General Insurance Article - Statutory Sick Pay significantly trails inflation


Falling values of Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) and contractual sick pay are leaving millions of Brits exposed if they are unable to work due to illness or injury, finds Cirencester Friendly Society

 Since 2016, SSP has risen by just £25.14, from £383.28 to £408.42 per month, significantly trailing behind inflation and leaving the average worker with a shortfall of over £1,540 each month. This compares with a monthly shortfall of £1,164 in 2016, if employees were unable to work due to illness or injury and had to rely on State Benefits. This pay gap is compounded by reduced contractual sick pay which has fallen dramatically from an average of 15.7 weeks in 2016 to under 4.5 weeks this year.

 What’s even more worrying is the drop in the average Briton’s savings. 25% of UK workers say they have no savings at all and this increases to nearly one-in-three (32%) among women. On average, Britons say their savings would last just nine weeks were they to stop working. This has fallen significantly from over thirteen weeks in 2016.

 Despite this reduction in governmental and employer support and the drop in personal savings, only 17% of people have income protection to provide them with continuing income if they are unable to work due to illness or injury. These findings come from independent research of over 2,000 workers in the UK, aged between 18 and 54.

 Commenting on the findings, David Macgregor, Commercial Director at Cirencester Friendly said: “It is deeply concerning that so many people would face potential financial hardship if they had to stop work due to illness or injury, and with the growing difference between people’s actual earnings and SSP this looks to be a trend which will only worsen.

 “When faced with household bills, potential medical costs and either mortgage or rent, the average person’s savings would be exhausted in just nine weeks. We hope our findings will serve as a reminder for people to take out income protection to provide them with continuing income and peace of mind, if they are ill or injured and unable to work.”
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Pet insurance premiums rise exceeding March 2024 levels
The latest Pet Insurance Pricing Index from pricing experts Pearson Ham Group shows a continued upward trend for Lifetime policies, the most popular t
Lloyds report strong performance and investor appeal
Insurance Capital Markets Research (ICMR) and the Lloyd’s Market Association (LMA) have released their 2nd annual report, the Lloyd’s 2025 Insights Re
Insurance customers save GBP100m as instalment costs fall
Consumer Intelligence launches APR Awareness Month to highlight true cost of insurance Instalments. Cost of living pressures and rising insurance prem

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.