- Joined
- 30 Jul 2006
- Posts
- 12,130
No message.
Last edited:
It's funny tho.They deserve to make money if they can. The salary they get for having the most important job in the country is ridiculous.
A council leader on 300k a year is earning 125k a year more than the PM.It's funny tho.
People often get paid big money for having important jobs, which they then proceed to screw up royally.
Council leaders are often earning 300k plus, even getting golden handshakes after they've done such a poor job that the council has been willing to pay them another 300k just to leave.
At which point they almost immediately get another highly-paid job at another council, rinse and repeat.
I sometimes wonder if just having responsibility alone justifies enormous pay cheques, esp when they can (and do) get it so very, very wrong.
The thing about MP’s, ministers, PM’s etc, is that people always go on about them only “doing it for the money”, when the fact is, with their education and connections, they could earn tenfold in the private sector, but they choose this as their career for their own reasons. They certainly don’t choose it to get rich. Most of them are well of anyway.
They aren't servants! (scoffs)But they earn that money anyway at the same time as being politicians by also sitting on boards of corporations. It's a massive conflict of interest, which other civil servants are forbidden to do.
That’s actually a very good argument. Why would the truly brilliant among us, slum it on £175k a year when they can easily pick up a few million in some City of London financial giant?Imagine if we had 60 MPs and paid them £500k each and paid the PM £2m or something, we might actually get some talented MPs in Politics
What's the value of an appointment that is largely considered to be a failure, and a tenure that is largely considered to be detrimental?Generally, the UK is terrible at considering the the cost of things but not the value. Hence why there's constant faux outrage whipped up about salaries in the public sector, and why the average moronic Brit blithley thinks that they could do a better job for half the money.
For context, the editor of the Daily Mail earns £1.5m a year plus 50% on top with long term incentive bonuses.
Massive salaries guarantee getting great minds? Really? You believe that?That’s actually a very good argument. Why would the truly brilliant among us, slum it on £175k a year when they can easily pick up a few million in some City of London financial giant?
This £25 exculpatory fantasy is not yet available but can be pre-ordered from Amazon at £10 off RRP.
This is going to fly off the shelves . . . straight into the dumpster.
Well, would YOU buy a copy - WOODYA?
What's the value of an appointment that is largely considered to be a failure, and a tenure that is largely considered to be detrimental?
To the point where a massive golden handshake was offered to remove said person? Who then immediately went on to lead another council?
I'm not just looking at salary, although your comment was not directed at me.
You have talked about jealousy and ignorance.
But what of the other side of the coin: the number of top execs who are (rightly or wrongly) earning a lot of money, whilst doing an awful job?
The public sector in my experience can be guilty of an eternal revolving door where execs come in, get paid well, do a crap job, and leave again.