Cost of living impacts on employees and employers

Inflationary pressures and the soaring cost of living is playing on workers' minds. But also on employers.

We have some resources to help organisations who want to support the financial wellbeing of their employees through the cost of living crisis, and we've been discussing this here. Our discussion about mid-year cost-of-living payments and one-off support for employees has now been read over 10,000 times. Charles Cotton, CIPD's Performance and Reward Advisor has also written about the pros and cons of doing that here.

Please continue to share any tangible steps you are taking to support your employees. As well as one-of payments, are you supporting your staff with travel loans? Have you introduced or extended flexible hours, allowed staff to 'sell' holiday? Are you considering encouraging your employees to come into the office where it will be warmer over the colder months?

But I recognose this is also a real challenge - a crisis, even - for employers themselves. 

Can you afford to do anything? Do you think it's your responsibility to do anything? Are you reviewing benefits? Do you expect to have to make redundancies to offset rising energy bills? 

Please let us know (below) what additional advice and resources you would find helpful in this area.

Parents
  • As mentioned in the OP, there is a cap on household energy prices, but not on commercial energy prices, so the cost of energy to businesses will be higher than to households. Ergo, letting people return to the office to save it domestic energy costs will result in higher costs for businesses. Contrariwise, using the money you *would have spent* on commercial energy and using it to subsidize domestic energy use for employees would help both sides save money.
  • Not that there is a solution that will fit all but this wouldn't work in places where staff have no choice but to come into the office i.e warehouse operatives.
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