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UK workers earning the same as they were ten years ago | UK workers earning the same as they were ten years ago |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Workers in the UK are earning no more than they were 10 years ago, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). | Workers in the UK are earning no more than they were 10 years ago, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). |
After adjusting for inflation, it said pay levels peaked in 2009. | After adjusting for inflation, it said pay levels peaked in 2009. |
Between then and 2012 the ONS said pay had fallen by 3% in real terms. | Between then and 2012 the ONS said pay had fallen by 3% in real terms. |
On average, it said workers were therefore earning roughly the same last year as they were ten years ago, in 2003. The TUC said the figures came as no surprise. | On average, it said workers were therefore earning roughly the same last year as they were ten years ago, in 2003. The TUC said the figures came as no surprise. |
"Official figures now confirm what everyone knows. Living standards have been falling for the vast majority, and there is no sign of change," said Frances O'Grady, the TUC's general secretary. | "Official figures now confirm what everyone knows. Living standards have been falling for the vast majority, and there is no sign of change," said Frances O'Grady, the TUC's general secretary. |
According to the ONS, average pay in 2009 was £12.25 an hour. After adjusting for inflation, that fell to £11.92 in 2010 and £11.41 in 2011. | According to the ONS, average pay in 2009 was £12.25 an hour. After adjusting for inflation, that fell to £11.92 in 2010 and £11.41 in 2011. |
The figures are not very different for workers in London, although their decline in earnings was a little less steep than in the country as a whole. | The figures are not very different for workers in London, although their decline in earnings was a little less steep than in the country as a whole. |
But public sector workers fared a little better than those employed in the private sector. | But public sector workers fared a little better than those employed in the private sector. |
Public sector workers saw more of an increase in their earnings during the boom years up to 2009, and the subsequent decline in earnings was not as steep. | Public sector workers saw more of an increase in their earnings during the boom years up to 2009, and the subsequent decline in earnings was not as steep. |
Living standards | |
The outlook for those whose incomes have been squeezed may not be much better. | |
It could be another 10 years before living standards return to the levels they were at before the recession, according to a report from the Resolution Foundation, a think tank dedicated to improving the lives of those on middle and low incomes. | |
It says many people in this section of society could face a permanent hit to their expected levels of prosperity. | |
"Without steady growth in earnings, living standards will continue to stagnate," said Gavin Kelly, the chief executive of the Resolution Foundation. | |
"We can't just return to the skewed growth of the past, when too many on low and middle incomes failed to keep up with overall rises in prosperity," he said. | |
The report suggests that if incomes now rise by just over 1% above inflation, it will take until 2023 for people to regain the living standards they had in 2008, when the recession began. | |
By that time their earnings might recover to £22,000 a year. |
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