Christine Buckley, Industrial Editor
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The gap between directors’ pensions and those of their staff has widened again, as Britain’s top bosses share a pensions pot worth £900 million.
According to a survey by the TUC, the average executive from Britain’s 100 biggest employers can retire at 60 on a final salary pension worth more than £3 million.
The average pension pot has increased by £300,000, or 15 per cent, from the previous year. A £3 million pension fund will deliver an annual pension of £193,000 – more than 25 times the average occupational pension of £7,500 a year.
Rising pension payouts in the boardroom come as 59 per cent of the companies have closed final salary pensions for new employees in recent years.
The TUC survey analysed the annual reports of the biggest UK employers from the FTSE and those of companies outside the FTSE that have large numbers of staff. It found that the directors of those businesses had final salary or defined benefit pension schemes that were worth £891 million.
For the best-paid directors of the top 100 British employers, the average pension is worth £5.3 million. This will pay out £320,000 a year – 42 times greater than most employees’ pensions.
Lord Browne of Madingley, the former BP chief executive, tops the directors’ league table, with a pension pot worth £21.7 million. Lord Browne, who quit BP in May, is followed by Sir Francis Mackay, the former chairman of Compass, who has a pension of £15.7 million. In third place is Sir Julian Horn-Smith, the former deputy chief executive of Vodafone, who has a £15.2 million pension.
Brendan Barber, the TUC’s general secretary, said: “Even if top directors were in the same scheme as their workforce, they would still get big pensions because their pay is so much greater than those of the staff they employ. But this is not enough for many top bosses, they need to have a guaranteed extra on top.
“Top executive pay has already created a new group of the super-rich who float free from the rest of society. This report shows that this does not stop with their retirement.”
The TUC survey found that it takes directors less time to build up full pensions and that the company contributions they receive are far greater than those of the employees.
For those businesses that reveal full information, directors’ pensions in defined benefit schemes have an accrual rate of one thirtieth, while the usual rate for employees is one sixtieth.
For directors and staff in money purchase schemes, the average contribution to directors was 20 per cent of salary, compared with 5.8 per cent for employees.
John Cridland, deputy director-general of the CBI, said: “These days, successful company directors are in demand around the world.
“So while big-number salaries and pensions might feel uncomfortable or unfair to some, cutting ourselves off from the global talent market or taxing high fliers out of existence would harm the UK’s economy at no benefit to ordinary workers.
“Top executives have often served companies for many years and, like any longstanding employee, are more likely to be in final-salary pension schemes with earlier retirement dates – and will have built up sizeable pension pots, too.”
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OK Simon from London, if not being a communist is to think like you then I'll consider turning into one. I reckon you must be expecting to be a millionaire pensioner yourself if you're so cheerful about it. And presumably, you think that fat cat salaries and pensions are a necessary price to pay for your preferred form of society.
cerronevado, Malaga, Spain
I have to wonder why MPs/Lords are excluded from these reports as they seem to be above the norm. How can they put ridiculous limits on workers and at the same time award themselves PAY, EXPENSES & PENSION increses which quite frankly they are not earning. Is there not a time for a total blitz on Parliament viz how much does it cost and is it worth it.
PS What do all of these Fact Finding trips abroad achieve, in my experience very little as like all of our Civil Service people abroard who do not seem eager to MINGLE rather preferring to live in British conclaves! and thus do not achieve perhaps what they could and should ,EG, represent our great Country. WE CAN AND SHOULD DO A LOT MORE TO COMMUNICATE WITH PEOPLES FROM OTHER COUNTRIES NOT NECESSARILY BEING FLUENT IN THEIR LANGUAGE (ALTHOUGH A BIG PLUS) BUT BY OUR ATTITUDE WHICH UNFORTUNATELY IS NOT GOOD.
George Gibson, Saltash, Cornwall
Not only is it obscene, but disgusting and vile to think that these 'Fat Cats' during the course of their working lives, were not made to contribute higher taxation rate into the system whilst in receipt of a wage for doing little else, than delegate and sit back on their 'fat ' lazy behinds with their both palms held out!
As for retirement , you can't buy life and thats one commodity even the wealthy have to pay a high price for!
The reassuring thing is, their greed will eventually consume them one way or another and justice will be seen to be done!
June, Essex, UK
Could we have the value of the pensions of the senior civil servants, MPs and the Cabinet?
Roger Parkes, Brenchley,
We're living in a society where it is quite possible for anyone to rise to the top... look at leighy at Tesco. This should serve as an incentive to those who aren't at that level to try and get there, if money is what they want. If money isn't what they want, then why are they complaining...?
Fred, London,
How terribly, terribly Orwellian ... Animal Farm's Napolean come to life times 100. How wonderful, how mavelous ... why it's almost like having Woody Allen film malformed tripe in the UK.
Arnold Tracey, Bronx, New York
In Japan executives earn half their counterparts in the UK. The Japanese economy is also much healthier than the US, UK or Australian economies with high export surpluses, low debt, and healthy companies. Toyota has become the largest car manufacturer in the world.
The grab for cash will come back to haunt the UK. All these massive salaries are being given in a time of massive debt, poor exports, and decreasing interest in what underpins exports: science, engineering and development. The same is true in the US and Australia. Highly regulated economies like Japan will leave the Anglo free-for-all nations for dead in the long run.
James, Sydney,
How terribly, terribly Orwellian ... Animal Farm's Napolean come to life times 100. How wonderful, how marvelous ... why it's almost like having Woody Allen film malformed tripe in the UK.
Arnold Tracey, Bronx, New York
To be honest if they genuinely worked that much harder few people would complain, however far too much is seen of these people on the golf course, at expensive restaurants and so on, not to mention worst of all the "bonus golden handshake" they recieve for failure. And as to the greater demand for them, i doubt that they perform much better in the role than many others not given the chance.
Ben, folkestone, uk
Just as communism dug its own grave, so now capitalism. Is there no decency left - the poor ordinary shareholder is being mercilessly robbed.
K Hall, Perth, W Australia
Who cares ? they earn more so they have bigger pensions .
Afterall were not communists .
simon, london,
This sort of preferential treatment is obscene, in my experience most of these 'Fat Cats' dont even deserve their grossly inflated salaries let alone these massive pensions.
The only comfort the rest of us have, is that there are no pockets in a shroud.
Clive Burghard, LANCING, ENGLAND