Workforce Periodical, Issue 16: December 2011’. • Hussein S. (2011) The contributions of migrants to the English care sector. Social Care Workforce Periodical, Issue 11- February 2011. • Hussein S. (2011) Migrant workers in long term care: evidence from England on trends, pay and profile. Social Care Workforce Periodical, Issue 12- March 2011. • Hussein S., Stevens M. and Manthorpe J. (2010) International Social Care Workers in England: Profile, Motivations, experiences and Future Expectations, February 2010. Final Report. • Stevens, M., Hussein, S. & Manthorpe, J., (2012), 'Experiences of racism and discrimination among migrant care workers in England: findings from a mixed-methods research project', Ethnicity and Racial Studies. 35(2): 259-280. shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk
Thank You For Listening Now Your Turn! shereen.hussein@kcl.ac.uk