Public Sector Pay Cap 12.48 pm John McDonnell (Hayes
and Harlington) (Lab) (Urgent Question): To ask the
Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement outlining
the Government’s policies with regard to the public sector pay cap.
The Chief Secretary to the Treasury (Elizabeth Truss) We all
recognise that public sector workers...Request free trial
Public Sector Pay Cap
12.48 pm
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(Hayes and Harlington)
(Lab)
(Urgent Question): To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer
if he will make a statement outlining the Government’s
policies with regard to the public sector pay cap.
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The Chief Secretary to the Treasury (Elizabeth Truss)
We all recognise that public sector workers do a fantastic
job. Over the past seven years, we have seen major
improvements in our public services. Crime is down, with a
greater proportion of police on the frontline. More
children are achieving higher standards at school and going
on to apprenticeships and university. Our NHS is looking
after more people than at any time in its history.
Government pay policy is designed to be fair to public
sector workers, who work so hard to deliver these strong
public services, but we must also ensure that we are able
to provide those public services on a sustainable basis for
the future. In many services, workers have received pay
additional to the 1% national increase. Teachers had an
average pay rise of 3.3% in 2015-16. More than half of
nurses and other NHS staff had an average increase of over
3% in 2016. Military service personnel also saw an average
additional increase of 2.4%. Salaries in the public sector
remain comparable to those in the private sector. In
addition, many benefit from higher pension entitlements.
They also benefit from the rise in the personal allowance,
worth £1,000 to a basic-rate taxpayer.
We are currently completing the pay review process for
2017-18. We have accepted the pay review body
recommendations made for doctors, the NHS and the armed
forces. We will be looking very carefully at the
recommendations on the remainder and making determinations
in the usual way. As the Chancellor said on Monday, our
policy on public sector pay has always been designed to
strike the right balance of being fair to our public sector
workers and fair to those who pay for them. That approach
has not changed, and the Government will continually assess
that balance.
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I welcome the right hon. Lady to her post, but when we ask
a question of the Chancellor, we would expect the
Chancellor to respond to that question. We simply wanted
clarity on whether the pay cap is still in force. That is
all we asked for.
The response that we have seen today confirmed what most
commentators are now saying: this is not a Government; it
is a Cabinet of absolute chaos. Let me explain that the
existing Government policy, as set out in the comprehensive
spending review 2015, due to be ratified today in the
Supply and Appropriation (Main Estimates) Bill, is still a
1% pay cap, and this is the diktat to which the various pay
review bodies are still working. In fact, they are written
to and told that their proposals have to reflect
“the Government’s policy on public sector pay awards”.
Yet over the last week we have seen, to be frank, absolute
confusion in Government— total disarray. The question we
are posing is, “Who actually speaks for the Government on
this issue?” On the day of the Queen’s Speech, No. 10 was
briefing out the end of austerity and the relaxing of the
pay cap, only to be contradicted by an incandescent
briefing from No. 11. Daily fearful of a putsch, No. 10
then backs down. For the Prime Minister it must be tough,
living next to a disruptive neighbour you can’t stand, you
try to get rid of, and you can’t get on with.
We then receive in the press the wisdom of the right hon.
Member for Uxbridge and South Ruislip (Boris Johnson), who,
according to a spokesperson,
“supports the idea of public sector workers getting a
better pay deal”.
This is followed by his past campaign manager turned
political assassin, the new Environment Secretary, who
supports the putsch against the Chancellor. Then the whole
process degenerates into farce when we have , earning £100,000 a
speech, telling us that the people who want more than 1%
are “selfish”. The Chancellor has called for a grown-up
debate. I agree. What we have seen are Cabinet Ministers
scrapping in the school playground. Cut off from the real
world that most people live in, the Chancellor has no
understanding of why our public sector workers are so
angry. They are angry because they have had enough of
seeing tax cuts to the rich and corporations while their
pay is being cut.
Can the Chief Secretary to the Treasury clarify how the
Government’s estimates 2017-18, as per the Supply and
Appropriation (Main Estimates) Bill on the Order Paper
today, will accommodate the reported offer to the fire and
rescue services, which, we are told, is subject still to
Government funding? Moreover, if we are to see another
Government U-turn, which in the case of public sector pay
we would welcome, can the Government confirm how they will
fund the £5 billion needed that they say would be saved by
the 1% pay cap? Or are we being confronted with yet another
uncosted commitment within weeks of a Parliament
commencing? It’s the magic money tree again.
The Government’s own report on Monday showed how much
doctors’ and nurses’ pay had fallen. Does the Chancellor
think that is fair? Given that 20% more nurses left the
nursing register than joined it this year, does the
Chancellor agree with the chief executive of the Royal
College of Nursing that:
“For every day…the cap remains in place”
the profession is “haemorrhaging”?
Finally, given the chaos on the Government Benches over
this policy, can the Chief Secretary tell us when an actual
decision will be made about the future of the pay cap? Will
public sector workers have to wait until the next Budget
before finding out whether they will have decent pay for
the next two years? Should not the Chancellor now write
formally to the pay review bodies to say that they are now
free to do what is right by public servants and pay them a
fair pay award this year?
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I do not know whether to be disappointed or delighted that
the shadow Chancellor does not want to see me at the
Dispatch Box, but I am here today to answer his questions
because I am responsible for this policy area, and I think
that is entirely appropriate.
As has been outlined by the Prime Minister and the
Chancellor already, our policy on public sector pay remains
in place, because it is the responsible thing to do. It is
the responsible thing to balance the importance of
recruiting and retaining high-quality people in our public
services with making sure that our public finances remain
sustainable so that we can continue to see the improvements
in our public services that we have seen under this
Government.
Some of the shadow Chancellor’s comments were disingenuous.
He did not reflect the fact—
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Hon. Members
Withdraw!
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Mr Speaker
Order. I know these matters pretty well by now. The right
hon. Lady must resume her seat. I am sure that she has got
a very versatile vocabulary, and she must deploy some other
term. She cannot accuse a Member of being disingenuous;
that is an imputation of dishonour. She has been in the
House long enough to know that she should not say that. It
is very simple, no debate required—a simple withdrawal.
Thank you.
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I do withdraw that, Mr Speaker, and apologise for it.
Perhaps the right hon. Gentleman was mistaken in what he
said, because in 2015-16 we saw teachers get 3.3% worth of
progression pay, we saw more than half of nurses and NHS
workers get over 3%, and we saw military service personnel
receive 2.4%. I therefore suggest that he include those
facts in the figures next time he speaks. As for the fire
service, he knows perfectly well that those pay policies
are set independently and are covered within the local
government budget.
I think it is wrong that we are hearing the Opposition talk
down our public services when we are seeing huge
improvements, we are seeing more people attracted into our
public services, and we are seeing the best performance
ever in our education system and our health system. As for
uncosted commitments, the right hon. Gentleman has £60
billion worth.
The right hon. Gentleman asked about the pay review
process. Well, the process is very simple. We have received
recommendations from pay review bodies already this year.
They make decisions based on the individual circumstances
within those sectors. We have followed all of their
recommendations. We will look at the further
recommendations we need to make decisions on, and we will
look at the balance between affordability and making sure
that we retain and recruit high-quality public sector
workers. This is the right approach. It is not saying that
we are going to open up the cheque book, bankrupt our
public services and see people lose their jobs, which is
exactly what has happened in countries like Greece that
took that approach and took their eye off the public
finances. The right hon. Gentleman needs to take a more
balanced approach in the way that he looks at this issue.
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Mr Speaker
During the rather fractious proceedings to date, one Member
has been the embodiment of calm and serenity. That Member
should be imitated by others, and will now be called to
contribute—Mr .
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Mr (Rushcliffe)
(Con)
Those are not adjectives that have been applied to me
throughout my political career, Mr Speaker, but I am
grateful to you for that credit. May I congratulate my
right hon. Friend the Chief Secretary to the Treasury on
straightforwardly restating the Government’s sensible
policy on this issue? It is necessary as part of our
ensuring, in this post-Brexit world, that we keep the
economy on track; that steady, sustainable growth
continues; and that we steadily eliminate the problem of
debt and deficit that we inherited.
Does my right hon. Friend agree that if she were to give
way to this week’s lobbying on the subject it would be a
political disaster, because the Government would be accused
of a U-turn and a surrender? It would set off a wave of pay
claims across the entire public sector, which the
Opposition are obviously looking forward to taking part in
if they can provoke them. It might also be an economic
disaster, and it would not be in the interests of the many
people in the public and private sectors who are having
economic difficulties in these times, and who want to look
forward to a much more prosperous future as we get our
economy back to health.
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My right hon. and learned Friend has a huge amount of
experience in this area. He is correct to say that we need
to take account of the sustainable, long-term financing of
public services. We need to look at the specific issues in
each sector where we need to recruit and retain staff, and
we also need to look at fairness with the private sector.
At the moment, public sector and private sector salaries
are roughly comparable. As a country, we need to improve
our productivity and our growth rate. That is the way to
ensure that everybody benefits. The Government have a
fantastic record when it comes to getting people into work,
and unemployment is at its lowest level since 1975. We need
to make sure that we continue with that.
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(Airdrie and Shotts)
(SNP)
I welcome the Chief Secretary to her place. We had all
hoped that today would bring some commitment and certainty
from the Government on public sector pay. Instead, our
public sector workers continue to be stonewalled from the
Dispatch Box, while members of the Cabinet have apparently
abandoned collective responsibility to brief for an end to
the cap. Perhaps that says more about those Ministers’
desire to undermine the Chancellor and the Prime Minister
than it does their commitment to public sector workers.
According to The Times, the Prime Minister wanted to
announce something today but could not get her Ministers to
agree a line.
This week, a report by academics from University College
London was published quietly by the UK Government’s own
Office of Manpower Economics. The report showed that
average hourly public sector wages fell in real terms by
6%—or, for some, by up to £3 an hour—in the past decade.
That is perhaps part of the reason why the past decade has
been the worst for wage growth in 200 years, and why
in-work poverty continues to rise. With that in mind, can
the Chief Secretary advise our dedicated police,
firefighters, nurses and others—who put their lives on the
line and make great sacrifices for us—what they have to do
to earn a fair pay rise, as they will do in Scotland? Or
does the Chief Secretary support former Prime Minister
’s comments from Seoul
yesterday, when he said that it was “selfish” to campaign
for an end to the pay cap?
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As I have outlined, pay is determined by a very clear
process. Independent pay review bodies make recommendations
on areas such as pay for the police and nurses. We will
look very carefully at those recommendations to balance
fairness for public sector workers, and recruitment and
retention of the best possible people, with affordability
for the public finances. That is a responsible approach to
take, and it will ensure that our economy grows and
unemployment continues to move in a positive direction.
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(Faversham and Mid
Kent) (Con)
Since 2010, 13,000 more nurses have been employed in the
NHS. I am worried that the Labour party’s unfunded
proposals for public sector workers could lead to a cut in
the number of nurses, given the £68 billion black hole in
the financing of the party’s manifesto. Will my right hon.
Friend assure me that when she looks at pay for nurses, she
will not only consider what is a fair level of pay, but
ensure that we remain able to afford to employ more nurses
in the NHS? Will she also ensure that we continue to focus
on sound finances and a strong economy to pay for our
public services?
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My hon. Friend is right to point out that, by having this
balanced policy, we have protected jobs in the public
sector and we have protected important services. The Office
for Budget Responsibility outlined in its report that our
policy protects the jobs of 200,000 public sector workers.
That is important for those people, but it is also
important for our constituents who receive those public
services and who are seeing improvements in our schools and
hospitals, and a reduction in crime. It is important that
we take that balanced approach.
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Sir (Twickenham) (LD)
Does the Chief Secretary not accept that there was a
fundamental difference between the economic conditions when
the 1% cap was introduced, when there was a fear of
large-scale unemployment and deflation, and the economic
conditions of the present day, when there are chronic
labour shortages throughout the public sector and salaries
have been eroded by rising inflation? Will she not lift the
cap to reflect basic economic reality?
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First of all, public sector pay is comparable with private
sector pay. In addition, public sector pensions are set at
a higher level, on average, than private sector pensions.
The pay review bodies have a remit to look at retention and
recruitment when they make their independent decisions. Of
course, I will look at all their recommendations when they
come out. The right hon. Gentleman has made an omission
that was also made earlier; a lot of those roles have pay
increments independent of the 1% cap. Teachers’ pay
increased by 3.3% in the last year for which we have
records, so it is not right to talk solely about the 1%
cap. In fact, public sector workers are rewarded in a
number of different ways.
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(Wokingham) (Con)
A recent Office for National Statistics study shows that
public sector productivity fell by 5.7% in the long period
from 1997 to 2014. Is not the way forward better pay for
smarter working? Do we not want pay awards that give
something for something, so that the taxpayer wins, the
service user wins and the employee wins?
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My right hon. Friend is correct to say that we want
improvement in our public services. I have highlighted
education, where more children are going to good and
outstanding schools; and I have highlighted our health
service, which is dealing with more patients than ever
before. School pay policy is set by individual academies,
for example, so we are giving more freedom over pay and pay
determination. It is important to look at the public
finances as a whole, and to ensure that, overall, we are
living within our means as a country.
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(Ashfield)
(Lab)
Right now, 130 workers at Annesley Department for Work and
Pensions office are being told that their place of work
will be closed and their jobs relocated up to an hour’s
drive away. Have these public sector workers not suffered
enough from the seven-year pay cap? Is not the last thing
that they need to be told that they need to find more money
to pay for their travel to and from work?
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The hon. Lady refers to a specific issue with a jobcentre
in her constituency. I am sure that the DWP is looking at
how those people can be assisted, and it is certainly
something that I am happy to raise with the Work and
Pensions Secretary on her behalf.
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(Chelmsford) (Con)
In Chelmsford, we are very proud to be home to one of the
places where nurses are trained—the great Anglia Ruskin
University, which I visited just last week. It is good to
hear my right hon. Friend speaking about how nurses have
benefited from pay progression, and also from lower taxes,
through the increment.
Part of increasing the prosperity of public sector workers
is the provision of an increasing number of training
opportunities. There is great excitement in my constituency
not only about the introduction of degree apprenticeships
and being one of the first places in the country to build a
new medical school, but about affordable housing and people
having more money in their pockets. Can the Chief Secretary
confirm that increasing prosperity is not just about pay,
but about having a strong economy to deliver more houses,
more training and more skilled opportunities?
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My hon. Friend is right that we need to look at what is
included in the wider package that people receive, whether
that is support for their pension, additional flexibilities
or additional elements of pay and training, because
training and progression are extremely important. I
remember visiting Chelmsford prison in her constituency,
which was looking at training opportunities for prison
officers. We are looking at that throughout the public
sector, because job satisfaction derives from many things,
and although pay is of course important—I would not deny
that—job satisfaction is also about working conditions and
about people on the frontline feeling empowered to do their
jobs well and knowing that they are making a contribution.
Being a public servant is incredibly important, and we need
to show that we are giving people on the frontline the
ability to make decisions and really improve people’s lives
for the better.
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(Bassetlaw) (Lab)
As a public sector worker, how much has the right hon.
Lady’s own pay increased since 2010 and how much has her
productivity increased since 2010? Can the country afford
her pay increase, and if so, does she agree with me that
Britain deserves a pay increase?
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I would answer the hon. Gentleman by saying that my pay has
gone both up and down since 2010, but my pay is set
independently. The important point is that the pay of
public sector workers is determined by the pay review
bodies, whose recommendations I take very seriously, and
that is how we should approach this issue. Rather than
trying to politicise the issue and saying that we should
have a blanket approach, we have set public sector pay
review bodies the remit to make such decisions themselves.
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Mr (Christchurch)
(Con)
When will the Government introduce the £95,000 cap on exit
payments for public sector workers? The legislation is on
the statute book, but it has not been implemented. Will it
be implemented soon so that we do not have any more
payments such as the £390,000 paid earlier this year to the
chief executive of Bournemouth Borough Council to leave?
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I would be very happy to discuss that issue with my hon.
Friend later.
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(East Antrim)
(DUP)
The rise in inflation, the recommendations of pay review
bodies and the closing of the gap between private sector
and public sector pay have quite rightly focused attention
on the whole issue of the current pay policy. Does the
Chief Secretary agree that rhetoric about austerity and
uncosted and unfinanced amendments to the Queen’s Speech in
this House are no substitute for looking at the tax and
borrowing implications and the implications for other parts
of the public sector of a review of pay policy?
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We need to look not only at the important issue of fairness
for public sector workers and the issue of recruitment and
retention, but at the overall health of the British
economy, so that we can make sure we carry on having low
unemployment rates and growth in our economy and carry on
dealing with the debt that is a result of the great
depression that we suffered as a country. We need to pay
down the debt and get the deficit further down so that we
can continue to enjoy high-quality public services.
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(Lewes) (Con)
As someone who has worked as a nurse during the period of
the pay cap and pay freeze, may I just say that that is
very difficult to do as a public sector worker? The issue
is greater than just a pay rise; it is also about the pay
structure. When Labour introduced the “Agenda for Change”
system, it created an increment system under which people
have to wait five, six or seven years to get the pay they
actually deserve. The increment system is not working, and
it also gives trusts the opportunity to downgrade people,
with a sister in one hospital on band 7 while another
somewhere else is on band 5. The pay structure is not
working, and that needs to be looked at as urgently as the
pay cap.
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My hon. Friend’s great expertise as a former nurse is shown
by the detailed question she has asked. We need to make
sure that we reform public services and give people the
opportunity to progress and be trained in the roles they
fill. One of the roles of the pay review body is to look at
such structures, as well as at rates of pay. During the
processes they go through, those bodies certainly take
evidence from frontline workers, unions and experts in the
area, and I hope that they will take such issues into
consideration.
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(Rochdale) (Lab)
The Chief Secretary referred to productivity increases in
the public sector. We recently saw firefighters racing into
Grenfell Tower, paramedics and police racing into the
Manchester Arena after the bomb, and doctors, nurses and
other medical professionals working around the clock to
save people’s lives. What advice would she give to her hon.
Friends on the Government Benches about productivity
increases by those people, who have served the people of
this country?
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Those firefighters, police and others in the emergency
services have done a tremendous job, and I am sure we are
all extremely grateful to them for regularly putting
themselves in the line of danger. The hon. Gentleman is
right to point that out.
What does productivity mean? I talked earlier about
empowering people on the frontline to be able to make
decisions and do things more quickly. When I talk to nurses
and teachers, they sometimes say that they want less
bureaucracy so that they can get on with the real jobs that
they have been employed to do, and that is why more police
are spending more time on the frontline. Productivity means
giving people more job satisfaction—spending more of their
time doing the job that they have come in to public
services to do—and that is why we are reforming public
services and seeing improvements.
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(Stirling) (Con)
Does my right hon. Friend agree that it is vital that the
Government should continue to balance fairness for public
servants and fairness for taxpayers who pay for public
services?
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We need to ensure a continual balance in being fair to the
people working in public services—giving them the training
and opportunities they deserve, and paying them
fairly—while at the same time making sure that they will be
able to continue to work in those public services in the
future. If we look at what happened in Greece when the
deficit got out of control, we can see that there was a 36%
reduction in spending on the health service.
[Interruption.] Members on the Opposition Front Bench may
groan, but they should look at the facts about what happens
when unfunded spending commitments are made. Let us be
clear: the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said that
Labour’s spending plans would lead to the highest levels of
taxation we have ever seen in peacetime Britain. Theirs are
not moderate but extreme proposals that would lead to
people losing their jobs.
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(Oldham West and Royton)
(Lab/Co-op)
The Chief Secretary quite rightly outlined that there is
more to the package offered to public sector workers,
including pensions, but will she confirm that the average
pension for a local government worker is less than £80
week? What message does it send when, on top of that, their
wages are supressed and their workloads have increased
twofold? Is not the truth that this Government know the
cost of everything and the value of absolutely nothing?
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We care about how well our public services are serving the
public, and we want to have highly motivated people working
in our public services who feel valued and properly
remunerated. That is why such decisions are made by
independent bodies.
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Neil O’Brien (Harborough) (Con)
Members on both side of the House want strong wage
increases for those at the bottom end, whatever sector they
are in. Will the Chief Secretary tell us what our new
national living wage will do to the incomes of those at the
bottom end, and will she confirm that it will give us one
of the strongest minimum wages in the world?
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My hon. Friend is right and I congratulate him on the role
he had in that policy. We are raising wages for those on
the lowest incomes and taking more people out of tax. Basic
rate taxpayers have seen a £1,000 reduction in their tax
bill. That is important in dealing with the cost of living
and in making sure that it always pays for people to go
into work.
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(Na h-Eileanan
an Iar) (SNP)
In a very readable book, “Austerity: The History of a
Dangerous Idea”, Professor Mark Blyth charts the fact that
austerity always fails, either at the ballot box or with
people waking up to the failing nonsense that is austerity.
If the Government instead concentrated on growth, the
deficit would take care of itself. Is it not time that
public sector workers, who pay taxes, are given the money
to spend in the economy and create that growth?
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I understand that the hon. Gentleman’s party voted to
support our pay policy earlier this year.
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(South East
Cambridgeshire) (Con)
The Institute for Fiscal Studies estimated that Labour’s
proposal would cost £9 billion a year, which is more than
double the amount the party estimated in its manifesto.
That would involve significant borrowing. Our interest bill
is £50 billion a year. Does the Chief Secretary to the
Treasury agree that that is £50 billion less to invest in
our public services?
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That is right. Future generations will pay for the services
that we are enjoying today, and that is wrong. We need to
live within our means and make sure that people are
properly rewarded. We need to make sure that things are
fair between the public and private sectors. That is what
the Government’s balanced policy is achieving.
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(Enfield,
Southgate) (Lab)
My union Unison represents workers across the public
sector. The hard-working nurses, teaching assistants,
cleaners and local government workers in my constituency of
Enfield, Southgate, who are not subject to increments have
been asking me when they will get fair pay for the hard
work they do for all of us. Does the Chief Secretary agree
with me and some of her colleagues that in the light of the
increases in inflation and the cost of living, the public
sector pay cap must end now?
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I have already said that our policy balances the need to
make sure that people are remunerated properly—that is what
the pay review bodies look at—and the need to make sure
that public services are sustainable in the long term,
because as well as making sure that people are paid
properly and that the wider package is as good as possible,
we need to make sure that those jobs are protected and
secure in the long term.
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(Redditch) (Con)
Does the Chief Secretary agree that as a result of Labour’s
economic mismanagement in 2008 to 2009, average
wages—[Interruption.]
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Mr Speaker
The hon. Lady’s question must be heard. Everybody in this
Chamber must be heard. Let us hear .
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Thank you, Mr Speaker. As a result of Labour’s economic
mismanagement in 2008 to 2009, average private sector pay
fell significantly, while public sector pay remained
stable. Does the Chief Secretary agree that it is
important, when we look at the pay review bodies’
recommendations, to recognise the challenges faced by small
businesses when they are outpaced by public sector
earnings? Given that small businesses, as employers, create
the majority of the jobs in this country, will she ensure
that the pay review bodies take into account the views of
small business people?
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We have got to the position where public sector pay is
comparable with private sector pay, and public sector
workers often have pension entitlements on top of that. It
is fair to get to a position where pay is comparable, for
the skills people have. That is fair for the businesses
that we need to create wealth in our country, so that we
can fund public services. It is fair for workers in both
the private sector and the public sector. Nothing is more
important than getting people into work and giving them a
sense of pride and responsibility, and the ability to earn
for themselves and their family that come with it. The
Government should be proud of what we have achieved: the
lowest level of unemployment since 1975. The idea that we
should put that at risk by making our public finances
unsustainable or by pricing small businesses out of the
market is very dangerous.
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Mr Speaker
I see that the Father of the House is leaving the Chamber,
but I hope that the calm and serenity that he brought to
the Chamber will linger with us for some time to come.
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(West Lancashire)
(Lab)
This issue is also about fairness—a word I have heard
repeatedly. Liverpool clinical commissioning group paid
themselves increases of between 15% and 81%, with a
non-executive getting £105,000. An NHS investigation has
confirmed that that is far outside the rules, yet the
accountable officer and governing body have not been held
to account. Does that send a message from the Government to
the NHS that people can do what they want, that anarchy
rules and that the pay cap will be applied selectively and
is not fair?
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It is very important that all public sector bodies stick
within the rules.
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(Central Suffolk and
North Ipswich) (Con)
I draw the House’s attention to my declaration of interest
as a working NHS doctor. My right hon. Friend has talked
rightly about the effect that increments have on
progression pay, and the staff affected have received an
increase in their pay. However, in the NHS half a million
staff are at the top of their pay scale and have received a
real-terms pay cut over the past few years. They work
incredibly hard, above and beyond the call of duty. They
are the people who gave up their days off to go in when the
terrorist attacks happened in London and Manchester. Those
people do need a pay rise. Does she recognise that many of
those staff are now turning to agency work? The locum and
agency bill in the NHS is £4 billion and rising. Does she
recognise that part of dealing with the cost of locum and
agency staff must be to increase the pay of permanent
staff?
-
I completely agree with my hon. Friend that doctors and
other medical staff do a vital job and have faced real
challenges. We are reducing the agency spend in the NHS
over time. It is important that we look overall at the
affordability for the public sector. That is the remit of
the independent pay review bodies. They hear evidence from
the experts on the frontline and make their
recommendations. We accepted the recommendation for doctors
that was put to us. We accepted the recommendation for
nurses and other NHS workers as well. We respect that pay
review body process.
-
(Delyn) (Lab)
Put simply, does the Chief Secretary think it fair that the
public sector workers who face a cap also face a rise of
around 5% to 7% in energy prices when the chief executive
of SSE this year had a 72% increase in his pay, taking it
to £2.9 million?
-
The Government are taking action on energy costs. We are
also making sure that public sector workers receive
increments in addition to the 1% that the right hon.
Gentleman mentioned. We are taking action as a Government
to raise the tax threshold, so that people on the basic
rate are now paying £1,000 less tax. He needs to take
account of the whole package; I think that he is
cherry-picking some bits.
-
(Aberdeen South)
(Con)
Is the Chief Secretary to the Treasury aware that the
Scottish Government set pay for 485,000 public sector
workers, which is close to 90% of all public sector workers
in Scotland? Does she agree with the statement by the
Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport on 10 May in the
Scottish Parliament, when the Scottish Government voted
against a pay increase for NHS staff, that
“we believe that there can continue to be value in the
independent pay review process”?
Is my right hon. Friend aware of the Nuffield Trust report
that highlights that the Scottish National party’s deep
cuts to the health budget in Scotland are seriously harming
the NHS?
-
It is great to have one of my Scottish colleagues pointing
out the facts about what is happening in Scotland. The
Scottish National party has failed to deliver. We see worse
performance in the Scottish NHS, and school standards in
Scotland are falling, which is a huge shame.
[Interruption.]
-
(Glasgow South West)
(SNP)
rose—
-
Mr Speaker
Order. Mr Stephens, you are a very excitable denizen of the
House. I had been intending to call you, but I think I will
leave you to simmer down for a few minutes in the hope that
you can recover such poise and composure as are available
to you.
-
(Heywood and Middleton)
(Lab)
The Labour Government brought in Agenda for Change for NHS
staff, which finally put us—I was one of those NHS staff—on
a fair rate of pay with an independent pay review body, but
since 2010 the coalition Government and the Tory Government
have systematically undermined Agenda for Change pay rates
by capping and freezing wages. The Government are all too
ready to describe NHS workers as fantastic, but giving them
a fair pay award is just that—fantasy. Is it not time that
the Government put their money where their mouth is?
-
The hon. Lady is not acknowledging the fact that more than
half of those people on Agenda for Change are receiving
average incremental pay of 3.3%.
-
Sir (North East
Hertfordshire) (Con)
My right hon. Friend will be aware that the NHS has
attracted workers from across the EU, particularly in
nursing. When she looks at how we set public sector pay,
will she look at international comparisons across the EU to
ensure that pay is set in such a way as to continue to
attract those very much needed staff to Britain? Does she
have data on that that she can consider?
-
I thank my right hon. and learned Friend for his question.
The pay review bodies are responsible for gathering the
data on how we ensure that we retain and recruit the
high-quality staff that we need in our NHS. I know they
have looked at that in their reports this year, as I am
sure they will do in future.
-
(Norwich South)
(Lab)
In the exceedingly fine city of Norwich, we have three NHS
trusts, two local authorities and a teaching
hospital—thousands of public sector workers who contribute
to our economy, and who are struggling to make ends meet.
Surely the Government must understand that austerity is
dying on its feet. They should invest in those people. If
they lift the public sector pay cap, they will invest in
Norwich’s local economy. It is a win-win for everyone.
-
I should say to my fellow Norfolk MP that we are seeing
improved public services in Norfolk, both in the health
service and in our local schools. That is a result of the
Government reforming services and investing in them, and
ensuring that people receive pay that helps to retain and
recruit the best possible staff.
-
(South Cambridgeshire)
(Con)
I understand that pay bodies are independent—it is
important that they remain so—but will the Chief Secretary
explain who sets the context for those pay bodies? When
they undertake their reviews, will they take into account
not only historical pay rises and the cost of living, but
extra influences such as the influence of Brexit on our
difficulty in recruiting nurses?
-
The answer is that the Government set the remit for the pay
bodies last year. Those reports have all been submitted. We
have responded to some of them, and we will respond to
others in due course. Later this year, we will set the
remit for the 2018-19 pay bodies.
-
(Brighton, Pavilion)
(Green)
No Opposition Member is talking down our public services in
the way that the Chief Secretary to the Treasury claims. We
are talking up the incredible commitment of the people who
work in them, despite the contempt with which her
Government treat them. She talks about job satisfaction.
Does she accept that what contributes to job satisfaction
for nurses is having the time they need to spend with
patients? When the NHS is under such strain, nurses simply
do not have the time to spend with patients because there
are so many staff vacancies. The NHS is in crisis. Lifting
the pay cap is a crucial way of addressing it. Why will she
not do it?
-
With respect, the hon. Lady talks the NHS down in her
question. The fact is that the NHS is doing a tremendous
job. We are reducing the bureaucracy so that nurses can
spend more of their time with patients. My right hon.
Friend the Health Secretary is driving an agenda of reform
that is delivering better public services.
-
(South Suffolk)
(Con)
It is worth remembering what would have happened had the
Labour party won the first general election after the great
recession: its 2010 manifesto committed to tough action on
pay, including a 1% cap on public sector pay. Does my right
hon. Friend think that that was because Labour does not
value public sector workers, or because it understood the
reality of the country’s position as a result of its
mismanagement of public borrowing and bank regulation?
-
There is rather an issue of false consciousness on the
Opposition Front Bench.
-
(Bristol South)
(Lab)
May I help the Chief Secretary? The pay review bodies
operate within a budget that is set by the Government. It
is a political decision not to accept their
recommendations, which she can do something about. Before
entering Parliament, I was proud to serve as an NHS
manager. Managers in the NHS play a crucial role in both
patient care and patient safety. Does she agree that equity
of treatment on pay is crucial for senior and all levels of
management in the health service, to ensure the recruitment
and retention of the very best?
-
The hon. Lady talks about the recommendations of the pay
review bodies. We have accepted all of the recommendations
that we have reported on so far this year. They are able to
make the recommendations they see fit. The Government set a
remit, but the bodies are independent in what they advise
us, and they have to take account of areas such as
retention and recruitment.
-
(Eddisbury)
(Con)
Unemployment has fallen by 63% in my constituency since
2010. I have many nurses and teachers working in my
constituency, but I also have careworkers, all of whom have
benefited from tax changes introduced by the Government
that mean they have an extra £1,000 in their pockets and in
their take-home pay. Does the Chief Secretary agree that
tax changes do not discriminate between private and public
sector workers?
-
Both private and public sector workers have a vital part to
play in the economy of this country. By taking people out
of tax, we have reduced the tax bills of basic rate
taxpayers by £1,000. The Opposition propose the highest
levels of taxation in this country’s peacetime history. Who
would that fall on? It would fall on precisely the people
whom we have been talking about in today’s debate.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Mr Speaker
Order. I mean to accommodate remaining would-be
interrogators, but questions and answers from now on need
to be shorter. They have been becoming ever longer as the
session has proceeded.
-
(Nottingham South)
(Lab)
Fifty-five per cent. of public sector workers are not
covered by review bodies, including most of our civil
servants and some of those on the very lowest incomes. Will
the Chief Secretary give any hope that real pay rises will
be considered for the 3 million public sector employees
without a review body, and what will be the mechanism for
doing so?
-
As with people who are under the purview of the pay review
bodies, we need to ensure that we retain and recruit the
best possible civil servants. At the same time, we need to
ensure that that is affordable for the public purse.
-
(Newark) (Con)
As the shadow Chancellor knows perfectly well, the former
Prime Minister did not say that it was selfish for
dedicated public sector workers to ask for a pay rise. He
argued—I would agree—that it is selfish and immoral for
politicians to offer benefits to the voters of today to be
paid for by the voters of tomorrow. Does my right hon.
Friend agree that, for her children and mine, it is
important to balance fair treatment of the public sector
with handing on a strong country not saddled by excess
debt?
-
My hon. Friend makes an excellent point. We need to ensure
that our public finances are properly sustainable, so that
we can fund those public services in future, and so that we
do not burden the next generation.
-
(York Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
Will the Chief Secretary write to the chairs of all the pay
review bodies—those serving on them are incredibly
frustrated—and ask them to set out the true cost of a
nurse, a teacher, a soldier, and to report back to
Parliament, so we can assess the independence of their
research?
-
I am sure the hon. Lady is aware that all documentation
from this year’s pay process will be published. She will be
able to see the research they have looked at and the people
they have interviewed in coming to their determination. In
due course, I will be writing to the pay review bodies for
their remit for the following year.
-
(Harlow) (Con)
Public sector workers are the guardians of our nation in
terms of our security, health, education and
infrastructure, so we clearly have to do something, in
particular for the lower paid. May I suggest to my right
hon. Friend that, given revenue from corporation tax
receipts increased by 21% in the past year, can we not have
a special redistribution fund to use that increased revenue
to at least help the lowest paid public sector workers?
-
My right hon. Friend will be aware that the flexibility we
give to pay review bodies is such that they can decide to
give higher rises to those on the lowest incomes in the
public sector. I would also point out that those on the
lowest incomes have benefited most from the raising of the
personal allowance. There are various ways of ensuring
support for those on the lowest levels of pay.
-
(Dwyfor
Meirionnydd) (PC)
It will interest the House, I am sure, to know that the
Scottish Government announced last week that they are
lifting the pay cap. The Labour Welsh Government have the
ability to do exactly the same thing, but in reality Labour
in Wales is the Conservative Government’s gwas bach, taking
their lead from Westminster. Thirty thousand Welsh nurses
are having their pay cut in real terms. I ask those on both
the Government and Opposition Front Benches to explain to
thousands of Welsh workers why Wales remains the poorest
paid country in the United Kingdom.
-
The hon. Lady will be aware that that is a devolved issue
and a decision for the Welsh Government.
-
(Ayr, Carrick and
Cumnock) (Con)
I am quite close to this debate. I served Strathclyde fire
and rescue service for 31 years, so I am familiar with the
good work that my colleagues continue to do; and I have two
daughters in nursing. One is a nursing sister, or a senior
charge nurse as she is determined today, and one is an
auxiliary nurse and a single parent. I do not hear from
them what I am hearing from Opposition Members, who are
painting a dark picture. My daughters seem to enjoy their
work. They work very, very hard, and there is no doubt that
my colleagues in the fire and rescue service work very
hard, too. My fear, if we continue to increase wages in the
public sector, is the risk of a spiral, with inflation and
mortgages going up. The point is the value of the take-home
pay in your pay packet and what influences the buying power
of public workers’ take-home pay.
-
My hon. Friend points out the impact on the overall economy
of unsustainable increases. We need to look at the overall
package for public sector workers, including the reduced
taxes that most public sector workers are paying and
improvements in areas such as training, and we need to
ensure that any pay raises are sustainable.
-
(Stoke-on-Trent North)
(Lab)
I am sure the Chief Secretary agrees that public services
are the backbone of our country, but the average full-time
public sector employee will have lost £4,073 in real terms
by 2020 because of this Government’s decisions. Does she
think that that is fair?
-
I do not recognise that figure. I outlined the increments
we have seen in areas such as teaching, nursing and the
armed forces. We need to make sure we have a balance
between fairness and affordability, and I outlined that
earlier, too. That is what we have been doing and that is
why we have been able to sustain high quality public
services at the same time as reducing the deficit and
seeing the lowest unemployment for 40 years. The fact is
that unsustainable increases in public spending would lead
to higher taxes, higher interest rates and a much worse
outcome for working people.
-
Mr (Middlesbrough South
and East Cleveland) (Con)
Does my right hon. Friend agree that the fact we are
spending more on debt interest than on our schools
perfectly encapsulates the reason why we need to be fair
across the generations when it comes to setting public
sector pay? Does she agree that there is nothing right or
moral in making cheap promises based on money we do not
have?
-
The Labour Government left us with a huge deficit and a
huge debt, which we have had to deal with over the last
Parliament. It continues to hang over us, which is why the
only path is the sustainable path of making sure we grow
our economy, so we can enjoy even better public services
and see people’s pay rise across the board.
-
Mr Speaker
Now that the hon. Member for Glasgow South West (Chris
Stephens) has been sitting in a state of almost Buddha-like
repose for some minutes, I think it is safe for the Chamber
to hear from him.
-
(Glasgow South West)
(SNP)
Mr Speaker, as a passionate trade unionist for 20 years
sometimes my emotions get the better of me.
Will the Chief Secretary confirm that pay is so low in some
Government Departments that 40% of employees in those
Departments are in receipt of tax credits? Will she
publish, for each UK Government Department, how many
employees are in receipt of tax credits?
-
We have good rates of pay across the civil service. We need
to make sure that that is sustainable, so we can carry on
making sure that we have good services in both the civil
service and the wider public sector.
-
Ms (Wealden) (Con)
The public are rightly fed up with politicians playing
politics with the NHS, so let us listen to what the NHS pay
review body has evidenced and said. Is my right hon. Friend
aware that the NHS pay review body stated:
“We do not see significant short-term nationwide
recruitment and retention issues that are linked to pay.”?
-
That is exactly why we have independent pay review bodies:
they give us impartial advice and make recommendations. We
accepted in full the recommendation of that body.
-
(Wirral West)
(Lab)
NHS consultants in my constituency tell me that morale in
the NHS is at an all-time low and that this is leading to
real problems for recruitment and retention. Having voted
against it only last week, I understand that certain
members of the Cabinet are now in favour of ending the
public sector pay cap. Will the Government now heed their
calls and give public sector workers the pay rise they
deserve?
-
I am not sure the hon. Lady has heard the last hour of our
discussion. We need to maintain sustainable public finances
at the same time as being fair to workers in the public
sector.
-
(Mansfield) (Con)
In my constituency, the local NHS trust has been crippled
by Labour’s disastrous PFI deal, a £350 million building
project that has now cost £2 billion in interest payments
that could have otherwise been used for pay rises. Does the
Chief Secretary agree that this proves absolutely that
sound economic planning in the health service is the best
way to provide fair pay in the future?
-
PFI is yet another example of how the Labour party spent
money it did not have and left future public service
organisations, schools and hospitals with debts that they
are now having to deal with. That is why we should not heed
its irresponsible calls.
-
(Stoke-on-Trent
Central) (Lab/Co-op)
The Chief Secretary earlier tried to draw a distinction
between taxpayers and public servants. Public servants are
taxpayers, so she cannot continue to draw that unfair
distinction. I would like to introduce an element of maths.
Will she acknowledge that when RPI is running at 3.2% and
CPI is running at 2.8% but pay is capped at 1%, that is a
real-terms squeeze on disposable incomes, which is hitting
the living standards public sector workers? In the general
election, when the Prime Minister was challenged on why
nurses were having to use food banks she replied by saying
it was a complex issue. How much does the Chief Secretary
attribute the pay cap to that “complex issue”?
-
As I have said before, there is the 1%, but there is also
incremental pay in many public service professions. There
is the 2.4% for the armed forces, and there is the 3.3%
that was received by teachers in 2015-16. Labour Members
should tell people about the whole picture, rather than
cherry-picking specific numbers.
-
(Torbay) (Con)
I am sure the Chief Secretary agrees with me—and with the
hon. Member for Stoke-on-Trent Central (Gareth Snell)—that
public sector workers are taxpayers. When it comes to
public sector pay, we should indeed look at the whole
picture, including the major tax cuts that have been made
since 2010 for those on the lowest wages.
-
Absolutely. It seems to me that Labour Members want to
count some things in their sums but not others, and that
they are picking numbers rather than looking at the big
picture.
-
(Witney) (Con)
Will the Chief Secretary confirm that new Government 10-year
gilts are paid at 1%, and will she confirm that if the
markets lose confidence in our deficit reduction plan the
interest rate is likely to rise, as is the cost to the
country, which will mean less money for our public services?
-
My hon. Friend is right to draw attention to the
macroeconomic picture, and to point out that if we do not
have a confident deficit reduction plan such as the one that
the Government have pursued for the last seven years, the
financial markets will lose confidence, and the effect on
working people will be a rise in interest rates, a rise in
housing costs, and problems for the Government in respect of
our borrowing.
-
(Dudley South) (Con)
I declare an interest: my wife is a primary school teacher
who is currently working as a teaching assistant.
Will the Chief Secretary ensure that both the rising cost of
living and recommendations of the independent pay review
bodies are properly taken into consideration in the setting
of public pay policy for next year’s settlements?
-
That is one of the factors that the pay review bodies
consider, along with issues such as recruitment and retention
and ensuring that the pay settlement is affordable. They have
the responsibility of speaking to people like my hon.
Friend’s wife who work in the public services, hearing what
they have to say, and making a determination. There are
different issues in different public services, and I think it
wrong to suggest that there is a “one size fits all”
solution.
-
(Mid Dorset and North
Poole) (Con)
The shadow Chancellor mentioned inequality. In fact, income
inequality has fallen since 2010, and now the top 1% will pay
27% of all income tax, a higher proportion than was ever paid
under Labour. Does that not show that the Labour party tries
to talk tough when it comes to inequality, but it is left to
the Conservatives to deliver?
-
The shadow Chancellor does not like facts to get in the way
of his rants.
-
The Minister of State, Department for International
Development (Lord Bates) (Con)
My Lords, with permission, I will now repeat in the
form of a Statement an Answer to an Urgent Question
given by my right honourable friend the Chief Secretary
to the Treasury in another place earlier today. The
Statement is as follows:
“We all recognise that public sector workers do a
fantastic job. Over the past seven years, we have seen
major improvements in our public services: crime is
down, with a greater proportion of police on the front
line; more children are achieving higher standards at
school and going on to apprenticeships and university;
and our NHS is looking after more people than at any
time in its history. Government pay is designed to be
fair to public sector workers who work so hard to
deliver these strong public services, but we must also
ensure we are able to provide those public services on
a sustainable basis for the future.
In many services, workers have received additional pay
to the 1% national increase: teachers had an average
pay rise of 3.3% in 2015-16; more than half of nurses
and other NHS staff had an increase of over 3% in 2016;
and military service personnel saw an average
additional increase of an average 2.4%. Salaries in the
public sector remain comparable to those in the private
sector and, in addition, many benefit from higher
pension entitlements. They also benefit from the rise
in the personal tax allowance, worth £1,000 a year to a
basic rate taxpayer.
We are currently completing the pay review process for
2017-18. The Government have set the remit for the pay
review bodies and they have made recommendations. We
have accepted the pay review recommendations made for
doctors and NHS staff and the Armed Forces. We will be
looking very carefully at the recommendations on the
remainder, and making determinations in the usual way.
As the Chancellor said on Monday, our policy on public
sector pay has always been designed to strike the right
balance of being fair to our public sector workers and
fair to those who pay for them. That approach has not
changed and the Government will continually assess that
balance”.
3.41 pm
-
Lord (Lab)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for repeating that
Answer, although I regret its tone and what it shows
about the Government’s attitude towards public sector
workers. This is clearly an extensive and complex issue
and I am therefore delighted that my noble friend
has managed to secure
a debate on this very matter next Thursday, when we
will have an opportunity to go into it in more detail.
The specific question that I put to the Minister today
relates to the terms of reference of pay review bodies.
Can the Minister tell the House whether those bodies
are required to have regard for government policy with
its 1% cap? If the answer is yes, surely the
publication of such reports is little more than a
publicity stunt.
-
The answer to the question is yes, but it is not a
publicity stunt. These are serious matters that are
considered very carefully, as has been the case on many
occasions for a long time. Public sector pay is set out
in the Budget and that advice is contained in
recommendations that are sent to the independent pay
review bodies. They make their recommendations and then
the Government respond, normally by way of Written
Ministerial Statement, as we have done already. The
situation in which we find ourselves is one of
significant debt. It is worth remembering that the
interest that we pay on our debt would cover the NHS
pay bill in its entirety each year. These are not
therefore inconsiderable matters; we ought to bear them
in mind and, at the same time, try to strike the
balance between fairness to those public sector workers
who do so much in our society and country and having
regard for the taxpayers who are paying their salaries.
-
(LD)
My Lords, lifting the 1% public sector pay cap has been
Liberal Democrat policy since 2015. Does the Minister
agree that the pay cap was brought in to prevent losses
and deflation at a time of fiscal crisis? It was never
intended to be prolonged and to continue into a period
of high employment and inflation and, therefore, should
be ended.
-
I seem to remember that when we were in coalition with
the noble Baroness’s party, there was in fact a pay
freeze for two years, which was then loosened to a 1%
cap. We now want to move forward: there needs to be
public sector pay restraint but we want to make sure
that, through progression pay and other benefits,
public sector work is recognised and rewarded.
-
(Con)
Does my noble friend agree that the surest way to
higher pay for all, including in the public and the
private sectors, must be through higher growth and
lower inflation? Is not the quickest way to higher
growth efficient and systematic control of all public
expenditure programmes and lots of new enterprise and
new investment? Is it not time for some new language to
explain that simple fact?
-
My noble friend has explained it rather well.
Maintaining a good solid economy is good for the
economy. It controls inflation and interest rates,
which are at an historic low. It has contributed to the
fact that we have record levels of employment and has
also enabled us to cut taxes for some of the lowest
paid, taking 1.3 million people out of tax altogether.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, the Minister says that public pay is a
balance between the pay to the individual in the
service and what the individual citizen feels is fair.
How have the Government assessed what the view of the
citizen is as regards National Health Service staff?
-
On that specific point, the Institute for Fiscal
Studies has reported that public sector workers earn on
average 13% more than those in the private sector.
Secondly—this is very important—the purpose of the pay
review body is to make sure that we continue to attract
people into the public services and deal with
employment. That is why it is interesting and helpful
to note that a public sector pay review body has said:
“We do not see significant short-term nationwide
recruitment and retention issues that are linked to
pay”.
-
(Con)
My Lords, as one who has from time to time found
himself at odds with government policy, will my noble
friend tell his colleagues in the Cabinet that we do
not expect them to have their debates in public?
-
I was just about to say that was above my pay grade and
then I realised that was probably not the right term to
use. The Chancellor set out the policy on public pay in
the Budget. That continues to be the case. We listen
very carefully to what the review bodies say and watch
very carefully to see the impact that has on
recruitment. That policy will continue.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, further to the excellent question by the
noble Lord, , when you have
the Health Secretary, the Environment Secretary and
even the Foreign Secretary publicly campaigning against
the policy of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, what
does that do for the authority and standing of the
Government? Is not the Cabinet a rabble?
-
Certainly, the Cabinet is not as the noble Lord
describes. The reality of all these things is that we
do not have a Cabinet of clones; we have a Cabinet of
individuals—a lot of individuals who care very
passionately about the areas for which they are
responsible. I declare an interest as a Minister for
International Development, about which I care very
passionately and on which I might occasionally be
prepared to make my case. But the fact of the matter is
that the collective government policy is as set out by
the Chancellor in the Budget. We listen carefully to
the independent pay review bodies.
-
(Con)
My Lords, does my noble friend agree that there is a
great deal of support for the view implied in the
question of my noble friend ? However, does
he agree that perhaps we are moving towards a moment
when it might be right to consider raising taxation to
deal with some of the problems being discussed today?
-
I am not sure that I agree with my noble friend in that
respect because the way that we have raised tax
thresholds, particularly for lower-paid workers, has
meant that on average they have benefited by an
additional £1,005, which is a significant increase to
their salary. Further, there is the increase in the
living wage, with the equivalent of a 4.2% increase for
the lowest paid. Therefore, I think there are other
mechanisms by which we can ensure that people’s pay and
conditions improve without resorting to raising taxes.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, is it sensible for the Government to continue
to put their faith in growth in the economy when
today’s abysmal news about productivity demonstrates
that it is bound to fail? Our productivity now is lower
than it was a decade ago.
-
That is why we have said that productivity is a key
target. But just last year we had the fastest-growing
economy in the G7. We have seen incredible growth,
otherwise we would not have employment at record levels
in this country, with an additional 3 million people in
work. Part of the reason is because we have kept a
tight grip on the public finances and have seen the
deficit reduced by two-thirds. These are important
contributions towards maintaining confidence in the
economy going forward. However, I accept that we need
to work much harder on the area of productivity.
-
(Lab)
What would the Minister say to the public sector
workers who are told that there is not enough money to
pay them a decent wage, while at the same time the
Government can find £1 billion to give to the DUP?
-
We would say to those people that we have independent
pay review bodies which look at these matters. On
Northern Ireland, there are historical challenges.
Personally, I think that securing stability for the
Government going forward is an important part of
maintaining that path to growth, enabling us to pay
down on the debts and ensure that salaries for both the
public and private sectors increase in the future.
-
(Con)
My Lords, I am afraid that my noble friend omitted to
correct the noble Lord opposite, who talked about £1
billion being given to the DUP. No such sum is being
given to the DUP—it is being given to the people of
Northern Ireland, to improve standards of living in
Northern Ireland.
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Not for the first time, I am happy to stand corrected by
my noble friend .
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(Lab)
My Lords, I will return to the Minister’s point about
productivity. I have raised questions previously about
the extent to which public servants are being encouraged
to work and change their productivity and to find ways in
which they might be rewarded. Can the Minister say
whether any instructions are being sent to the pay review
boards about this, to search for better productivity?
There may be an opportunity for more money to be paid to
public servants if productivity can be linked to their
performance, and this may be a way out of the impasse we
find ourselves in.
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We look at that constantly. When I was at the Home Office
we looked at that with regard to the police, as reducing
bureaucracy improves practices and efficiency within the
police force. We were able to maintain levels of
front-line policing while at the same time we saw crime
falling to record lows. So all these things can be looked
at and improved.
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