Who's getting an inflation based pay rise?

Who's getting an inflation based pay rise?

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Discussion

Kiwi79

Original Poster:

879 posts

234 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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Curious what proportion of people get an annual pay rise and if this year it's increased due to inflation.

I work for a large IT company who flat out don't do annual payrises so every year unless you get promoted your real world pay takes a haircut. Obviously this year it's particularly noticeable but our industry has seen redundancies so I think the snr management think against that backdrop there is no need and folks will be retained.

Are you getting a pay boost? 2-3% or inflation matching 10%+

MDMA .

8,900 posts

101 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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I get a flat 3% year on year. The big difference will be what Decembers bonus will be. Better be bigger than last year. We’ve had a record year smile Will find out in 2 weeks.

frank hovis

457 posts

264 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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3% , first raise in about 4 years
Found out on Monday morning they are cutting our bonus percentage by 5% next year as our overall package has been deemed to be too much !

Rampant Golf

2,750 posts

210 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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I'm getting an inflationary pay rise in April but they gave us 5% of it in October to cover the cost of living crisis. Very welcome and forward looking by the company.

Alias218

1,496 posts

162 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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I’m very fortunate in that I’m receiving a 14.2% pay raise this year, on top of a 5.15% raise last year.

Absolutely appreciate that this is very much the exception.

marksx

5,052 posts

190 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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I got a one of cost of living payment equivalent to 4%
It's a flat payment for everything though so some will be a lot higher % which is nice and a great gesture. Not sure what actual payrise will be though, that will be April.

Acorn1

650 posts

20 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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rofl I wish!

Downward

3,596 posts

103 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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NHS £50 a month pay rise April 2022. Pension contributions increased by £40 October 2022. £10 up.
Pension goes up again April 23 by £40 again.

Luckily every bill has gone up too, Infact gas and electric have trebled…


Geffg

1,130 posts

105 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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Downward said:
NHS £50 a month pay rise April 2022. Pension contributions increased by £40 October 2022. £10 up.
Pension goes up again April 23 by £40 again.

Luckily every bill has gone up too, Infact gas and electric have trebled…
Not all NHS get the pension increase. Depends on your contract. The new gender for change contracts are different. The most the nhs pay into pension is matched if you put 6% in they put 6% which is decent compared to a lot of companies though.

stevemcs

8,667 posts

93 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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Payrise ? whats one of those?

Glade

4,267 posts

223 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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My company:

Everyone on lowest salaries being brought to £1 more than living wage.

Then the company average is 5%.

We've been "benchmarked" and if you are above there has to be mega reasons to get more, but it's possible.

If you are below you should have over the average to bring you up to benchmark.

The managers have a "pot" so they generally achieve this by reducing the % for those over the benchmark to give it to those under.

There is an additional pot for boosting the lowest earners in a group.

So far I have seen some people getting 7.5% and some getting 3%.

I suppose it is fair, I just hope they have benchmarked correctly because I've seen that go wrong before and there was a mass exodus.

Edited by Glade on Tuesday 13th December 21:03

snoopy25

1,865 posts

120 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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2% pay raise.....pretty much 8-9% pay cut in reality frown

sawman

4,919 posts

230 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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1.5% for me, best not spend it all in one sweet shop

Antony Moxey

8,075 posts

219 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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We’ve just been given an across the board rise of just under £2kpa, backdated to April. That means very roughly we’ve got an extra grand take home in last month’s pay packet and about an extra hundred quid a month take home from now on. A further pay review is, I think, due in April.

I work in a school and the rise is for non-teaching staff - MTAs, support staff, caretakers, etc. Doesn’t matter if you’re on £20k or £50k, everyone got the same.

JulianHJ

8,744 posts

262 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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Absolutely no chance. My colleagues and I have had around a 20% cut in real terms over the last decade.

Monkeylegend

26,411 posts

231 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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I am getting a 10.1% increase next April.

Rick101

6,970 posts

150 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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All the pensioners?

55palfers

5,910 posts

164 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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All the phone and broadband companies for sure.

CPI plus 3.9% for Virgin!

No politicians moaning about that being inflationary though.

CoupeKid

753 posts

65 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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I joined my company in November last year.

In April I was expecting to get 6% which was the standard pay rise plus a bonus for passing a professional exam. Instead I got 10.6% which I was very happy with.

In October one of my new colleagues told our director that he’d been offered more money so we had a team meeting and it turns out everyone has been approached. It’s a crazy competitive market. In November I was given another 15.7% and I’ve been told I’m getting another 9% in April.

It’s getting rather embarrassing as I wouldn’t pay myself this much for the job.

They’re starting to change it to expect travel for travels sake and no amount of money will make it worthwhile.

10 years ago I worked for one of the large IT companies that didn’t really do pay rises. I worked for 7 years without one although they kept giving me more responsibility.

I’ve now doubled my salary and they aren’t in business anymore!

SAS Tom

3,403 posts

174 months

Tuesday 13th December 2022
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Probably not a right lot. Previous job was 2% every year but it doesn’t really make a difference, moving onto a new place/new job is the only way I’ve seen decent increases. My last job was a 40% rise from the previous and this one 20% from previous.