Posted by Hari on Saturday, January 07, 2017 with No comments | Labels: Big Society, Bonus, inequality, jobs, pay, unions
"Fat Cat Wednesday 2017"
by the High Pay Centre
Welcome back to work. FTSE100 bosses will have already
clocked up an average annual UK salary just two-and-a-half days into the
working year
- Top bosses will already have made more money by the first Wednesday of 2017 than the typical UK worker will earn all year
- The average pay ratio between FTSE100 CEOs and the average total pay of their employees in 2015 was 129:1
- Making the publication of pay ratios compulsory will help track progress on closing this gap
It’s Fat Cat Wednesday (4.1.2017). After just two and a half
days Britain’s top bosses will have made more money than the average UK worker
earns in an entire year, according to High Pay Centre calculations.
The figures show that pay for top company executives
returning to work this new year will pass the UK average salary of £28,200
(note 2 below) by around mid-day on “Fat Cat Wednesday”.
After a year in which “elites” were criticised for being out
of touch and ignorant about the concerns of ordinary people, these pay gap
figures confirm that there are dramatically different rates of pay at the top
compared with what everyone else receives.
Median FTSE100 CEO pay in 2015 was £3.973 million (note 1
below). We found that even if CEOs are assumed to work long hours with very few
holidays, this is equivalent to a rate of pay of over £1,000 an hour (note 3
below). The “national living wage” for over 25s is £7.20 an hour.
High Pay Centre director Stefan Stern said: “Our new year
calculation is not designed to make the return to work harder than it already
is. But ‘Fat Cat Wednesday’ is an important reminder of the continuing problem
of the unfair pay gap in the UK. We hope the government will recognise that
further reform to pay practices are needed if this gap is to be closed. That
will be the main point in our submission to the business department in its
current consultation over corporate governance reform.
“Reality check” needed
“Effective representation for ordinary workers on the company
remuneration committees that set executive pay, and publication of the pay
ratio between the highest and average earner within a company, would bring a
greater sense of proportion to the setting of top pay,” Stern added.
The huge increase in top pay in recent years seems to have
arisen because of so-called “performance-related pay” awards. But as new
research from Lancaster University Management School has revealed, the link
between pay and performance has in fact been “negligible”:
GUARDIAN: 'Negligible' link between executive pay and firm's performance
INDEPENDENT: Link between high executive pay and performance ‘negligible’
FINANCIAL TIMES: ‘Negligible’ link found between executive pay and performance
This is not just a FTSE100 company problem. AIM-listed Asos
is being criticised today by the GMB union for a similar vast gap in pay created
by the chief executive’s “Long Term Incentive Plan” (for more information
contact jon.parker-dean@gmb.org.uk).
And excessive private sector pay deals set a bad example to
some public sector and not-for-profit organisations, as controversy over the
pay for some university vice chancellors, school “superheads”, NHS Trust chief
executives, local authority leaders and some charity bosses suggests.
The continuing pay gap creates problems for us all.
Notes:
1. The median pay for a FTSE 100 CEO in 2015 was £3.973
million, based on the publicly disclosed “single figure” measure
http://highpaycentre.org/pubs/10-pay-rise-thatll-do-nicely (There are different
ways of measuring executive pay, and the single figure measure differs from the
“pay realised” figure and the pay awarded figures available from Manifest.)
2. Median earnings for full-time workers in the UK (who had
been in their job for at least 12 months) were £28,200 in
2016https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/earningsandworkinghours/bulletins/annualsurveyofhoursandearnings/2016provisionalresults.
This represents an increase from £27,645 in 2015.
3. Even when making the generous assumption that FTSE 100
CEOs work 12 hours a day, including three out of every four weekends, and take
fewer than 10 days holiday per year, this still works out at about £1,009 per
hour, meaning that it would take around 28 hours’ work to surpass the UK
average of £28,200 – some time around mid-day on Wednesday 4th, assuming they
begin work for the year on Monday January 2nd.
4. The High Pay Centre is an independent think-tank set up
to examine corporate governance and pay at the top of the income distribution.
We carry out research aimed at developing a better understanding of top
rewards, company accountability and business performance.
5.
The 10 highest paid CEOs in 2015 and 2014 were as follows:
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