Spotlight on Federal Pay: New House Leadership Calls for Federal Pay Freeze
Monday, November 22, 2010(National Federation of Federal Employees)
As the
opening of the 112th Congress grows
nearer, calls to cut federal spending and slash
the deficit have reached a fevered pitch. With
the budget deficit looming large, lawmakers
from both chambers have called for
belt-tightening measures, many of which
unapologetically target federal
workers.
In the
next session the federal workforce will
undoubtedly see attempts to freeze or cut
salaries that already fall 24 percent behind
those of private sector employees. Just days
after the mid-term elections, incoming House
Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) said in a news
conference:
“There
ought to be a freeze on the hiring of new
federal employees, and frankly, we ought to
freeze the pay.” He goes on further to assert,
“The average federal employee makes twice as
much as the average private sector worker.”
Federal
pay detractors, like Boehner, are quick to cite
this misleading figure to justify their demands
to freeze or lower the wages of federal
workers. This logic is deeply flawed, because
to compare the two sectors is like comparing
apples to oranges. The federal workforce, due
to decades of aggressive outsourcing of
blue-collar federal jobs, is a thoroughly white
collar workforce. The private sector, on the
other hand, has a large of lower-paying service
sector jobs that don’t exist in the federal
sector. The fact is that, on average, federal
jobs require more education, skills, and
experience than many private sector jobs,
making any comparison between the two sectors
as a whole profoundly misleading. The truth is,
when you compare the pay of a Justice
Department lawyer to a private lawyer, or a VA
doctor to a private doctor (comparing apples to
apples), federal employees make an average of
24 percent less.
Despite
overwhelming evidence to the contrary, Eric
Cantor (R-VA), the second-ranking Republican in
the House, agrees with Boehner’s
statements:
“Americans are fed up with
public employee pay scales far exceeding that
in the private sector.”
Federal
employees are fed up too. Not only do many make
considerably less than their private sector
counterparts, they are presently facing some of
the most significant threats to their
livelihoods in decades. Federal workers now
fear that even the modest 1.4 percent pay
adjustment proposed by President Obama could be
eliminated in the coming months. Some worry
that this attempt to freeze pay will be just
the first of many additional attacks on the
federal workforce.
To begin
confronting our burgeoning federal deficit, we
must work together to cut back where necessary.
We cannot, however, place the burden of our
debt squarely on the shoulders of federal
employees. The work they do for America every
day is crucial, and it is the commitment to
their jobs that keeps our country
running.
