Pay for some public sector workers has risen much more than the
economy-wide average in recent years. In particular, public
sector workers on lower rates of pay have seen substantial,
inflation-beating pay rises. At the 25th percentile
(i.e. for those earning more than only one-quarter of public
sector workers), real public sector pay is now 16% higher than in
2007.
But higher earners have seen big reductions in pay in the public
sector. At the 75th percentile (i.e. earning more than
three-quarters of public sector workers), pay is now 8% lower in
real terms than in 2007. Teachers and doctors have faced bigger
cuts still, with doctors particularly hard-hit over the period
since 2019.
It has long been the case that pay in the public sector is more
compressed (with smaller gaps between low and high earners) than
in the private sector. But the difference in pay inequality
between public and private sectors has grown further following
public sector pay deals that consistently prioritise lower-paid
workers. Such divergence is unlikely to be sustainable and is
almost bound to lead to recruitment and retention problems.
These are some of the key findings from new IFS research
published today, funded by the Nuffield Foundation and abrdn
Financial Fairness Trust, in advance of the general election
expected later this year.
These trends in pay have a number of key implications:
-
There has been a big decrease in inequality in pay in
the public sector. Back in 2007, pay at the
75thpercentile of the distribution was 140% higher
than at the 25th percentile. By 2023, it was only
90% higher than the 25th percentile. In
other words, the gap between relatively high and relatively low
earners has fallen by more than a third since 2007.
- Men are disproportionately likely to work in high-earning
public sector roles, relative to women, and so have seen worse
trends in their pay. Mean pay for women in the public
sector fell by less than 1% from 2019 to 2023, compared with an
8% fall for men. Over the period 2007 to 2023, mean pay fell by
11% for men and rose by 3% for women.
-
Over the longer term, higher-paid occupations such as
teachers and (especially) doctors have seen much larger falls
in average pay than the public sector as a whole.
Average doctor pay in the autumn of 2023 was almost 15% lower
than in 2010, with teacher pay lower by around 9%. Since 2019,
it looks as if doctors’ pay has done particularly badly
compared with other occupations, though the latest data do not
yet incorporate the full effect of pay deals that were
implemented in September.
-
Average pay in the public sector as a whole has fallen
behind the private sector, including in the last four
years. By the end of 2023, average pay in the public
sector was at roughly the same level as in December 2019, while
private sector pay had grown by around 2%, continuing the trend
of private sector pay outperforming public sector pay since
2015.
Jonathan Cribb, an Associate Director at IFS and an
author of the report, said:
‘Doctors, experienced teachers and senior civil servants are all
paid considerably more than the average worker. That might make
holding their pay down, while increasing the pay of lower-paid
public sector workers, look attractive to the government. But pay
needs to reflect skills and outside options. The public sector
has always been more generous to its lower-paid employees, and
less generous to the highest-skilled, than the private sector.
This can be pushed too far. Large cuts to the pay of higher
earners in recent years have contributed to problems of
recruitment and retention, as well as industrial strife. We may
need to see pay inequalities in the public sector rise if it is
to remain at all competitive with private sector options for
higher earners, many of whom play a critical role in public
service delivery.’
Mark Franks, Director of Welfare at the Nuffield
Foundation, said:
‘Pay accounts for a large chunk of government spending, and
elevated public debt, sluggish economic growth and high inflation
have left the government facing a difficult balancing act between
paying its employees appropriately and sustainable management of
the public finances. However, finding a viable long-term approach
to public sector pay should be high on the agenda of any future
government. As users of public services, we all lose out if the
government is unable to recruit and retain workers in sufficient
numbers, with the most vulnerable members of society often
disproportionately affected.’