John Lewis offers staff free food over Christmas to help with cost of living

J

John Lewis is to offer free food to all its workers, including temporary staff, during its peak Christmas trading period as a way to help with the cost of living.

Workers in stores, warehouses and its head office will be able to get breakfast and lunch in staff canteens while those on the road, such as long-distance lorry drivers, will be able to order a packed lunch.

The offer, which will run from 3 October to 6 January, comes as retailers and other businesses battle in a tight labour market to sign up staff for what could be a tough last three months of the year as rising energy bills, food and petrol prices put the squeeze on household budgets.

Perks include free food, interest-free loans, gift cards, one-off cost of living bonuses of as much as £2,000 and additional staff shopping discounts. Some hospitals have set up food banks or are offering emergency hardship loans to workers struggling to cope while holiday specialist Hays Travel holds a prize draw each month; the August winner will have their bills paid for six months.

Union leaders said one-off benefits were not substitute for a pay rise.

Kate Bell, the head of economics at the TUC, said: “Of course workers will take any form of help they can get this winter. But the only real way to give working families security is a decent pay rise.

“One-off support is not enough. We need to get wages rising across the economy to end this living standards crisis.”

High levels of employment and Brexit, which has disrupted the flow of workers from the EU, have made it harder for businesses to recruit temporary staff.

The John Lewis Partnership, which includes the upmarket grocer Waitrose, is trying to recruit more than 10,000 temporary roles in the UK this Christmas, including shop assistants, warehouse workers and delivery drivers.

Owned by its workers, it is known as among the best payers on the high street, offering a minimum of £11.05 an hour in London and £9.90 across the rest of the UK plus an annual profit-related bonus.

But its rates have become less competitive. The group’s UK hourly rate has been overtaken by most of the major supermarkets who now pay at least £10 an hour.

Its annual bonus has also come under pressure, with no payment in 2021 and only 3% – the equivalent to one and a half week’s pay – this year, as the group’s profits have been hit by the pandemic and rising costs. The executive team including its chair, Sharon White, donated their bonuses to the Red Cross this year, but White earns a basic salary of close to £1m.

About the author

Marta Lopez

I am a content writer and I write articles on sports, news, business etc.

By Marta Lopez

Categories

Get in touch

Content and images available on this website is supplied by contributors. As such we do not hold or accept liability for the content, views or references used. For any complaints please contact adelinedarrow@gmail.com. Use of this website signifies your agreement to our terms of use. We do our best to ensure that all information on the Website is accurate. If you find any inaccurate information on the Website please us know by sending an email to adelinedarrow@gmail.com and we will correct it, where we agree, as soon as practicable. We do not accept liability for any user-generated or user submitted content – if there are any copyright violations please notify us at adelinedarrow@gmail.com – any media used will be removed providing proof of content ownership can be provided. For any DMCA requests under the digital millennium copyright act
Please contact: adelinedarrow@gmail.com with the subject DMCA Request.