Head The Wall wrote: » Let me dumb it down more for you and the two PS guys that don't understand it either Pension levy - your salary decreases as you now have to contribute more to your pension, you pay tax on the decreased salary and receive tax relief on this as it is a pension
Vizzy wrote: » Afraid the CSO disagree with you on this,they have stated that the average public servant earns €47 K and this caters for all grades ages etc As I have said there are people on more than this and many on less but on average they all earn €47 K You cant on the one hand use averages in relation to the level of pay in the public sector and then disregard the average because it suits your argument in relation to pensions.
Tiered pay cuts for public servants - 5% on the first €30,000 of salary, 7.5% reduction on the next €40,000 and 10% on the next €55,000 of salary
Public servants' pensions to be linked to average salary across career, rather than final salary
Head The Wall wrote: » I added the text in bold, the rest is what is quoted by another poster. I have no problem understanding the difference between a pension contribution and a straight paycut. See the post by Welease above who explains it better. Either way it's still not a paycut.
deise blue wrote: » Now let me dumb it down for you ! Any unilateral reduction in net pay is a pay cut .
angelfire9 wrote: » Can I point out for the second time on this thread that the CSO figure of €47k that you are all so fond of quoting is from 2008 PRE the 2009 PAY CUT
Head The Wall wrote: » Let me dumb it down more for you and the two PS guys that don't understand it either
gigino wrote: » You are incorrect there. A few years ago average public sector pay was a few grand higher than the 47k. The 47k per year is the central statistics office ( and they should know ) latest statistic.www.cso.ie
angelfire9 wrote: » The latest statistic from the CSO for PS pay is from 2008 unless you can provide a proper link as opposed to a link from the CSO home page? :rolleyes:
doncarlos wrote: » Less money in my pocket = paycut Doesn't matter to me if it's taken out net or gross to be honest.
gigino wrote: » If you go through the cso home page you can find plenty of info. Latest statistics from the CSO are from 2010.http://www.cso.ie/releasespublications/documents/earnings/2010/earnlabcosts_q12010.pdf I know in an ideal world they would have 2011 statistics, but what with holidays and stress leave and sickies ts hard to get the work done. Someone else verified the 47k statistic from the CSO by dividing the amount of government expenditure on public sector wages by the number employed there. Not rocket science you know..
gigino wrote: » Someone else verified the 47k statistic from the CSO by dividing the amount of government expenditure on public sector wages by the number employed there. Not rocket science you know..
Drumpot wrote: » Ok, I dont take offence with people looking to defend themselves against cuts. I take offence with people who think that their employer shouldnt cut their wages because the dont think they can afford the cuts because your employer can squeeze the taxpayer to subsidise your lifestyle.
OMD wrote: » You are the one who keeps saying he is wrong. It is up to you to prove it. Simply saying that's wrong doesn't really help. As you can see from link the rates of pay quoted are from 2010. Average pay for public sector is €47,467.68 Why not simply check a fact before you make a song and dance about it:rolleyes::rolleyes:http://www.cso.ie/releasespublications/documents/earnings/current/earnlabcosts.pdf
Laminations wrote: » Clearly not rocket science. Not even good basic stats. A company employs 10 people. 2 on €200,000 8 on €10,000 Total wage bill €480,000 Average based on your silly sums €48,000
gigino wrote: » an average is an average In your "silly" example above, 20% of the workforce are on an average salary which is 20 times the average salary of the other 80% of the workforce. Are you suggesting this is the case in the public service too ? Clearly anyway we can agree on one thing : the wages at the top need to be slashed first + most.
sollar wrote: » Do you not realise that any tax, PRSI or USC increases hit public servants also. There is no tax that you pay that will not affect me also.
Laminations wrote: » . Show me the distribution of wages within the PS (and include semi-states too) and I'll entertain an argument about cutting simply based on an average figure.
gigino wrote: » Thats been gone in to before on different threads. Average salary figures for various sections of the p.s. are on the cso website. Semi states are even higher. ..was'n the ESB 90 or 95k ? ......it was listed on the front pages of all the main newspapers there a few weeks ago, as well as on this site. Where have you been ? n.b. In your "silly" example above, 20% of the workforce are on an average salary which is 20 times the average salary of the other 80% of the workforce. Are you suggesting this is the case in the public service too ?
Laminations wrote: » I asked pages ago if someone could furnish the mean, median and mode wage in the public sector.
donalg1 wrote: » 44% of public service workers earn under €30k per year
donalg1 wrote: » 44% of public service workers earn under €30k per year and this was before the USC and Pension Levy,