Green - Labour market
Replace zero-hours with guaranteed hours
Require guaranteed-hours contracts for regular variable-hours workers, with compensation for cancelled shifts.
Last updated: May 2026.
Affected workers
The official ERA analysis cites about 2.4 million variable-hours workers affected by guaranteed-hours measures.
- Official business cost is material.
- Fiscal cost is mainly public exposure.
- Flexibility loss is the bigger economic risk.
Core trade-offs
Variable-hours workers gain income security. Employers lose scheduling flexibility. In variable-demand sectors, fewer casual shifts and lower marginal hiring should be expected.
- Workers gain predictable hours.
- Employers lose flexibility.
- Casual hiring likely falls.
Illustrative fiscal impact
+GBP 0.2bn to +GBP 3.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 0.8bn.
- 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: Likely fewer marginal casual shifts and some lower hiring in variable-demand sectors.
- Wages: Income volatility falls for workers receiving guaranteed hours.
- Prices: Hospitality, care and retail may pass scheduling costs into prices.
- GDP / productivity: Likely negative short run if flexibility loss exceeds planning gains.
Assessment
Guaranteed hours improve security for variable-hours workers but reduce employer flexibility. The policy should be assessed as a labour-cost and scheduling constraint, not as a free administrative change.
Confidence: Medium-low. Official costings exist, but a stronger ban would exceed them.
Main risks
- Hours rationing: Employers may offer fewer shifts or avoid regular patterns.
- Small-firm exposure: Demand volatility is harder for small firms to absorb.
- Enforcement burden: Workers need fast remedies for cancelled shifts and avoidance.
Safeguards
- Phase by regularity threshold.
- Monitor shifts, not just jobs.
- Use fast low-cost enforcement.
Academic evidence
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.
DiNardo, Fortin and Lemieux, Econometrica, 1996
Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992
Labour-market institutions can compress wage inequality through wage floors and bargaining power.
Useful for distributional channels, not for claiming free fiscal gains.
Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992 (1996)
UK government evidence
Department for Business and Trade, 2026
Employment Rights Act 2025 - Economic Analysis
The ERA economic analysis estimates around GBP 1bn annual direct business cost before social-care bargaining.
Provides official baseline costs and affected groups.
Department for Business and Trade, 2026
Employment Rights Act 2025 impact assessments
The IA collection separates guaranteed hours, unfair dismissal, fire and rehire, union and equality measures.
Prevents treating broad rights packages as one undifferentiated pledge.
Ministry of Justice, 2026
Tribunal Statistics Quarterly: October to December 2025
Employment Tribunals received 13,000 single claims and had 58,000 open single cases in Q3 2025.
Shows enforcement capacity is already a binding risk.
Tribunal Statistics Quarterly: October to December 2025 (2026)
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology for replace zero-hours with guaranteed hours Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- Employment Rights Act 2025 - Economic Analysis UK government report - Department for Business and Trade, 2026
- Employment Rights Act 2025 impact assessments Impact assessment collection - Department for Business and Trade, 2026
- Tribunal Statistics Quarterly: October to December 2025 Official statistics - Ministry of Justice, 2026
- Does Employment Protection Reduce Productivity? Academic article - Autor, Kerr and Kugler, Economic Journal, 2007
- Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992 Academic article - DiNardo, Fortin and Lemieux, Econometrica, 1996
- Workers' Charter 2026 Party policy source - Green Party of England and Wales, 2026
Other Green policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.