Public Sector Workers Set for Pay RiseByline: Michael BlackleyDaily Mail (London)
Millions of UK public sector workers, including teachers and doctors, will get pay rises of about 6% after Rishi Sunak decided to accept the recommendations of independent pay review bodies. The bodies had suggested pay rises of between 6% and 6.5% for 2023-24, at a potential ...
Several different groups from the public sector have been involved in industrial action over pay in the last few years, including junior doctors whoagreed to enter formal talks with with government last weekin a bid to resolve their 20-month dispute. A previous round of teachers'...
Pay rise fails to close public sector gap.Nurses' pay still lags significantly behind that of comparable professions, despite pay rises worth four times the headline rate of inflation.doi:10.7748/NS.16.16.4.S4Mick LipleyC. DuffinNursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987...
Public sector pay growth keeps ahead with 5% rise The article informs that in the field of Information Technology (IT), Great Britain's public sector pay growth has kept ahead with a rise of 5%. According to the Society of IT Management's annual survey, IT salaries in local authorities ....
580,000 IN WAGE WAR THREATS; Anger at Public Sector Pay Rise LimitsRead the full-text online article and more details about "580,000 IN WAGE WAR THREATS; Anger at Public Sector Pay Rise Limits" - Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland), June 7, 2006Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland)...
Appendix: Interviews with sector leaders This report is based on a combination of interviews that took place between July and November 2023, and secondary research. Individuals interviewed represent federal, state, local, and nonprofit organizations throughout the country (see ...
Millions of workers are in line for a Budget pay rise as the Chancellor announced the UK’s economy is “firmly back on track” after the coronavirus pandemic. Rishi Sunak has confirmed he will scrap the year-long public sector pay freeze in his fiscal statement on W...
The chancellor confirmed some public sector workers will see a pay rise next year, while others will see a wage freeze.
But Sara Gorton, head of health for Unison — the largest public sector union — told the FT this was insufficient: “A pay rise less than inflation won’t be enough to persuade disillusioned health workers to stay in the NHS.”