Scottish Daily Mail

BBC ‘facing £150k cap’ on staff pay

PM’s salary ‘should be limit’

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

THE BBC could follow the public sector and cap staff pay at the same level as Theresa May, the new Culture Secretary has said.

Matt Hancock said the Corporatio­n had ‘missed a chance’ to bring in similar measures, as he compared the salaries of the broadcaste­r’s foreign editors with those of ambassador­s.

North America editor Jon Sopel was last year listed as having a salary of between £200,000 and £249,999. By contrast, British ambassador to the US Sir Kim Darroch earns from £180,000 to £184,999. Mrs May is paid £150,000 a year.

Mr Hancock’s comments come in the midst of a row over Carrie Gracie, who resigned as the BBC’s China editor because she was unhappy about unequal pay.

The 55-year-old had earned £135,000 – considerab­ly less than Mr Sopel – before the BBC offered her a £45,000 rise, which she rejected.

Today programme presenter John Humphrys, who was criticised after being recorded joking about the issue, had been listed as having a salary of up to £649,999.

The Corporatio­n has asked Huw Edwards, 56, to cut his salary of almost £600,000 as it scrambles to fend off a legal row over its gender pay gap. Speaking to ITV’s Peston on Sunday, Mr Hancock said: ‘Making sure we have equal pay isn’t just about levelling up women’s pay in the BBC, it’s about equal pay and a reasonable level.

‘Across the rest of the public sector, we brought in rules to say that except in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, people who are paid for by taxpayers’ money shouldn’t be paid more than the Prime Minister.

‘I think [the BBC] missed a chance to bring in that kind of rule when we brought it in for the rest of the public sector a few years ago.

‘Who should we be paying the most to? Is it the BBC editor, or is it the ambassador? People in the Armed Services put their life on the line and yet they abide by the public sector pay norms.’

Mr Hancock said he would discuss the issue with BBC director-general Lord Hall in the next few weeks.

The BBC said: ‘We have reduced the amount we pay talent by a quarter over the past five years.’

A spokesman warned the Corporatio­n was competing against ITV, Sky, Channel 4, and the ‘deep pockets’ of Netflix, Amazon and Apple.

 ??  ?? Snap: Vanessa Kirby with Helena Bonham Carter at the weekend
Snap: Vanessa Kirby with Helena Bonham Carter at the weekend

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