By 6pm on Tuesday, Britain’s top bosses will have earned
more than the average UK worker gets in an entire year, new calculations fromthe High Pay Centre think-tank suggest. Britain's top bosses earn average UK annual
salary in 22 hours of work. The findings highlight vast and growing gulf
between the privileged top one per cent of earners and the rest of us. The
median average salary of a full-time UK worker is £27,645 a year. That means it
would take just 22 hours of work in the New Year for these chief executives to
take home more than the average British worker. Assuming they started work with
most of the rest of the workforce on Monday, it will take them until Tuesday
afternoon to reach the target.
FTSE 100 bosses received average total remuneration,
including share options, of £4.96m in 2014, according to estimates from the
proxy shareholder voting agency Manifest. This equates to a rate of around
£1,200 an hour.
Official statistical surveys suggest that the income gap
between the top 10 per cent of earners and those in the middle of the income
distribution has been relatively stable for the past 25 years. But the share of
the top one per cent, which includes company bosses and bankers, has been
rising strongly over most of that period as pay and bonuses have ballooned.
Figures released by the Office for National Statistics last month showed that
the share of wealth of the top one per cent was around 12.6 per cent – equal to
the combined wealth of the poorest 57 per cent of the population. Wages grew at
2.4 per cent in the most recent ONS labour market statistics.
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