Pay inequality in the UK has grown worse
in the last year with today, Tuesday 6th January, marking the point at
which Britain’s top executives will have amassed the same amount of pay
as the average worker’s earnings for a whole year.
The figure, which is calculated by the High Pay
Centre think tank which monitors top pay, uses the recent figures that
show the chief executives of the top 100 companies on the London Stock
Exchange earn an average of £4.7 million a year, whilst the average
annual salary in the UK is £27,200.
It means that it takes these top executives just
two working days to earn the same amount of money as the average British
worker - one day less than the equivalent measure last year.
Political blog Left Foot Forward
points out that whilst Primark still refuses to pay its ordinary
workers a living wage, last year George Weston, chief executive of
Primark owners Associated British Food, was awarded £5 million for
hitting performance targets, on top of a salary of £1 million and annual
bonus of £900,000.
Last year, the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) published report which said that
income inequality has a “statistically significant impact” on economic
growth. John Hood, the communications manager of the Equality Trust
campaign both agrees with this point and also highlights that the huge
disparity between the wages of the rich and poor has the potential to
damage British society as a whole.
“Britain is a country which used to pride itself
on fair play and fair pay but this seems to have regressed into ‘winner
takes all’,” he says. “The tiny elite have disappeared into the
stratosphere in terms of earnings, whilst the rest of us are barely
scratching a living. If it continues economic growth could well stagnate
and the fabric of society will be pulled apart at the seams.”
Hood also indicates that although many political
parties are discussing pay inequality, particularly in the run up to the
next election, none of them have been clear about how they would tackle
it. “Over four fifths of people now agree that the gap between rich and
poor is too great, and 70% believe it is the government's role to
reduce it. The fact that few politicians have effectively tackled
inequality is at least one reason for the huge disillusionment with
mainstream politics,” he says.
Read here comments from politicians of various parties but don't expect any solutions.
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