Public sector non-managerial pay up 14.9% 2016-2025, lags private sector
L'essentiel
- Public sector non-managerial pay rose 14.9% between 2016-2025, less than the private sector's 16.2%.
- Despite recent growth exceeding inflation (22.6% over the period), public sector wages haven't recovered pandemic-era losses, lagging by over 7%.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Contractual pay for non-managerial public employees has grown by 14.9% between 2016 and 2025, while private sector wages increased by 16.2%. Despite growth exceeding inflation in recent years, public sector wages have not yet recovered losses from the post-pandemic period, with a deficit exceeding seven percentage points.
Contractual pay for non-managerial public employees has grown by 14.9% between 2016 and 2025, compared to an increase of 16.2% in the private sector. Despite wage growth exceeding inflation in recent years, public sector wages have not yet recovered losses incurred in the years following the pandemic, with a lag exceeding seven percentage points. This is according to a report on public employee wages recently published by Aran. The report indicates that inflation over the period was 22.6%. However, contract negotiations in the Public Administration were blocked between 2015 and 2018. In 2025, contractual pay for non-managerial public employees grew by 2.7%, against a 1.5% increase in prices.
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Questions ouvertes
- What specific factors contributed to the slower wage growth in the public sector compared to the private sector?
- What are the projected long-term economic consequences of this wage disparity for public employees?
- Will there be future government initiatives to address the wage gap and recover lost purchasing power for public sector workers?





