The government has put the UK in an “unconscionable” position by forcing through pay rises on the back of cuts to existing budgets, according to the junior doctors’ union.
Junior doctors will receive a 6% pay rise, plus £1,250 added to their salaries – equivalent to a raise of between 8.1% and 10.3% depending on previous pay packets.
“We will not negotiate again on this year’s settlements, and no amount of strikes will change our decision,” Mr Sunak said.
It wants their pay restored to spending parity with the levels seen in 2008, noting that they have received below-inflation raises ever since.
Young medics are currently engaged in a five-day strike, their longest yet.
The prime minister’s line-in-the-sand approach is “irresponsible and unreasonable”, according to Dr Sumi Manirajan, the deputy co-chair of the BMA’s junior doctors committee.
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She told Sky News: “This will no doubt contribute to the feeling that junior doctors are experiencing and reporting of not feeling valued.”
The pay increases for public sector workers
Police – 7%
NHS – 6%
Junior doctors – 6% + £1,250 one-off payment
Prison officers – 7%
Armed Forces – 5% + £1,000 one-off payment
Teachers – 6.5%
Professor Phil Banfield, the chair of the BMA’s UK council, said: “Today’s announcement represents yet another pay cut in real terms and serves only to increase the losses faced by doctors after more than a decade’s worth of sub-inflation pay awards.”
He added: “Public sector workers are not only working in underfunded services, but they are now being asked to pay for them through further cuts and proposed increased visa costs.
“The political choices this government is making continue to make ordinary people sicker and poorer; that is an unconscionable position for a ‘civilised’ society to be in.”
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said the pay awards across the public sector will require around £5bn in cuts over the next two years.
Part of this will be funded for education by £880m from government over the next two years, as well as a rise in the immigration health surcharge – paid by people applying to immigrate to the UK.
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‘This is final pay offer for NHS’
The surcharge has raised around £900m in the past four years
The rest of the money will be found through “efficiencies” and “rereprioritisation” – which usually means cuts – although Downing Street says most of the money will be found from “underspends”.
Matthew Taylor, the chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said there was “no fat on the bone” to fund pay rises out of existing hospital budgets.
He told Channel 4 that any reprioritisation would mean there “will be things we won’t be able to do”
“Patient services will be jeopardised and actually the prime minister’s own waiting list pledge will be jeopardised,” he added.
Responding to the BMA, a Downing Street spokesman said the 35% pay rise would be “simply not fair to taxpayers”.
“From the deal, independenty set by the [pay review bodies], junior doctors will see around a 9% uplift to pay,” he said.
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“Anyone… would think that is a significant increase. Certainly we do and we will not countenance borrowing more money or increasing taxation to go beyond what the independent pay review bodies have recommended.”
Health Secretary Steve Barclay said: “Of course, my door’s open to discuss with the BMA other issues in terms of the quality of work conditions within the NHS and how we best support doctors in training.”