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UK govt offers junior doctors 22.3% pay rise to end strikes

By Jimisayo Opanuga
29 July 2024   |   8:46 pm
Britain's recently elected government and the union representing junior doctors said on Monday they have struck an agreement offering a substantial pay rise to end a wave of unprecedented strikes. The British Medical Association (BMA) said it agreed to put the offer to members and recommended them to vote in favour. If accepted, it would…
A video grab from footage broadcast by the UK Parliament’s Parliamentary Recording Unit (PRU) shows Britain’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves making a Ministerial Statement to MPs on the state of Government finances, in the House of Commons, in London, on July 29, 2024. (Photo by PRU / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT “AFP PHOTO / PRU ” – NO MARKETING – NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

Britain’s recently elected government and the union representing junior doctors said on Monday they have struck an agreement offering a substantial pay rise to end a wave of unprecedented strikes.

The British Medical Association (BMA) said it agreed to put the offer to members and recommended them to vote in favour.

If accepted, it would put an end to a long-running dispute over wages, triggering pickets including the longest walkout — totalling six days — in the seven-decade history of Britain’s National Health Service (NHS).

Junior doctors — those below specialist, consultant level — in England had been asking for a 35-percent “pay restoration”.

While the new offer falls short of that, the BMA said the average junior doctor’s pay uplift across the two years of the dispute would be 22.3 percent.

“This offer does not go all the way to restoring the pay lost by junior doctors over the last decade and a half,” the union said.

But although it lamented “it should never have taken so long to get here”, the union called the package “a good step forward for our profession, acknowledging there is still more work to be done in the future”.

Since coming to power in July, the centre-left Labour government has been keen to draw a line under the long-running industrial disputes sparked by soaring inflation, which dogged the previous Conservative administration.

Besides doctors, it has relaunched negotiations with railway workers.

Finance Minister Rachel Reeves hailed the agreement as “the start of a new relationship” between the government and healthcare staff.

Labour has made turning the crisis-hit NHS around a priority, pledging to tackle huge backlogs in waiting times for appointments and surgery and an exodus of professionals leaving the service.

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