In a Berlin workshop where the hum of machinery competes with the clatter of hope, disabled workers are demanding what should be theirs: equal pay. For decades, Germany’s sheltered workshops have paid employees pennies on the euro, a system now under constitutional challenge. The case is sending tremors across the Channel, where the UK’s Equality Act is facing its own reckoning. This is not a dry legal debate; it is a human story about dignity, invisibility, and the slow churn of social justice.
Take Anna, a 34-year-old with cerebral palsy who assembles circuit boards in a Berlin workshop. She earns €2.50 an hour. Her counterpart in a mainstream factory earns €15. She told me, ‘I work just as hard. Why is my labour worth less?’ Her question is the heart of the German case, brought by several workers supported by the ‘Behindertenbeauftragter’ (disability commissioner). They argue that the system violates both German constitutional law and the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. If successful, it could force hundreds of workshops to pay minimum wage, reshaping a sector that employs 300,000 people.
Across the North Sea, the UK’s Equality Act 2010 similarly allows employers to pay disabled workers less if they are deemed ‘less productive’ or need ‘special conditions’. The latest government figures show over 40% of disabled adults in the UK are employed, but the pay gap remains stubborn: disabled workers earn 13% less on average. Campaigners, including the charity Scope, have long argued that the Act’s ‘productivity’ exception perpetuates a second-class system. ‘It’s a legal loophole that brands disabled people as inherently less valuable,’ says Scope’s policy director, James Taylor. The German case is now galvanizing a push for reform. Labour MP Debbie Abrahams has tabled an amendment to the Equality Act to remove the pay loophole, citing the European precedent.
But what does this mean on the street? In a café in Manchester, I spoke to Mark, a 28-year-old with a spinal condition who works in a warehouse. He is paid £7.50 an hour, while his non-disabled colleagues earn £9.50. ‘They say I need more breaks so I’m worth less,’ he said, stirring his tea. ‘But I always hit my targets. The break is medical, not laziness.’ His story is not unique. Many disabled workers report being funnelled into ‘sheltered’ roles even when fully capable of mainstream work, a practice that reinforces segregation.
Critics of the German system, like Professor Dr. Sigrid Betzelt of the University of Berlin, argue that the workshops are ‘empire for the disabled, but without real inclusion.’ They provide jobs but keep people in a parallel labour market. The UK risks the same if it fails to act. Yet the push for reform is not simple. Employers warn that equal pay could make it harder to hire disabled workers, as accommodations could be seen as unaffordable. This is the classic tension between equality and market logic.
The German case is a reminder that social progress is rarely linear. The workshops were initially fought for by disabled activists themselves, as havens from exploitation. Now they are seen as a new form of cage. In Britain, the Equality Act was hailed as landmark legislation. But as Claire (a pseudonym), a Paralympic athlete turned campaigner, put it: ‘Laws are just words until they change how we see each other.’
What happens in Berlin’s courts will not directly change UK law, but it alters the moral landscape. The UK is now under pressure to prove it values all work equally. As Anna said, ‘I want to be paid like a human being, not a fixed cost.’ That is a demand that transcends borders and legal systems. It is a demand for the most basic recognition: that labour, any labour, has dignity.
The clock is ticking. The German verdict is expected in late 2024. In the UK, the amendment to the Equality Act is crawling through Parliament. The real test, however, is not legal. It is whether we, as a society, can look at someone like Anna or Mark and truly see a peer, not a problem to be managed. That is the human cost of inequality, and it is still too high.
Clara Whitby, Culture & Society Editor








