Amazon warehouse workers in the United Kingdom have organised a series of spontaneous strike actions after the e-commerce giant's management offered them salary raises ranging from 35p to 50p per hour.
Unofficial wildcat strikes are sweeping across Amazon's UK warehouses, with hundreds of workers staging walkouts, sit-ins, and work slowdowns in protest of the e-commerce giant's pitiful wage increases.
Beginning on 3 August 2022 with Amazon's LCY2 warehouse in Essex, where 700 logistics workers spontaneously walked out after receiving a 35p salary raise offer, Amazon employees have already undertaken walkout actions in at least ten Amazon facilities over similar business offers.
Amazon workers had also held wildcat strikes (those performed without the involvement or backing of a union) in Rugeley, Coventry, Swindon, Rugby, Doncaster, Bristol, Dartford, Belvedere, Hemel Hempstead, and Chesterfield at the time of publication, with more predicted in the coming days.
So far, striking actions have included walk-outs from shifts, sit-ins at warehouse canteens, and work slowdowns, in which workers are actively seeking to fall short of productivity standards. Workers at some of the facilities, for example, process one package per hour in order to be paid.
Amazon, which does not recognise unions in any of its UK facilities, offered its workers salary raises ranging from 35p to 50p per hour, depending on their location and length of service with the company. While the offer represents a 3% rise above current earnings, the inflation rate in June 2022 was 9.4%.
"Amazon employees' starting wage will rise to a minimum of between £10.50 and £11.45p/h, depending on region." "Since 2018, the minimum hourly salary provided to Amazon associates has increased by 29%," claimed an Amazon representative.
Employees are also provided with a comprehensive benefits package that includes private medical insurance, life insurance, income protection, subsidised lunches, an employee discount, and other benefits worth thousands of pounds each year, as well as a business pension plan."
Making Notations An anonymous Amazon worker from Coventry told From Below, a publication dedicated to documenting the everyday struggles of working-class people against capitalism and the state, that warehouse staff had been waiting for information about the pay rise since April, and were expecting at least another £2 per hour. They were instead offered 50p.
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