Threads / Public Sector Pay Review / The Department regards pay as its strongest lever in recrui…
Written Evidence Published 9 Jul 2025 ↗ View on Parliament

The Department regards pay as its strongest lever in recruiting and retaining teachers. For example, following the most recent 5.5% pay award, the Department reduced its teacher trainee targets as it expected 2,500 more teachers to stay. However, teacher pay has lagged behind others – in 2024, those working in the education sector were paid around 10% less in real terms than in 2010, with the wider public sector being paid on average 2.6% less than in 2010.58 Written evidence from the Nationa...

The Department regards pay as its strongest lever in recruiting and retaining teachers. For example, following the most recent 5.5% pay award, the Department reduced its teacher trainee targets as it expected 2,500 more teachers to stay. However, teacher pay has lagged behind others – in 2024, those working in the education sector were paid around 10% less in real terms than in 2010, with the wider public sector being paid on average 2.6% less than in 2010.58 Written evidence from the National Foundation for Educational Research stated that the Department’s 2.8% pay increase for 2025–26 is lower than the Office for Budget Responsibility’s 3.7 Type: conclusion | Number: 22 | Response status: not_addressed