Green - Labour market
Protect pay in transition schemes
Guarantee two years of pay protection for workers moved through publicly supported transition schemes.
Last updated: May 2026.
Transition scale
The central case covers 100,000 workers a year receiving temporary pay protection during industrial or net-zero transition.
- CCC estimates 8k-75k job losses from net zero.
- Central case includes wider industrial transition.
- Average support is GBP 8,000 per worker.
Core trade-offs
Workers facing transition gain income insurance. Taxpayers or employers pay. If poorly targeted, it can slow necessary reallocation and preserve unviable jobs.
- Displaced workers gain income support.
- Taxpayers or employers pay.
- Bad design slows reallocation.
Illustrative fiscal impact
+GBP 0.1bn to +GBP 3.5bn. Central estimate: +GBP 0.7bn.
- Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Gross costs are separated from tax, NI and benefit offsets.
- Private business costs are not automatically fiscal costs.
- Behavioural responses widen the range materially.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2027-28
- Jobs: Protects incomes, not jobs; may delay movement from declining sectors.
- Wages: Maintains earnings temporarily for selected transition workers.
- Prices: Small aggregate effect unless levies or regulated prices fund it.
- GDP / productivity: Likely negative if unconditional; better if tied to retraining and viable jobs.
Assessment
Pay protection can reduce hardship during transition, but it is not automatically pro-growth. The economic case depends on whether it speeds retraining into productive jobs or delays adjustment in declining sectors.
Confidence: Low. The exposed workforce is uncertain and depends on industrial-transition policy design.
Main risks
- Reallocation delay: Pay protection can keep labour in low-productivity or declining activities.
- Eligibility pressure: More sectors may claim transition status once support exists.
- Regional lock-in: Support may preserve jobs where future demand is weak.
Safeguards
- Tie support to retraining milestones.
- Publish eligible sectors and expiry dates.
- Evaluate earnings after support ends.
Academic evidence
Acemoglu and Restrepo, Journal of Political Economy, 2020
Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets
Automation can displace tasks and workers even when it raises output in some firms.
Supports caution on AI rules that trade protection against productivity.
Autor, Kerr and Kugler, Economic Journal, 2007
Does Employment Protection Reduce Productivity?
Employment-protection changes can reduce productivity where firms face higher firing and adjustment costs.
Supports caution on policies that raise dismissal, scheduling or adjustment costs.
UK government evidence
Climate Change Committee, 2023
A Net Zero workforce
The CCC estimates 8,000 to 75,000 existing jobs may not continue in current form.
Bounds transition-pay exposure.
BEIS and Department for Education, 2021
Green Jobs Taskforce report
The Green Jobs Taskforce emphasised skills plans and worker engagement in transition.
Supports targeting pay protection with retraining.
HMRC, 2026
Rates and thresholds for employers 2026 to 2027
HMRC thresholds define income tax, employee NI, employer NI and statutory-pay recovery.
Used for tax and statutory-payment offsets.
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology for protect pay in transition schemes Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- A Net Zero workforce Official advisory report - Climate Change Committee, 2023
- Green Jobs Taskforce report UK government report - BEIS and Department for Education, 2021
- OECD Employment Outlook 2024 International report - OECD, 2024
- Rates and thresholds for employers 2026 to 2027 UK government guidance - HMRC, 2026
- Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets Academic article - Acemoglu and Restrepo, Journal of Political Economy, 2020
- Does Employment Protection Reduce Productivity? Academic article - Autor, Kerr and Kugler, Economic Journal, 2007
- Workers' Charter 2026 Party policy source - Green Party of England and Wales, 2026
Other Green policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.