This article highlights the distributive considerations behind the longstanding opposition of the British Trades Union Congress (TUC) to the introduction of a statutory national minimum wage in the United Kingdom. Possibly because of its strong preoccupation with class divisions, the existing literature on labor market development has failed to fully recognize the importance of these considerations in shaping the TUC’s longstanding opposition to statutory intervention to assist the low paid in the United Kingdom. In much of this literature, it is argued that this opposition mainly resulted from union fears that statutory intervention would undermine their function and with that their ability to attract union members. This article casts dou...