PFEW calls for minimum 17 per cent pay rise for officers

The Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW) has called for a 17 per cent pay increase for police officers after an independent study showed a significant decline in police pay since 2000.

Mar 9, 2023
By Paul Jacques

The research by think-tank Social Market Foundation (SMF) revealed real terms police pay has fallen almost 20 per cent behind inflation between 2000 and 2022.

It suggests this decline is likely to be linked to the restrictions on police officers’ right to strike.

The PFEW says the issue of police pay “must be addressed now after more than a decade of being ignored” and described the research as “a wake-up call” for policymakers.

The SMF report also shows police constable starting salaries have lagged behind earnings as a whole across the economy by “a considerable amount”.

It has calculated that if these real-terms trends continued over the next five years, police pay would drop a further four per cent in real-terms by 2027, in stark comparison to private and public sector worker pay, which is set to rise over the same period.

Other comparable groups saw their pay rise by between one and 14 per cent between 2000 and 2022, making the police “an outlier” among other protective services workers and public sector workers, said SMF.

The independent report, published on Thursday (March 9), says the decline in police pay, likely to be linked to the restrictions on police officers’ right to strike, which puts them at “a distinct disadvantage to all other workers including other emergency service workers.

A key factor in discussions of police pay is the ‘P-factor’, which the SMF research suggests should be a figure offered in addition to its findings. The report references the P-factor as an element of police pay that reflects the unique obligations and responsibilities police officers’ experience relative to other comparable roles. This includes their “unique risk of exposure to physical and psychological harm”, alongside the restrictions that are placed upon their private lives.

The P-factor payment does not feature in the report, highlighting that the actual figure of degradation of police pay is significantly higher.

National chair Steve Hartshorn labelled the research a “wakeup call for policymakers in the UK”.

“For a long time now, the PFEW has been working to achieve better pay and working conditions for our members. Police officers put their lives on the line every day to serve and protect their communities.

“That is why today our national council has taken the decision to call for a minimum pay increase of 17 per cent for our officers.

“The Government can no longer sit by and ignore our members’ basic needs and must recognise the impact of this independent research.

“In the context of ongoing inflation, indications of a police retention crisis, and reports of officers being forced to turn to food banks, the issue of police pay must be addressed now after more than a decade of being ignored.”

He added: “Police officers deserve to be treated with respect and dignity, and that begins with better pay. Pay that not only reflects the cost-of-living crisis that many of us face but puts right the 17 per cent decline since 2000 and compensates officers for the dangers they’re exposed to as part of the job.

“They must be compensated fairly for doing a job that is so important and unique that they do not have access to industrial rights.”

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