The Scotsman

Top CEOS outearn average workers in just first three days

● Publicly listed firms ‘must report and explain executive pay gap from this year’

- @CIPD By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpimedia.co.uk

Bosses at FTSE 100 firms will earn more than the average salary of their employees in the first three working days of the year, research has found.

Chief executives will need to work until just before 5pm today to make the same amount of money that the typical full-time worker will earn throughout the entire year.

High executive pay is likely to be a key issue in 2020 as this is the first year that publicly listed firms with more than 250 UK employees must disclose the ratio between CEO pay and the pay of their average worker.

Under new regulation­s, listed businesses must also explain the reasons for their executive pay ratios.

Figures show that top bosses earn 117 times the annual pay of the average employee, while in 2018 (the latest year for which figures are available) the average FTSE 100 CEO earned £3.46 million, equivalent to £901.30 an hour.

In comparison, the median full-time worker took home an annual salary of £29,559 last year, equivalent to £14.37 an hour.

The calculatio­ns are based on data and analysis by the CIPD, the profession­al body for HR and people developmen­t, and independen­t think tank the High Pay Centre.

The two organisati­ons are now urging businesses to use pay ratio publicatio­n as an opportunit­y to fully explain CEO salary levels rather than to treat it as a “box ticking” exercise, adding that the ongoing issue of excessive high pay “undermines trust in business and fuels concerns over fairness”.

CIPD chief executive Peter Cheese said: “Pay ratio reporting will rightly increase scrutiny on pay and reward practices, but reporting the numbers is just the start. We need businesses to step up and justify very high levels of pay for top executives, particular­ly in relation to how the rest of the workforce is being rewarded.

“Greater fairness and openness in pay is essential in building trust, among employees as well as external stakeholde­rs and investors.

“Expectatio­ns on businesses behaving and acting responsibl­y are rising, and greater transparen­cy around how they are treating and managing all their people is a vital part of building long-term sustainabi­lity.”

In December Denise Coates, founder and chief executive of gambling giant Bet365, hit the headlines after maintainin­g her position as Britain’s highest paid boss.

Coates took home a basic salary of almost £277m in the year ended March 2019, pocketing a £57m basic pay rise.

Luke Hildyard, director of the High Pay Centre, said: “CEOS are paid extraordin­arily highly compared to the wider workforce, helping to make the UK one of the most unequal countries in Europe.

“New reporting requiremen­ts mean that publicly listed firms will have to be more transparen­t over how and why they reward their CEOS relative to the wider workforce.”

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