The
minimum wage was introduced in Great Britain in 1909, by
Winston Churchill, for certain low-wage industries and expanded to numerous industries, including farm labour, by 1920. However, by the 1920s,
family allowance targeted at low-income families was an alternative method, suggested by reformers, to relieve poverty without distorting the labour market. The trade unions and the Labour Party adopted this view. In 1945, family allowances were introduced; minimum wages faded from view. Talk resumed in the 1970s, but in the 1980s the Thatcher ministry made it clear it would not accept a national minimum wage. Eventually with the return of Labour to power, the
National Minimum Wage Act 1998 set a minimum wage of £3.60 per hour, with lower rates for younger workers. It largely affected workers in high-turnover service industries such as fast-food restaurants, and people from ethnic minority backgrounds. The system was first implemented in August 1946 as "family allowances" under the
Family Allowances Act 1945, at a rate of 5
s (= £0.25) per week per child in a family, except for the eldest. This was raised from September 1952, by the Family Allowances and National Insurance Act 1952, to 8
s (= £0.40), and from October 1956, by the Family Allowances Act and National Insurance Act 1956, to 8
s for the second child with 10
s (= £0.50) for the third and subsequent children. By 1955, some 5,000,000 allowances were being paid, to about 3,250,000 families. It was modified in 1977, with the payments being termed "child benefit" and given for the eldest child as well as the younger ones; by 1979 it was worth £4 per child per week. In 1991, the system was further altered, with a higher payment now given for the first child than for their younger siblings. In October 2010, the
Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government announced that Child Benefit would be withdrawn from households containing a higher-rate taxpayer from January 2013. After some controversy, this was amended so that any household with at least one person with prescribed income over £50,000 would lose Child Benefit by a taper which removed it altogether when the income reached £60,000. This came into force on 7 January 2013. Today, child benefit is administered by
His Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC). , payment rates are £26.05 per week for the first or only child (including the eldest of a multiple birth) and £17.25 per week for each additional child. ==Comparison in Europe==