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Your MP's pay is probably going to rise a lot faster than yours this year

Public sector wages are capped but MPs' pay is set to soar

Jon Stone
Wednesday 13 May 2015 06:42 EDT
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Midwives shout as they stand on a picket line outside St Mary's Hospital in Manchester
Midwives shout as they stand on a picket line outside St Mary's Hospital in Manchester

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MPs' pay is set to dramatically outstrip both public sector and private sector wages, according to new statistics released today.

The Office for National Statistics said wages were 1.9 per cent higher in the first quarter of 2014 compared to last year, a figure hailed by ministers as the biggest increase since 2008.

But the announcement comes as MPs are set to get a £7,000 – or 10.9 per cent – pay rise this year, from £67,000 to £74,000.

The Conservatives have also pledged to cap public sector pay increases at 1 per cent, meaning many working in public services will be left even further behind.

MPs' pay is not decided by the government but by an independent pay authority which the Coalition gave control of wages to.

Marcial Boo, chief executive of the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority, said last year that MPs should not be paid what he described as a "miserly amount" to do their jobs.

The raise could happen within months, with the Daily Telegraph newspaper reporting this morning that any rise could be backdated to the general election.

All the party leaders have set themselves against the rise before the general election, but some MPs have spoken out to defend an increase.

Jack Straw, foreign secretary under Tony Blair, said in 2013 that not increasing MPs' wages would deter “people from modest backgrounds” from entering politics.

Sir Malcolm Rifkind, a minister in the last Conservative government, also said in February this year that it was "unrealistic" to expect MPs to live on £67,000 a year.

Both MPs have since had the whip withdrawn by their respective parties over an unrelated alleged 'cash for access' scandal.

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