Workplace Report (May 2016)

Pay and prices

Settlements post 2.3% rise


Collectively agreed pay deals were higher, at 2.3%, in April.


Settlements from Labour Research Department’s Payline database for the three months from February to April show a 2.3% midpoint (median) increase on lowest pay rate. That’s an increase on the 2.0% rises for the previous three months.


The 2.3% figure includes the influence of the introduction in April of the National Living Wage. However, if the standard increase — what most grades or workers got — is taken, the midpoint increase was steady at 2.0%.


Pay analysts XpertHR saw their median rise for the whole economy dip to 1.7%, dragged down by public sector settlements. 


Official Average Weekly Earnings figures for total pay, including bonuses, showed 2.0% rise in the three months to March for the whole economy, against a 1.9% rise for the three-months ending February.


In manufacturing, growth was steady at 1.7%, and services growth was unchanged at 1.6%. 


For the private sector as a whole, the increase was 2.1% against 2.0% the previous month. In the public sector, including financial services, earnings growth was down to 0.6% from 0.8%; if financial services are excluded, growth was up to 1.6% from 1.4%.


The three-monthly rises in regular pay, excluding bonuses, for March were: whole economy 2.1% (2.2% in February); private sector 2.3% (2.5%); public sector, including financial services 1.5% (1.4%); services 1.9% (1.9%); and manufacturing 1.9% (2.0%).

www.lrd.org.uk/index.php?pagid=18

http://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlabourmarket/peopleinwork/earningsandworkinghours/datasets/averageweeklyearnings


This information is copyright to the Labour Research Department (LRD) and may not be reproduced without the permission of the LRD.