daithi7 wrote: » because we all have to pay for the massively over generous, individual lottery win for every retiring pubic service employee in the land last year, this year and for the next 50 fuppin years. That's why!!
mikhail wrote: » Why the hell are generous pension agreements from 25 years ago a matter of discussion? Would you like to try stripping it from those people? Or is this something that was fixed 25 years ago, but continues to be used as a stick to beat a sector where the new entries are not paid - and will never be paid -remotely as well?
daithi7 wrote: » Everything is an exception in the Irish Public Service. The pay is exceptional. The pensions are truly exceptional. Conditions are exceptional. Their unions are exceptional. And any politician or minister looking to control public sector pay is very exceptional. And finally, their performance is , well, exceptionally average.... probably below average tbh.
Geuze wrote: » Teaching scale is very long. 25? Have a look yourself:www.asti.iewww.tui.ie
salonfire wrote: » Is that an answer to my question?
GooglePlus wrote: » Most aren't paid enough.
JimmyVik wrote: » How many years would they have to be working to be at the top of the scale?
Geuze wrote: » Note that those on top of scale at 64k still get qual allowances, as well.
blanch152 wrote: » https://www.education.ie/en/Circulars-and-Forms/Active-Circulars/cl0041_2019.pdf Teacher at the top of the scale would be on a salary of 64k. For those that are post-95, but pre-2013, the pension would be only around 20k, plus the State pension of about 12k.
Geuze wrote: » As there are many types of PS, on various salaries, many will get a different pension than 12k. A teacher with full 40 years service would get a pension of approx 32k-36k. (That is before the new SPS pension scheme)
Geuze wrote: » Ok, so you are talking about the post 2013 SPS pension scheme, ok, fair enough. Then let me clarify. Teachers in the pension schemes before the new SPS pension scheme can expect a pension of 32-36k.
Geuze wrote: » Let us check. I am more familiar with the older pay scales.https://asti.ie/pay-and-conditions/ Salary Scale and Qualification Allowances for Teachers who entered Teaching on or after 1 January 2011 Teachers who were first appointed to a Department paid teaching position between 1st January 2011 and 31st January 2012 are paid in accordance with the revised salary scale, which includes the Honours Primary Degree Allowance, and any applicable qualification allowances Teachers who were first appointed to a Department paid teaching position on or after 1 February 2012 are paid in accordance with the revised salary scale which now includes the Honours Primary Degree allowance. See below to view this scale and allowances. For further information please refer to circular 0041/2019Post 2011 top of scale = 69,407, a bit higher than I expected. This seems to include the former Degree allowance? Ok, so the pension will be 50% of final salary, assuming 40 years service. So the pension will be 34,703. That is made up of the SPC and a work pension. The SPC is 248.30 * 52.18 = 13k pa.So the work pension is 21,703. Is that correct? I think so.
History Queen wrote: » I'm a teacher. Post 2011. We are looking at approx 12k per year plus state pension Edit: (I say approx because obviously the figures depend on inflation but the figures are from a presentation my union gave in 2019 and was verified by a Cornmarket rep who visited my staffroom last year)
maxwell smart wrote: » Don't appear to be including the pension numbers in there. That is where a huge difference exists between Public and Private
Geuze wrote: » As there are many types of PS, on various salaries, many will get a different pension than 12k. A teacher with full 40 years service would get a pension of approx 32k-36k.
History Queen wrote: » What is exceptional about the post 2011 pension? Approx 12k after 40 years service (although also eligable to claim state pension of approx another 12k)
noodler wrote: » AO stops well before AP?
noodler wrote: » Must be at the top of their scale the last ten years. Ten years of increments plus the annual increases/PRD reductions since 2016 would be significantly above 10%. An AO in the Civil service would have had their gross double over that period on increments alone.
JimmyVik wrote: » Over the last 10 years or so, my salary has increased about 80%. Compared to a friend who does the same job in the PS whos salary has increased by less than 10%. Hes doing it for the pension he tells me.
Hotblack Desiato wrote: » AO is an exception as its pay scale starts at the bottom of one grade, and finishes at the top of the next grade up.
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.