| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 Irish Economy
 EU Economy
 US Economy
 UK Economy
 Global Economy
 International
 Property
 Innovation
 
 Analysis/Comment
 
 Asia Economy

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

News : Irish Last Updated: Jul 13, 2009 - 7:05:33 AM


Irish average earnings in 2007 were at €37,726; Pay at ESB and Bord Gáis at €71,572; Public/private gap was 48% ex-pensions
By Finfacts Team
Jul 10, 2009 - 2:58:52 PM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Source: Davy

The National Employment Survey 2007, is a major workplace and earnings survey conducted by the Central Statistics Office and the results for 2007 have been published today. Average annual earnings were €37,726 in 2007, this figure was composed of €35,607 basic earnings and €2,120 annual bonuses and BIK (Benefit in Kind). Earnings were highest in the Electricity, gas €71,572 - -  mainly the ESB and Bord Gáis. Besides workers in such public services have a five-star pension scheme and they have been allocated shares in their companies. The public/private gap was 48% for average hourly earnings as of October 2007.

Besides the pay gap, the majority of Irish private sector workers have no occupational pension.

The ESRI has conducted research which compares similar jobs in both sectors:

SEE: Irish public sector pay excluding pensions exceeds private sector pay by 10% for top jobs to up to 30% for other grades

The survey provides detailed comparisons on the factors that influence individual employee earnings. The results have been compiled on the basis of earnings data provided by employers and individual data collected directly by the CSO from a sub-sample of employees. The CSO wishes to thank the employers and employees who provided information for the survey.

The results show that:

  • Employees earned an average of €20.08 per hour in October 2007. Men earned €21.17 per hour and women earned €18.91 per hour (89.3% of male hourly earnings).
  • Half of all employees earned less than €16.29 per hour (i.e. the median hourly earnings figure).
  • Average hourly earnings for full-time workers were €21.17 while part-time workers received an average of €15.40 per hour.

  • The average working week was 34.4 hours. Men worked an average of 38.0 hours and women 30.7 hours per week.
  • Public sector average hourly earnings were 47.6% higher that the private sector in October 2007.  Average earnings per hour in the public sector were €26.67 compared to €18.07 per hour in the private sector. Nearly a quarter (24.5%) of private sector employees consisted of Sales and Other occupations (mainly manual labour) compared with only 8.1% of employees in the public sector.

  • A profile of educational qualifications in the public and private sectors shows over half (52.8%) of all public sector employees had third-level qualifications, compared with 31.9% in the private sector.
  • Public sector workers have spent an average of 11.6 years in their current employment while in the private sector employees have spent an average of 8.2 years in their current employment.
  • The average employee has been working for just over 15.1 years and has spent about 9.0 years in his/her current employment.
  • Average earnings per hour were highest in the Education sector at €33.23 per hour followed by the Electricity, gas and water supply sector at €30.96. The lowest average hourly earnings were in the Hotels and restaurants sector, at €12.93 per hour.
  • Professional employees earned the highest hourly earnings of €33.61 while Sales workers had the lowest earnings at €14.08 per hour.
  • Educational qualifications had a strong influence on earnings potential as employees who had a third level degree or higher tended to have higher earnings than other employees and this difference increased with age. Employees aged under 25 years with a third level degree or higher qualification earned €17.57 per hour compared to those with a higher secondary (Leaving Certificate) qualification who earned €12.31 per hour. This gap had widened to €42.21 and €20.97 respectively for employees aged 50 to 60 years.
  • Employees living in Dublin earned €22.03 per hour compared with €1 - €3 less for those living in the Rest of Leinster, Munster and Connaught (€20.29, €19.07 and €18.83 respectively). Employees in Ulster (including those living in Northern Ireland and working in the Republic of Ireland) earned €17.59 per hour.
  • Average annual earnings were €37,726 in 2007, this figure was composed of €35,607 basic earnings and €2,120 annual bonuses and BIK (Benefit in Kind). Earnings were highest in the Electricity, gas and water supply sector at €71,572 and lowest in the Hotels and restaurants sector at €23,505.
  • A comparison of NES results show that earnings per hour rose from €19.16 in October 2006 to €20.08 in October 2007. Hours per week fell slightly from 34.8 hours per week in October 2006 to 34.4 hours in October 2007.
  • More analysis of the NES data will be carried out in July 2009 and published thereafter. This analysis will further examine the differences in earnings.

Source: CSO

Davy chief economist Rossa White commented:

Public sector hourly pay exceeds private sector by 48%; gap obvious for same education,  experience and occupation

Public sector pay out-of-whack with private pay

  • The latest annual National Employment Survey showed that public workers enjoyed a huge hourly premium over their private sector counterparts.

  • The gap was 48% for average hourly earnings as of October 2007. There is no evidence to suggest that the chasm has closed since.

  • Median earnings were 52% higher in the public jobs.

For the equivalent occupation, education level or experience, the smallest gap is 25% and the largest is 76%

  • The gap between public and private pay cannot be justified by saying that public sector employees are more experienced, better educated or do different jobs.

  • For example, how can we explain the fact that security personnel in the public sector get paid 46% more than their private sector peers?

  • Table 1 above shows that no matter what way the data are cut, the gap is glaring. Looking at the most educated – those with a third-level degree or above – the public sector pay premium is 44%. Those with 20-29 years' experience achieve a wage that is 36% higher in the public service than in the private service.

Upshot is that the public pay bill has not been properly tackled, but there is justification for big cuts

  • In February, the first attempt was made to rectify the imbalance. But the public pension levy only matched the wage cuts in the private sector, so the gap has probably not closed. The public pay bill of €20bn in 2009 amounts to more than one-third of voted public expenditure. Further pay cuts of at least 10% are justified by these data.

Annual earnings are 32% higher in the public sector, but hours worked (not bonuses) account for smaller gap compared with hourly earnings

Hourly earnings are 48% on average higher in the public sector. But average annual earnings are 32% higher because public employees work fewer hours.

But it is not the case that bonuses are much higher in the private sector.

In 2002, bonuses (and benefit-in-kind) in the private sector amounted to €1565 (or 5% of average annual earnings) versus only €149 in the public service. Five years on in 2007, bonuses in the public service had almost caught up at €1807 versus €2,211.

Related Articles


© Copyright 2009 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

Irish
Latest Headlines
Kerry Group reports 41% rise in H1 2010 profit before tax
Grafton returned to the black in H1 2010
Glanbia reports 58% increase in H1 2010 pre-tax profits
Paddy Power reports pre-tax profits up 54% to €52.5m in H1 2010 - - World Cup provided big boost
CRH reports 77% drop in H1 2010 profit to €25m
Bank of Scotland (Ireland) Limited to exit the Irish market; Bank had shook up the Irish mortgage market from 1999
National Economic and Social Council says euro has been beneficial for Ireland
Irish business faces risks and competitive advantages from climate change
European central banks reported to have bought Irish government bonds today
Bord Gáis launches report: ‘The Future of Renewable Gas in Ireland’
Bank of Ireland reports loss of €1.25bn before tax in first half of 2010
State aid to Anglo Irish Bank set to exceed €24bn; Bank support pushed Irish budget deficit to 36.51% of GDP in Q1 2010
National Irish Bank reports operating profit of €26m in H1 2010 before bad debt charges of €367m; Danske Bank posts profit before tax of €420m - - up 32% year on year
AIB announces rises in residential mortgage rates
Bord Gáis Energy Index fell in July as the euro recovered
Irish pension funds recovered some lost ground in July; Inflation adjusted returns over 10 years negative
Irish Exchequer deficit at end-July 2010 is €10.2bn
Annual rate of change in loans to Irish households was minus 4.1% in June 2010; Domestic banks owed €54.8bn to the European Central Bank in June
US private sector employment increased by 42,000 from June to July
AIB reports 24% plunge in income in H1 2010; Loss before tax of €2.0bn
DART Underground 'will grow' Dublin business by €450m or maybe not
 Four Irish companies a day went bust in the first seven months of the year
O’Keeffe says US firm ServiceSource is to add 70 new jobs in Dublin; Extra €55m investment to support Irish start-up firms also announced
Dublin's Docklands Authority cuts deficit from €213m to €19m in 2009; Agency left with 34 Council/Executive Board members and 27 staff
Irish Glass Bottle site loans transferred to NAMA
Online advertising expenditure in Ireland in 2009 reached €97.2m or maybe not
Financial Services Ombudsman criticises “unwarranted and unsolicited” moves by Irish banks to move people off low-rate tracker mortgages
Permanent tsb to raise variable mortgage interest rates
Lenihan announces review group to report on disposal of State commercial assets
Enterprise Ireland launches Seed & Venture Capital report for 2009
Elan reports net loss of $213m in second quarter
Central Bank and Financial Regulator say review of Irish banks’ mortgage lending policy for first time buyers shows practices need to be improved
Profits earned by Irish hotels have plummeted by 50% since 2007; Room rates said to have dropped to 1999 levels
Campaign for Change at One51 dissidents announce nominees for election to board of One51 at AGM
Commercial Court orders full trial of 3 Limerick solicitors on personal guarantee claims of over €63m from Anglo Irish Bank
Bank of Ireland to refund €3m to ATM users who over 4-year period left the money from cash withdrawals in the ATM
NTMA raises €1.5bn in new borrowing; Ireland has completed 90% of its long term borrowing programme of €20bn for 2010
Ryanair says volcanic ash clouds cost it €50m in its fiscal first quarter
Central Bank governor says Ireland's two biggest banks AIB and Bank of Ireland have passed its stress tests -- which are more severe than ongoing Eurozone tests
Bank of Ireland to reduce its workforce by 750 staff over the next two years