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UK body to recommend 4-5% pay rise for 1.5 million health workers - Guardian

Published 06/25/2022, 06:49 AM
Updated 06/25/2022, 06:50 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A care worker assists a resident at Alexander House Care Home during the COVID-19 pandemic in Wimbledon, London, Britain, December 25, 2020. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

LONDON (Reuters) - British public-sector health workers should receive an annual pay rise of 4-5% this year, a government advisory body plans to recommend, according to a report in the Guardian newspaper on Saturday.

Surging consumer price inflation, which hit a 40-year high of 9.1% in May, means workers are pushing for bigger than normal pay rises, and there have been widespread strikes in Britain's privately operated rail industry over the past week.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said pay restraint in the public sector is needed to save money and reduce the risk of a longer-term inflationary spiral.

Average pay excluding bonuses in the public sector in the three months to April was up by an annual 1.8%, compared with 4.8% in the private sector, official figures show.

The Guardian said the National Health Service Pay Review Body - a panel that makes annual pay recommendations to the government - would recommend an increase of "somewhere between 4% and 5%".

The body, which normally makes its annual recommendation in July, did not immediately reply to a request for comment. Last year it proposed a 3% pay rise, which the government accepted.

It recommendations cover most staff other than doctors, dentists and senior managers in Britain's National Health Service, totalling almost 1.5 million workers.

In a submission to the review body in February, the health ministry said it had a fixed budget to last until 2025, and that there were "stark trade-offs between pay and other NHS spending" such as staffing levels and medical equipment.

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Latest comments

They should lay them all off and go back to private sector Healthcare. It is in government monopoly's interest to have people die as soon as they retire as they become a cost centre for the government, whereas the private sector medical professionals want people to live as long as possible. The government workers know this.
I wonder how much the people who are working for this government advisory body are being paid? Bet it's filled of Tory donors in top jobs and their children, grandsons, siblings, nephews as support staff
1-0-1 on how to exponetially slap your economy
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