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Table 2. Remuneration Trends |
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(Dollars per annum) |
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Chief Executive Officer |
Federal Member of Parliament |
SES Band 1 |
ASO 1 |
AWE (a) (annualised) |
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Base salary |
Allowances / benefits , & bonuses (b) |
Total |
Base salary |
Electorate allowance(c); |
Total |
Base salary (d) |
Allowances (e) |
Total |
Salary (d) |
Full-time adult total earnings |
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1988 |
112 104 |
72 159 |
184 263 |
49 180 |
18 958 |
68 138 |
57 775 |
1 016 |
58 791 |
19 944 |
27 125 |
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|
1989 |
124 640 |
91 063 |
215 703 |
55 000 |
21 005 |
76 005 |
58 297 |
8 500 |
66 797 |
21 249 |
28 877 |
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|
1990 |
140 478 |
88 891 |
229 369 |
58 300 |
22 658 |
80 958 |
64 768 |
8 500 |
73 268 |
22 070 |
30 796 |
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1991 |
145 244 |
87 498 |
232 742 |
66 387 |
22 685 |
89 072 |
66 387 |
8 500 |
74 887 |
22 622 |
31 844 |
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1992 |
155 339 |
96 997 |
252 336 |
67 715 |
23 819 |
91 534 |
67 715 |
8 500 |
76 215 |
23 074 |
32 381 |
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|
1993 |
160 932 |
95 221 |
256 153 |
68 663 |
23 819 |
92 482 |
68 633 |
13 784 |
82 417 |
23 397 |
33 502 |
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1994 |
176 166 |
115 426 |
291 592 |
74 460 |
24 588 |
99 048 |
69 693 |
19 674 |
89 367 |
23 748 |
35 019 |
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1995 |
178 336 |
115 666 |
294 002 |
78 987 |
25 540 |
104 527 |
78 587 |
19 674 |
98 261 |
25 192 |
36 651 |
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1996 |
206 200 |
125 382 |
331 582 |
81 856 |
26 076 |
107 932 |
81 441 |
18 495 |
99 936 |
26 107 |
38 075 |
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1997 |
220 355 |
72 079 |
292 434 |
81 856 |
26 467 |
108 323 |
82 120 |
20 454 |
102 574 |
26 890 |
39 274 |
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1998 |
237 476 |
150 579 |
388 055 |
81 856 |
26 467 |
108 323 |
86 132 |
20 454 |
106 586 |
27 697 |
40 927 |
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% increase 1988 to 1998 |
112 |
109 |
111 |
66 |
40 |
59 |
49 |
1913 |
81 |
39 |
51 |
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(a) Average weekly earnings. (b) Comprises benefit value of company car, car parking allowance, annual leave loading, private travel and entertainment allowances, employer superannuation contributions and employee salary sacrifice superannuation, loan benefits, other cash payments, the cost of fringe benefits tax and value of incentive bonus, other cash payments, loan benefits, the cost of fringe benefits tax and value of incentive bonus. (c) Lowest electoral allowance paid to a member. (d) Highest increment. (e) Comprises expense of office allowance (1988 only), benefit value of SES vehicle and car parking allowance (from 1989) and average value of performance bonus (from 1993). _______Break in series caused by fact that after October 1996 service wide agreements were replaced by individual agency agreements and Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs). Almost all SES officers are now on AWAs, the terms of which are confidential. The base salary of an SES officer in 1997 is that specified in the Notional Remuneration Package, 1997, that formed the basis for SES negotiations with agencies on their AWAs. The base salary of an SES officer in 1998 is taken from an article Pay Gap Widens at Top of PS: Survey (Canberra Times, 24 April 1999) which is based on the results of a survey by the Department of Employment, Workplace Relations and Small Business. SES allowances in 1997 are those specified in Notional Remuneration Package noted earlier and are assumed not to have changed in 1998. Salary figures for ASO 1 for 1997 and 1998 are based on Department of Finance and Administration Certified Agreement of 1997-1999 that specifies a 3 per cent increase in salary for all employees from 1 December 1997 and a further 3 per cent increase from 1 July 1998. |
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Care should be taken when examining remuneration levels because of differences in the scope of items included within the definition of allowances. For example, included in CEO allowances is the value of employer superannuation contributions which is not included in the allowances of a Federal Member or an SES officer. A Federal Member's electoral allowance does not include the value of a car but this is included in the allowance of a CEO and an SES officer. For these and other reasons, comparisons between levels should not be made. Rather, the only meaningful comparisons are those which look at changes which have occurred over time.
Table 2 shows that in the ten years to 1998, the total remuneration level of a CEO has risen by 111 per cent which is significantly larger than any of the other occupational classifications listed.(1) For an SES Officer Band 1, overall remuneration has risen by 81 per cent, the provision of a vehicle after 1988 being a significant factor in this increase. The rate of increase for a Federal Member of Parliament has been 59 per cent.(2) Lagging well behind is an ASO 1 whose salary has risen by only 39 per cent over the ten year period. These figures compare with a 51 per cent increase in earnings of the community generally as measured by the average weekly total earnings full-time employed adult.