I think the banks should pay. They are the ones who cocked it all up.
A common view, but not a correct one. If you want someone to blame, look to the Labour benches.
I think the banks should pay. They are the ones who cocked it all up.
this gold plated final salary pension crap is so wrong, my pension isnt final salary and certainly isnt gold plated! they changed the civil service pension scheme years ago! the nuvos pension scheme for new starters is even worse!
I fail to see how cutting my below inflation payrise is really going to help, cos we have been getting shafted on pay for years, but now for some reason we are the whipping boy.
It's appalling to me that the public sector has been allowed to get so big in this country and no surprise that as a result the books don't balance. We need to move people out of public and into private - and not financial services or any other kind of service industry, we need to encourage businesses to come to the UK and invest in our country and employ our people.
Having worked in the public and private sector in London i can comfortably say that the idea of lower public sector wages is often wrong, it depends on what exactly your job is though.
For example my previous public sector employer advertised a wage for job x (for example £40k). However what they didn't say was that there was a 'private sector wage parity scheme', which meant that for jobs that are difficult to recruit for due to private sector competition, they were allowed to bump up the salary to private sector levels (say £60k) whilst all the paperwork still said £40k.
That particular little rule was the norm where i worked, especially for higher up managers despite many of them being public sector lifers on crazy high pensions.
I think it's about time that the public sector was trimmed, I've witnessed the amount of waste first-hand, my major annoyance were the number of middle managers who were paid a lot of money despite being obviously not up to the job - they were in that position because that organisation rewarded length of service over ability - which isn't something you see very often in the private sector.
Doesn't sound too shabby to me.
Not that brilliant when you consider the 12 hour shifts, working nights and weekends and the fact that the job involves getting a lot of abuse. You also spend most of your time ferrying people who don't need it to hospital because you aren't allowed to refuse if they insist...
And no doubt having to had worked a lot of years to get anywhere near that top end salary.
People who get the big money from my experience in an IT Dept apart from management are contractors. They get massive money and often end up doing a runner at the end of their contract with the money only to leave the cleanup to local IT staff who already have enough on their plate.
In fact most of my experience of private sector IT bods has been pretty terrible. i would hope we have been unlucky and its not the norm, but in most cases they tend to be people who can talk the talk but never walk the walk.
Why can't those who work in the public sector grasp the simple concept that they are paid for solely on the graft of others, and therefore should not be entitled to disproportionate levels of benefits and pay increases?
but they can be revenue protecting, which is just as valuable.
So you think that the emergency services are earning their pay by watching someone else do all the work? You think that £28k is too big a wage? You think last years 1% pay rise was disproportionate? You sir, appear to have been blinded by the media.
And you, like most public sector workers, seem to think they are hard done by when in fact they don't realise how fortunate they are.
The public sector needs a huge axe taking to it. I don't envy this government in its task, because even the very modest measures announced yesterday resulted in predictable screams and whining from public sector unions who won't accept anything which slows down the gravy train.
Yeah, a lot of years, not quite sure how many, but it's band 5 in the NHS AFC pay scale
Contractors don't "do a runner" at the end of their contract. If the contact is extended they stay, if not they leave. Simple. It's your employers decision and if their contract is up before the job is complete it's your employers responsibility to retain their services. Don't blame contractors for your employers shoddy practices. Same goes for having rubbish contractors on site - if you lot don't interview properly they you get what you deserve frankly.
![]()
Had numerous contractors from numerous companies of the last 9 years here and i can probably count on 1 finger how many good ones we have had. So im just going on what ive experienced.
And you, like most public sector workers, seem to think they are hard done by when in fact they don't realise how fortunate they are.
The public sector needs a huge axe taking to it. I don't envy this government in its task, because even the very modest measures announced yesterday resulted in predictable screams and whining from public sector unions who won't accept anything which slows down the gravy train.
A 25% cut to all government budgets except for health and foreign aid is not a modest measure. I wonder how you will feel about the rise in illegal immigration that will occur due to the already overstretched Borders Agency losing even more front line officials?
Not that brilliant when you consider the 12 hour shifts, working nights and weekends and the fact that the job involves getting a lot of abuse. You also spend most of your time ferrying people who don't need it to hospital because you aren't allowed to refuse if they insist...