Tuesday, 8 October 2013

Why Jeremy Hunt wants to cut our pay further (and what we should do about it)

Read this great analysis from Grumbling Appendix alongside this post for a full overview of what lies behind Jeremy Hunt's decision.

Jeremy Hunt, the Minister for Health, has spoken out against the 1% pay rise proposed by the NHS Pay Review Body for NHS staff, and has proposed that NHS staff should not receive any increase, and instead the money "saved" should be spent on "modernisation" of the existing pay structure.
The withdrawl of the pay rise is getting the most coverage, but the main issue is actually the "modernisation" which the government wants to implement.
We do not receive automatic pay rises
At present NHS employees, like many in the public sector, receive what are called increments. This is an incremental pay increase for every year of service, roughly 3.5% per year which moves you from the bottom of your pay band to the top, over a period of about 10 years. After 10 years service, you've reached the top of your pay band, and further pay increases only come with promotion to a higher band or when the government grants them to the whole NHS. Which they haven't for two years, and don't want to do now.