Western Mail

Pay gap remains despite signs of ‘restraint’ by top executives

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EXECUTIVE pay fell last year but top bosses will still have made more money in three days than the typical worker earns in a year, new figures reveal.

The mean pay of chief executives in FTSE 100 companies fell by a fifth from £5.4m to £4.5m – 120 times more than an average full-time worker, a slight drop on the ratio of 122-1 in the previous year.

Today was dubbed Fat Cat Thursday, as the pay of top executives will pass the median annual salary of £28,758 for employees.

The High Pay Centre think tank and the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Developmen­t (CIPD) said there had been “modest” restraint by company boards but the pay gap between the top and average workers remained wide.

All listed companies will have to publish the pay ratio between bosses and workers under new corporate governance reforms this year.

Stefan Stern, director of the High Pay Centre, said: “While it was encouragin­g to see a tiny amount of restraint on pay at the top of some FTSE 100 companies last year, there are still grossly excessive and unjustifia­ble gaps between the top and the rest of the workforce.

“Publishing pay ratios will force boards to acknowledg­e these gaps.”

Peter Cheese, chief executive of the CIPD, said: “It’s crucial that the Government keeps high pay and corporate governance reform high on its agenda, but we also need business, shareholde­rs and remunerati­on committees to do their part and challenge excessive pay.”

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