a slight tangent on previous thread
would you travel upto an hour to work
then work 1 hour paid work
then travel 1 hour back home again
(for what looks like to me )
37p
You will pay tax if you earn over £12501. Also, if you get universal credit and your earnings drop below a certain level they deduct a chunk because you haven’t earned enough. You get to ‘keep’ 37p out of every pound and you are also encouraged to take jobs paying below the minimum wage.
If you examine the entire thread - especially my answer at 14:39 - you will find that the question title is incorrect. It is not the Tories who are classifying people who work one hour as "employed". They are classified under a 37 year old international convention.
I doubt anybody working an hour a week would spend two hours travelling to and from it. But, as Gromit says, working less than 16 hours a week does open up a host of benefits not available to those not working at all.
// if you get universal credit and your earnings drop below a certain level they deduct a chunk because you haven’t earned enough. You get to ‘keep’ 37p //
Total wrong You can earn £287 and any work after that is deducted by 63p in every pound extra you earn.
Gromit - sorry, missed off the £287 bit but if you earn below a certain amount (it’s about £570) then they deduct money because you aren’t fulfilling all of the criteria.
sorry i mis read a little you get to keep 37p x
25 and over £8.21
21 to 24 £7.70
18 to 20 £6.15
Under 18 £4.35
per hour
average commute time in uk 54 minutes
You really are clueless. If you are on minimum wage and working just one (ore a few hours) you will be on a flexible contract, and you will not have a set day off. In fact you are more likely to be working at the weekend.
I sometimes choose only to work one or two hours, but it suits me because it's 5 minutes walk away. The average commute figure of 54 minutes is wholly irrelevant to me, and the figure will include some well paid people who commute nearer 2 hours each way to do a full day.
I've still no idea where 37p fits in unless you are assuming the person gets paid £1 an hour.
Maybe it's worth starting a new thread and forgetting this one.