Public Sector Fat Cats

The Sunday Telegraph has published today a list of what the paper calls 'NHS fat cat earners' - some 660 NHS managers no less - who all earn more than the Prime Minister.

For obvious reasons - I am reproducing only the top ten on the blog site.

But it does give you a sense of how salaries in some parts of the public sector - have been allowed to get completely out of control.

Because for every NHS manager earning over £200,000 a year - you will find there are many others in the next tiers of management - whose salaries are also grossly inflated.

The great cost to the public purse lies in the thousands of third and fourth tier managers earning £70,000 - £100,000 a year - although for obvious reasons those earning more than the Prime Minister will always grab the headlines.

The problem is that if the 'head honcho's' salary is far too high - then this pulls up all the people below - except of course the mainstay grades and those on the lowest rungs of the ladder - who remain very low paid.

Another problem is that many of these top managers are paid salaries - that are on a par with the best paid consultants and GPs - when they are actually professional administrators.

Highly talented and qualified no doubt - but they are not doing a medical job - even though they manage those that do - and it is the paradox that is distorting the reward system.

The same thing happens in local government - albeit to a lesser extent - but the same process has caused a huge expansion in highly paid and over paid - third and fourth tier management jobs.

Sunday Telegraph - NHS Top Earners         

1. David Bennet £282,500
Was interim chief executive of Monitor, independent regulator of NHS foundation trusts, from March 2010 to February 2011

2. Neil Lloyd £282,500
Chief executive, NHS Professionals

3. Ruth Carnall £277,500
Chief executive, London Strategic Health Authority

4. Sir Ron Kerr £274,500
Chief executive, Guy’s and St Thomas’s NHS Foundation Trust

5. Sir Robert Naylor £262,500
Chief executive, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

6. Peter Morris £262,000
Chief executive, Barts and The London Trust

7. Clare Chapman £252,500
Director general of workforce, Department of Health

8. Sir Andrew Cash £243,100
Chief executive, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals Foundation Trust

9. Dr Mark Goldman £242, 500
Chief executive, Heart of England Foundation Trust until July 2010

10. David Dalton £232 600
Chief executive, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust

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