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UK firms expect to offer a bit more pay in 2015 - CBI

Published 22/12/2014, 03:50
© Reuters. Workers walk through the City of London

LONDON (Reuters) - British companies plan to cautiously relax their grip on pay in 2015, but rises will be limited by higher costs for holiday pay and workplace pensions, as well as weak productivity growth, the Confederation of British Industry said on Monday.

Forty-three percent of firms taking part in a survey said they intended to raise salaries at their next pay review by the same rate as the retail price index, and 12 percent said they would increase pay by more, the CBI said.

That compared with 42 percent and 7 percent respectively in the same survey conducted a year ago, it said.

"Gradually, as the recovery has become more firmly embedded, the number of companies planning to freeze pay has decreased significantly and we have seen more companies feeling confident enough to start to increase pay levels," CBI deputy director-general Katja Hall said.

The Bank of England is watching wage growth, which has lagged inflation for much of the period since the financial crisis but has recently shown signs of recovery, as it considers when to start raising interest rates.

The RPI measure of inflation stood at 2.0 percent in October.

The CBI said companies expected employment costs to rise as a result of changes to the way holiday pay is calculated and a new requirement on employers to put employees into workplace pension schemes.

Hall said businesses were also worried about talk from politicians of more curbs on immigration, which could make it harder to find the right staff, and about pay levels.

The ruling Conservative Party and the opposition Labour Party have both promised to make it harder for immigrants to claim benefits as a way to address concern among voters about immigration ahead of elections in May.

© Reuters. Workers walk through the City of London

Labour has also promised to raise the national minimum wage by 25 percent within five years, something that has raised concerns about the independence of Britain's Low Pay Commission which recommends the annual increase in the minimum wage.

(Writing by William Schomberg; editing by Andrew Roche)

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