LONDON (Reuters) – Pay deals awarded by British employers cooled for the first time this year in the quarter to July, which may calm the worries of Bank of England officials who fear wage growth is feeding inflation, a survey showed on Wednesday.
Median basic pay deals in the three months to the end of July fell to 5.7% following six consecutive quarters at a record 6%, human resources publication and data provider XpertHR said.
Pay awards remained below the rate of inflation. British consumer price inflation cooled to 6.8% in July from 7.9% in June.
The BoE, which hiked interest rates to 5.25% in August to tame stubborn inflation, is closely monitoring wage growth in the private sector and has said it will keep raising Bank Rate if inflationary pressure persists.
Sheila Attwood, senior content manager at XpertHR, said pay awards had likely hit their peak and expects the gap between pay deals and inflation to narrow.
“Our figures of a decrease in wage rises might ease minds at [the] Bank of England, fearful of the effects of a wage-price spiral,” Attwood said.
However, official figures from the Office for National Statistics showed annual wage growth excluding bonuses rose to 7.8% in the three months to June, the highest in records going back to 2001.
XpertHR said median pay awards for the public sector stood at 5% in the year to July, up from 3.2% in the year before.
(Reporting by Suban Abdulla, editing by Andy Bruce)