Forum search & shortcuts

Example of the over...
 

[Closed] Example of the over blown public sector?

Posts: 5984
Free Member
 

I couldn't and wouldn' make the same claim about teachers, nurses or police men because I am not as well informed about them.

But then you've posted this:

I support what they do entirely and think that whatever they are paid, frankly it's not enough. It's one of the hardest jobs I think you can take, one of the most valuable to society and one of, if not the, most undervalued in terms of pay.

😆


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 12:47 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

What I think and what I can speak knowledgably about are not the same thing.

In the absence of any information to the contrary, I am prepared to believe that teachers have a difficult job that they are unerpaid for. It's not the same thing as saying, I know this to be relatively true.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 12:53 pm
Posts: 5984
Free Member
 

What I think and what I can speak knowledgably about are not the same thing.

I concur.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 1:00 pm
Posts: 8784
Full Member
 

I'm not sure what the relevance is of teachers of violent inner city kids, we're talking about a PA in Milton Keynes, sure the place is a shite-hole but I doubt he/she will have to wear body armour whilst taking minutes.
My parents are ex-teachers and my sister-in-law teaches now and I wouldn't (and nor do they) call their jobs stressful. Especially once you've taught an entire year and have class notes already done.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 1:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I concur.

Touche! 😆


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 1:19 pm
 hh45
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

This is nothing to do with the thieving scum (sorry my autism ruining my chance of ever being diplomatic) in the City - they need lining up and shooting. I just think, to get back to the original question, that £38,000 is too much for a secretary / PA. In MK I would expect it to be about 26-30,000 assuming a 52 week year (I imagine there is still alot of organising to be done even during school holidays). Comparison with our secretaries and PAs here (central London - £28-32,000, moderately hard working); teachers themselves, police, military, clerical staff typically and so on suggests, to me at least, that £38K is more than needs to be offered even for an exceptional person. Its true I don't know the precise job spec but the clue is in the name - organising mainly, some typing. Not an easy job but not a £38k job.

The public sector needs to get real over the excess of pubic spending since 2002. Believe it or not I am a Guardian reading Liberal voter but the clear out is going to be big and its long overdue.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 1:52 pm
Posts: 28
Free Member
 

Stress? Those bankers are soft as shite. Ponces.

You sound quite bitter - have you considered retraining as a banker? Apparently the most stressful thing they have to do is working out what sort of Porsche they are going to buy.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 2:55 pm
Posts: 5984
Free Member
 

That is pretty stressful though. Have you seen the options list???


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 3:01 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

In a business... if you get it wrong you’re out of a job.

I don't buy this private sector = efficiency argument one little bit. Some of the easiest jobs I've ever had were working for private enterprises. My GF's dad works on the railways for private contractors and the tales of waste, inefficiency and ludicrous multiple layers of subcontracting there are absolutely shocking.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 3:06 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

he clear out is going to be big and its long overdue.

The hardest hit will be the poorest and most vulnerable people in our society.

As long as the bankers are ok though, eh? 🙄


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 3:54 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 4:28 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

yep, teachers should get paid more, I agree.

But, and I admit I could be wrong here, this isn't public sector gorn mad is it? Isn't it the school deciding what budget they have available to pay for this post, rather than some union demanding higher wages for PA's?

And some job's just pay more. I've got a job in a hospital, and a post-grad qualification is essential. But I get paid less than a bin man. But there's less demand for my job, so they can offer a lower wage.

I reckon the public sector is applying market forces on the sly.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 4:30 pm
Posts: 35270
Full Member
 

[i]My point was that this is a small organisation, it's 1000 pupils, it's not a large massively complex orgnisation[/i]

It takes a team of 4 people (including a part timer, me, a chair of governors) to run a primary school of nearly 160 pupils (foundation to yr2) our budget is nearly £1.5 million, there literally aren't enough hours in the day to do what we need to do. If I didn't run my own business and so dictate largely my own hours I don't know how I'd fit the work i need to do in my day, and we're a successfully performing small school in a reasonably well off town with no major problem children. A secondary school with a 1000 pupils? in a large urban setting? Yep I'd want at least that sort of money to be a PA to a head...


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 4:36 pm
Posts: 1100
Full Member
 

People in the public sector haven't yet woken up and smelt the coffee when it comes to the recession. There can't be many private companies that haven't stopped wage increases, bonus, asked staff to take a 10% pay cut, sacked people, etc. The public sector just seems to want to carry on as normal and doesn't seem to get it that they should be doing the same for less. Everyone else has so why not them.

How about this for a job advert
Bristol based charity teaching under privileged and disabled children to ride bikes. Great idea which I do support, however!!
Co-ordinator wanted, 2 days per week, work from home and choose your hours,
Remember this is a charity
£19,000 fixed 2 year contract


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 4:40 pm
Posts: 26912
Full Member
 

if you are so jealous apply for the jobs FFS as you point out its free market, if you dont want it **** off and stop moaning would be my advice.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 6:51 pm
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

If the Public Sector's so cushy and well paid it's a miracle that it hasn't sucked all the top talent out of the Private Sector.

Yet there hora remains...


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 6:58 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

woody74 - is that job ad not pro rata?

Also - lots of people in the public sector have taken pay cuts, lost bonuses, had reduced hours etc


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 7:21 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

woody74 - Member

Remember this is a charity

So why then, give it as an example when slagging off public employees who are paid by the government ?


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 9:03 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Woody might have chosen a poor example, but he is right. The public sector is going to experience a lot of pain. This is not schadenfreude, it's just that it is going to happen.

The Institute of Fiscal Studies today said that none of the three main parties has got even close to addressing the very real spending cuts that we are going to have to make. The Tories have identified £6bn; the lib dems around £18bn. The IFS says we need to make around £45bn in savings. It is going to have to come from somewhere, (well everywhere actually)


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 10:02 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It was not a poor example. It was a wrong example.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 10:13 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Nice work if you can get it!


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 10:34 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It does seem odd that a headteacher's PA would be paid more than most of the teachers.


 
Posted : 27/04/2010 11:28 pm
Posts: 8784
Full Member
 

if you are so jealous apply for the jobs FFS as you point out its free market, if you dont want it **** off and stop moaning would be my advice.

What a load of BS. That's like saying why complain about MPs abusing their expenses system - just all become MPs if we want free duck houses. This PA is being paid with tax payers money so to me that's enough of a reason for tax payers to want to whine about it on an irrelevant forum. It's not about jealousy it's about not wanting public money being wasted paying public sector roles at a higher rate than their private sector equivalents.


 
Posted : 28/04/2010 8:42 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

FuzzyWuzzy has a point.

He's the corollary to that argument. As the holder of a private pension that is invested in various funds, provided by the financial services industry, I have a vested interest and therefore a legitimate grievance with the wrongs that have been wrought in that industry and even without tax payers money being used to support that industry, I have a right to say how that industry is run and how its leaders are compensated.

You see I am ideologically promiscuous and sometimes I like to make other peoples’ arguments for them!
😉


 
Posted : 28/04/2010 9:01 am
 hora
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

It does seem odd that a headteacher's PA would be paid more than most of the teachers.

+1.


 
Posted : 28/04/2010 10:07 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

If it is anything like our head of department's PA (university), I imagine this kind of administrative role is much harder than you would think, and might involve a lot more responsibility than being a PA in the private sector. The difference between academia / education, and a standard PA, is that in academia, the PA is supporting someone whose focus is both on education (or research in a university), and also on the general running of the school, which in practice gets pretty much entirely done by the support staff. Whereas in a business, there is one clear focus, and the PA is basically a purely administrative person, looking after diaries, booking plane tickets etc. for someone who has the job of making the business run.

Now, if schools hired professional managers as heads, rather than teachers, then perhaps this would be different, although I'm betting they'd not be anywhere near as efficient as the combination of someone who has a clue about education in the actual leadership role, and a decent administrator.

Joe


 
Posted : 28/04/2010 10:16 am
Posts: 26912
Full Member
 

It's not about jealousy it's about not wanting public money being wasted paying public sector roles at a higher rate than their private sector equivalents.

Firstly you have no idea what the job entails so you dont know what the equivalent is and secondly what is the principle that makes you assume a public sector job should be paid less than a private sector job?


 
Posted : 28/04/2010 6:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

y what is the principle that makes you assume a public sector job should be paid less than a private sector job?

How about guaranteed final salary pension schemes; extraordinarily generous redundancy terms; greater job security and better working hours.

Will that do you?

FWIW I don't think that PS jobs are worth less than private secctor. No one on this thread did. This thread was always about the point that this PS job was paying MORE than an equivalent PS job.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 8:43 am
Posts: 26912
Full Member
 

How about guaranteed final salary pension schemes; extraordinarily generous redundancy terms; greater job security and better working hours.

Better working hours? What do you base that on? How many parties are talking of pension reform in the public sector, is job security better given impending cuts? Or are you just making assumptions?


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 8:46 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Firstly you have no idea what the job entails so you dont know what the equivalent is and secondly what is the principle that makes you assume a public sector job should be paid less than a private sector job?

As a very very rough rule - Private sector makes money, public sector spends money. And in my experience (running a company that deals with both sectors) it's easier to spend than make money.

Our local Council head gets paid well over £200k. In the UK's poorest county. And from a Council that's riddled with issues. "They" say they need the "best" people - I rarely see any evidence of this massive level of competence from the numerous cock ups made by every big public sector organisation.

It's a culture of job security, waste and a huge pension in many cases.

You fail in business - you close down. You fail in public sector or banking - you get a big payout. That doesn't compute.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 9:01 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

In a business, no one is telling you what to do, you have to figure it out on your own and you have to compete in what is often a crowded and complex market place. You’ve no way of knowing whether the decisions you make are right or wrong and if you get it wrong you’re out of a job.

What a huge generalisation. The parts of the private sector i've worked in are nothing like that. Plenty of people get things wrong, and they can carry on. As grum has said there is a huge fiction about the public vs private sectors and stuff like efficiency, perfect competition etc. I used to work for Tesco and there were massive amounts of waste and so many incompetent managers it was laughable.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 9:16 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Better working hours? What do you base that on?

I think it's called 'overtime' although I can't be sure because I've never been paid 'overtime' ever despite sometimes putting in 20 hours a week more than my contract stated.

talking about pension reform in the public sector

Emphasis here on the word 'talking'. Talk is very cheap. Public Sector pensions are not.

is job security better given impending cuts

Not now it isn't. Brace yourselves guys. Oh and for ****s sake make sure you've got mortgage insurance. It's not expensive and will save you life in the event you get made redundant.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 9:22 am
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

Our local Council head gets paid well over £200k

That's a lot of money. In the open market (presumably that's how they recruited him/her?) that should get you a capable individual. What would paying less get you?

It's a culture of job security, waste and a huge pension in many cases

I can't speak for the job security or waste, but there are huge pensions for very, very few in the public sector. On average the wonderfully cushy index-linked final salary pensions which are coming under attack are around the £4k mark. Since that's based on final salary, how piss-poor were these people's wages during their working lives?

Your little diatribe is a synthesis of all the anti public sector spin that's now coming at us from all sides, and it does't compute.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 9:33 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Your little diatribe is a synthesis of all the anti public sector spin that's now coming at us from all sides, and it does't compute.

You know you may well be right and I would extend an olive branch now and say that a lot of the diatribe, from me and everyone else is based in part on what we see, hear and learn from the world around us and in part on miss held perceptions.

But the reality is that there is a lot of resentment of the public sector from those in the private sector just now, and you really have to ask why, because it doesn't matter who is right and who is wrong. This is a game just like any other; what is 'real' has very little to do with it, the game is structured around what people believe and you have to adapt your strategy around that.

I fear for many people in the public sector because you're going to get hit really hard in the next few years and having been there myself, I know it's not pretty. The real question is, what are you going to do when it happens? Those of us in the private sector who have already been through this pain had to get on and make the best of it. I hope that the public sector can do the same.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 9:47 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

johnners - most of our clients are public sector. We advise on strategy for the public sector. We go right under the skin of public sectors organisations and help them have more impact - some do really well with often limited resources, others just couldn't organise a pi55 up in a brewery.

Your tone suggests that I just read a few tabloids and make assumptions - you couldn't be more wrong.

The reason for resentment of the public sector - as I said they spend money and rarely make it. And they spend OUR money. So when money is seen as wasted (I bet a £100k head of the Council could do the job just as well) then anger rises. Some of it is just naive jealousy, some of it has a point.

The fact is that too many are being paid six figure sums for jobs that just don't justify it. The jobs market is pretty limited for senior execs - if they can't survive on more sensible pay, they really need to consider a shelf stacking job at a supermarket - that's where many out of work private sector ex execs now are.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 9:59 am
Posts: 7128
Free Member
 

I resent the pay of COs in the public sector and I work in the public sector. Their pay is yet another manifestation of increasing inequality in terms of income and wealth in this country. The fact that people may have anecodotal evidence of incompetence and inefficiency doesn't mean the whole organisation is like that. Also with reference to this public/private dichotomy, all of my budgets get spent on private suppliers so if I face cuts it will quickly impact on the private sector incomes.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 10:53 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Just had confirmation of a nice contract from a well known public sector client (10 minutes ago). I love the public sector 😉 Their execs can get paid what they want... :mrgreen:


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 11:00 am
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

There has always been an incessant drip of briefing against the public sector in general and it's turned into a torrent over the past couple of years. From many of the posts on this thread it's evident that it's working well. A future administration will be able to cut public sector jobs to a chorus of approval, and when the public services suffer as a result that can be spun as a consequence of the laziness and incompetence of the remaining public servants. Win-win.

I fear for many people in the public sector because you're going to get hit really hard in the next few years

Why are you assuming I'm in the public sector? I'm not, and my future job prospects are looking sketchy at best. That doesn't mean I have any misplaced envy for public servants.

The reason for resentment of the public sector - as I said they spend money and rarely make it

The whole reason for the public sector to exist is to provide public services funded from taxation. Resenting it because it takes money to do so is odd.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 12:08 pm
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

Just had confirmation of a nice contract from a well known public sector client

So you work for the public sector, and are being wholly funded from taxation. That puts you squarely in the firing line...


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 12:10 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Errmmm - no. I run a company that has a few public sector clients. We have a decent number of private sector clients too. Thanks for asking.

You seem to be struggling to grasp a simple concept - people get irritated when public sector organisations appear to WASTE money on things like daft exec salaries. Of course they don't resent money being spent - that's what the public sector is there for. It has an enormous "client" base and guaranteed billions in income - somehow it often manages to waste this huge stream of revenue.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 12:16 pm
Posts: 26912
Full Member
 

overtime in the public sector? cool I'm off to find the right form to fill in...........

Actually only ever been paid overtime in the private sector


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 1:28 pm
Posts: 7766
Full Member
 

I can oly share my experiences as a teacher. 1) MK will still have the London enhancement of salary. 2) Enen the headie of a huge school is not earning £100k +.30 It is difficult for the head teacher to take on a regular class as the have to be able to attend any "happening" in the school.HT also needs to meet any number of parents when they complain because their wee darlings history teacher has dared to suggest that a school tie is a better investment that new trainers. 😳 3) Schools, even where I teach,my email gives a clue,will not exclude because of the league tables,hence kids informing you that you are an effing c,will not be removed.

On to the public sector gravy train,I qualified 6 years ago,1 in 8 got a job.Now a lot of Councils are giving temp contracts,two years being the usual.The idea that we do few hours for a decent salary is a laugh,50 per week min,same as everybody else,and that is before I factor in rugby,DoE etc. I would imagine.Somebody posted above that once you had a years worth of notes you had it made.Not in my experience.I was a shopfitter and put through 50% more in salary in my final year at that that I will at top of scale as a teacher.Aberdeenshire recently offered every teacher over the age of 55 a lump sum to retire.So job security is no longer one of the attractions.

That said, I love the job


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 1:47 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

A future administration will be able to cut public sector jobs to a chorus of approval, and when the public services suffer as a result that can be spun as a consequence of the laziness and incompetence of the remaining public servants. Win-win.

Back to the 80's anyone? You can remember that far back can't you?


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 1:59 pm
Posts: 5807
Free Member
 

Surf-Mat, I'm just struggling to grasp how you can spout absurd generalisations like "It's a culture of job security, waste and a huge pension in many cases".

Thanks for asking.


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 2:04 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Kettle

Black

Pot


 
Posted : 29/04/2010 2:52 pm
Page 3 / 4