The Office for
National Statistics has just published the provisional findings of the 2014
Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE).
While the latest
ASHE findings confirm that the big squeeze on real pay continued between spring
2013 and 2014 the detailed figures show relative winners and losers, with employees
who remained in continuous employment over the year enjoying a real pay
increase and women seeing a narrowing in the gender pay gap.
Growth in median
weekly earnings of 0.6% (to £417.90) for all employees (full-time and
part-time) is lower than the corresponding figure of 0.8% pay growth indicated
by the ONS’ average weekly earnings statistics and adjusted for consumer price
inflation represents an annual reduction in real pay of 1.1%. The median annual
pay increase for full-timers (0.1%, to £518 per week, i.e. a reduction in real
pay of 1.6%) is lower than at any time since comparable records began in 1997
and well below the increase for part-timers (0.6%, to £161.10 per week).
However, the underlying pay situation looks better when one strips out the
effect of changes in the mix of employment over the course of the year and
focuses solely on the majority of employees who have remained in the same job
for at least one year. These ‘job stayers’ enjoyed an annual median pay
increase of 4.1%, providing a real terms pay rise of 2.4%.
Full-time women employees
saw a bigger pay increase (0.6%, to £461.90 per week) than male full-timers
(0.3%, to £557.80 per week), though male part-time employees (with an increase
of 1.4% to £151.40) did slightly better than women (1.3% to £166.10). This
helped the median gender pay gap to narrow from 10% to 9.4%, the smallest gap
between male and female pay since 1997.
There was a slight
increase in pay inequality, the weekly pay of the top 10% of earners increasing
by more than that of both median earners and the bottom 10% of earners. For
full-time employees the top 10% of earners saw pay growth of 0.4% (to £1,024.40
per week) compared with just 0.1% for the bottom 10% (to £287.90 per week). The
discrepancy was even larger for part-time employees where the increase for the
top 10% of earners (1.2%, to £397 per week) easily outstripped that for the
bottom 10% (0.2%, to £50 per week).
Overall, the
annual pay snapshot at one level provides a familiar picture of a UK workforce
still feeling the squeeze and continuing to become more unequal in terms of
pay, but also presents a challenge to some well-worn narratives by showing that
‘job stayers’ are faring relatively while women are making some, albeit slow,
progress toward closing the pay gap with men.
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