Many UK CEOs earn more in three days than a typical worker does in a year

Many UK CEOs earn more in three days than a typical worker does in a year

The average boss of one of Britain's top companies will on Thursday have earned the same as the typical worker will make in the entire year, according to a new report, stepping up pressure on companies ahead of the annual reporting season.

Just three working days into 2018, pay for the average FTSE 100 chief executive will pass the median worker salary of 28,758 pounds ($38,855), the report by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development (CIPD) and pressure group the High Pay Centre showed.

And that is despite the mean pay of FTSE 100 CEOs falling by about 17 per cent in 2017 to 4.5 million pounds amid pressure from investors, the government and wider society for excessive pay to be reined in.

Even with that pay cut, the ratio of CEO pay to the pay of the average full-time worker is still 120:1, the report on "Fat Cat Thursday" showed, with the best-paid boss - advertising company WPP's Martin Sorrell - on 48.2 million pounds.

"The drop in pay in the last year is welcome, although relatively marginal, and will have largely been driven by the growing public and shareholder concerns and the Prime Minister's stronger focus on boardroom excess and plans to reform corporate governance," CIPD Chief Executive Peter Cheese said.

After a high-profile government review of the UK Corporate Governance Code in 2017, Britain's leading companies will now be forced to disclose the pay ratio between the CEO and average worker, a move welcomed by the High Pay Centre's Stefan Stern.

"Publishing pay ratios will force boards to acknowledge these gaps. We look forward to working with business and government to make this new disclosure requirement work as effectively as possible," he said.

Luke Hildyard, Stewardship and Corporate Governance Policy Lead at the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, said just 7 per cent of FTSE 100 annual reports detailed the difference between the CEO's pay and that of the wider workforce.

"Huge pay differences between executives and the wider workforce symbolise how too many companies fail to understand or appreciate the value of their workers," he said.

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