Paid how much?

The ongoing public sector strike has raised several interesting points.

Not least of which is what teachers actually earn. A full-page advert in newspapers last weekend gave some very respectable figures  for teacher salaries.  A teacher just starting out, with a 4 year qualification has a total cost to employer of around R229,000 per year. This includes 13th check, pension, medical aid and housing allowance, but is a surprisingly high number. It also included the then-proposed 7% increase (versus CPI at 3.7% at the moment).

The offer was increased to 7.5% since the original advert, but the numbers below are the unadjusted numbers in the advert. These are annual basic packages excluding benefits. (It’s unclear whether the before Total Cost to Employer columns include or exclude the 13th check, which is definitely included in the TCE column).


Year
Experience 2007 2008 2009 2010 TCE 2010
1 year 107,007 129,948 150,105 160,614 229,790
5 years 111,357 131,256 153,129 163,851 233,718
10 years 117,042 135,228 160,920 172,185 243,830
20 years 136,923 158,568 194,421 208,032 287,324
30 years 151,257 175,152 220,278 235,698 320,892

This advert prompted an immediate outcry from teachers writing to complain that they earn nothing close to that figure. This was followed up by government affirming that the figures are correct, noting that many teachers may not add up all the non-cash benefits. Continue reading