Scoundrel wrote: » Or you could just apply to the PS since it's so great with it's "gold plated" pensions?
cms88 wrote: » They can get a priviate one like most people...
Scoundrel wrote: » Using terms like Gold plated(straight out of IBEC and Indo playbook) in reference to pensions proves you are not neutral.Should people not get decent pension after a lifetime of work? Or should we all work till we die just to keep making money for those at the top?
maxwell smart wrote: » Just for info he doesn't own it anymore, sold it some time ago....
Scoundrel wrote: » Ah yes the newspaper owned by Ireland's biggest tax dodger and proven corrupt oligarch Denis O Brien now why would they publish such anti PS nonsense I wonder? average PS earning is not 959 a week and everyone knows that.
Scoundrel wrote: » Using terms like Gold plated(straight out of IBEC and Indo playbook) in reference to pensions proves you are not neutral. Should people not get decent pension after a lifetime of work? Or should we all work till we die just to keep making money for those at the top?
daithi7 wrote: » In Ireland public sector pay is 30% greater than the private sector (not including the gold plated, index linked pensions) In the UK the differential is just 1%. Fact is , Ireland pays its public sector far too much and the rest of the workforce and society as a whole must pay for this excess. Is a travesty, that feeds into things like the cost of Healthcare, policing, etc, etc, etc . That's what bothers neutrals tbh.
daithi7 wrote: » Really!?! Seriously, so you're trying to convince me that the differential in public over private sector pay changed by a whopping 40% in just 1-2 years?? And none of us noticed!?! Yeah right.https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/politics/dan-obrien-how-the-government-continues-to-prioritise-public-sector-pay-levels-above-all-else-37368536.html Re Dan O'brien, Sept 30th, 2018 "The latest figures from the Irish State's statisticians show that average weekly earnings in the public sector here are €959. That is more than 40pc higher than in the private sector." "....The latest Eurostat figures show that in Ireland, it is the seventh highest among the 28 countries of the EU. It is far above both the average in Britain and the average across the EU as a whole. And that is despite Ireland not having an unusually large number of public sector workers in the workforce. Pay "restoration" is a prime example of all parties' unwillingness to face down a powerful lobby. Restoring pay to bubble-era peaks was always an exercise in inequity....."
Geuze wrote: » Irish PS pay is 0.3% below the private sector, although this varies across the pay distribution. The previous PS pay premium has declined, due to PS paycuts, and lower pay restoration compared to pay rises outside the PS. OK, lower paid PS, at the 10th percentile, do earn 12.7% more then the private sector, ok. But non-PS get faster pay progression, so by the 90th percentile, the PS have fallen 17.3% behind.https://www.cso.ie/en/releasesandpublications/rp/rp-eappp/eappp20152018/ "Results from the OLS Regression model show a public/private sector pay differential ranging from 6.8% in 2015 to -0.3% in 2018, for the model which includes size of enterprise as a determining factor. Results for the OLS model which deducts the pension levy and excludes size shows a pay differential ranging from 1.4% to -3.4%. See Table 4.1. Summary results from the Quantile Regression model show a public/private sector pay differential in 2018 ranging from 12.7% at the 10th percentile to -17.3% at the 90th percentile for the model which deducts the pension levy and includes size of enterprise as a determining factor. See Figure 4.1 and Table 8.8. The corresponding model which makes no adjustment for the pension levy and excludes size shows a pay differential in 2018 ranging from 17.6% at the 10th percentile to -13.7% at the 90th percentile. See Table 8.4." The pensions for people hired since 2011/2013? have been made less generous.
daithi7 wrote: » In Ireland public sector pay is 30% greater than the private sector (not including the gold plated, index linked pensions)
combat14 wrote: » the green tax everything and anything that stirs party are in government now.. it will be pay rises that are needed not cuts to afford all the new "green" taxes that are being brought in
Scoundrel wrote: » Don't try and educate the Indo reading Newstalk listening morons with facts and figures you'll give yourself a hernia dealing with them. Blah, de blah, bs, blah, bs... .
Deleted User wrote: » No cuts would be severe enough to satisfy them. No point justifying PS pay to these haters. As we can see anyway the decision makers like Pascal appreciate the work the PS do.
Scoundrel wrote: » Don't try and educate the Indo reading Newstalk listening morons with facts and figures you'll give yourself a hernia dealing with them.
Sierra Oscar wrote: » Pascal Donohoe gives a statement on plans around public sector pay Minister for Finance confirms the September pay increase will go ahead as scheduled and a new pay agreement will be negotiated later in the year. There will be no public sector pay cuts.
ShedTower wrote: » Jesus people are barmy when it comes to public sector pay. The 2% was a part of a 3 year public service pay stability agreement in 2017. Nobody cared that the private sector was receiving far higher pay increases since then. The public sector was falling way behind on wages, certainly in admin areas. If things start picking up again in 2021 the private sector will get the increases (and lets face it a lot of them won't even lose the increases of the last few years). As this goes on the public sector will eventually get a 3 or 4 year pay agreement with pittance here and pittance there. Most of it kicked down the road, just as this 2% was in 2017. With a promise not to ask for anything else for years just to get it. Newbies are pulling €390 a week. What's the Covid payment, €350? €390 for a full week of work, after competing against hundreds or thousands to get it. And a pretty poor pension to be honest, one that's miles different to preexisting schemes. The public sector will suffer in 2021 and 2022, despite how the private sector bounces back. They'll suffer with the next pay agreement too. The public service was a good place to be back in the day, no doubt. But anyone who joined it in the last few years must absolutely be baffled by it all.
kippy wrote: » The reality of the 2% is: 1. It's part of a legally agreed roadmap of pay and conditions restoration. 2. The net cost to the state is not 2% 3. It is very likely that shortly after far more than 2% will be shorn off public sector wages using the various channels of negotion available.
daithi7 wrote: » As another poster succinctly put it, since the last financial crash there has been a restoration of public pay to Celtic Tiger levels..
daithi7 wrote: » I think even someone like you know' the logic' is to quietly pile on even more pay rises for the public sector (who of course politicians own pay is linked to ~ funny dat hey!? ) before the mother of all recessions is reflected fully in the national finances in the autumn & next year. Once the horror of our financial reality is fully apparent, this latest pay rise is going to be seen to be the absolute abomination that it is. As another poster succinctly put it, since the last financial crash there has been a restoration of public pay to Celtic Tiger levels ( which were never sustainable) but there has been no restoration to 2007 Tax Levels. (I.e. USC, rates, other 'emergency & one off taxes all stillin place ). That's just plain wrong imho, and this public pay rise now, is a disgrace
ParkRunner wrote: » I think the logic is you don’t cut yourself out of a recession as it just prolongs it. It depends on the wider state of the economy really and how long any recession might last. Needs a bit more analysis than knee jerk reactions as once a pay cut is signaled that’s a whole lot of money that’s going to immediately be banked rather than spent in anticipation
addaword wrote: » Not as much as those on an average of 15,000 or whatever less a year, most of whom have no pension, security etc How many will lose their jobs? Now that is suffering.
ShedTower wrote: » The public sector will suffer in 2021 and 2022,
Blondini wrote: » Whatcha waiting for then! Publicjobs.ie
daithi7 wrote: » Having 'Pubic Pay Cuts' in the title of this thread is disingenuous imho, as none have occurred for close to a ~ decade now!? Perhaps it should be titled, something more like:' What Has to Happen to Prevent Senseless Public Pay Rises?' E.g. Ireland is going into a massive recession, with 25% unemployment, but the public sector are still giving themselves a further 2% pay rise on already hugely over the top & totally out of line salaries & pensions. Jesus wept!!