- Leading UK CEOs are earning between 12 and 14,000 times their own workers’ pay
- It takes four days on average for a UK CEO to earn their frontline workers’ yearly salary
- Shift and hourly workers who’ve kept businesses running are being overlooked in favour of higher executive pay.
Breakroom, the people-powered job board, has today released its CEO pay comparison tool enabling users to easily compare their pay to that of a well-known CEO.
The tool takes some of the UK’s highest profile CEOs and enables users to compare their salaries and discover how many times more the CEO is being paid.
The You vs a CEO tool also compares the salary of well-known CEOs with that of their own employees.
The results are shocking with CEO earnings ranging from 12 to over 14,000 times that of their frontline hourly employees.
Breakroom looked at the 2021 earnings of CEOs from well-known companies and compared this with their data on the average frontline hourly workers’ pay from the same company to reveal how much higher the CEOs’ pay is.
For example, Bet 365 CEO, Denise Coates took home a staggering £298,600,000 in 2021, meaning she was paid 14,244 times more than her own frontline workers. NHS Chief Executive, Amanda Pritchard, took home £260,000, being paid 12 times more than her own workers’ pay. Whilst, Simon Roberts the CEO of Sainsbury’s, who is currently under pressure to pay all staff the Real Living Wage, took home 202 times the average Sainsbury’s hourly workers’ pay.
Pay issues are causing unrest amid a climate of rising prices and stagnating wage increases. BT and Openreach workers took strike action over pay awards this week, after CEO Phil Janssen was awarded a 32% pay rise but workers were offered a rise lower than the rate of inflation. The tool notes that the average worker pay at BT is just £11.90ph, with Phil Janssen earning 113 X average workers’ pay.
A front line picketeer said:
“We have call centre staff using food banks, and our CEO refused to even talk to us over pay – he did have time to meet Tiger Woods for a round of golf though. Is that what we expect from leaders now? Workers have had enough and the public have had enough of these companies raising prices, making massive profits and treating workers badly. Enough is enough.”
Anna Maybank, Co-Founder and CEO of Breakroom, commented:
“Exorbitant CEO pay is one of the major contributors to rising inequality in the workplace, and it needs to be tackled. Right now employers are facing the worst candidate shortage in history at the same time employees are facing a massive cost of living crisis. No CEO should be earning hundreds or thousands of times their own workers’ pay and it’s unjustifiable that on average it takes just four days for a FTSE 100 CEO to earn the equivalent of a UK frontline worker’s annual salary.
“CEO pay has bounced back post-covid but the pay for frontline staff who kept businesses operating during the pandemic have seen their pay flounder. Our members have told us that low pay mixed with the cost-of-living crisis is the number one reason they are currently looking to leave and change jobs. If businesses want to keep and attract talent they are going to have to start filtering down their profits to frontline workers.”
Breakroom has conducted the largest ever survey of over 300,000 UK frontline workers, asking them about the things that really matter to them, like pay, flexibility, team, and management. Using this data to produce an objective rating of more than 2,300 UK employers.
You can learn more here: https://www.breakroom.cc/you-vs-a-ceo