HomeBack to Home
Search
advanced
AustraliaFranceGermanySouth AfricaUSAThe Daily Reckoning is global
Our newsletter pulls you inside a world of insightful, humorous and contrarian investment advice straight from our global network of experts.

MPs The Case for a Pay Increase

Lord William Rees-Mogg - Thu 06 Mar, 2008

After the recent expense account fiddles, there’s an argument for paying our politicians more

After the recent exposure of expense account fiddles, there’s a case for paying our politicians more says William Rees-Mogg...

MPs: The Case for a Pay Increase

It is depressing that the American election has seen charges and counter charges of corruption. Senator Obama has been attacked for historic property deals. Senator McCain has been attacked for his relations with a lobbyist. There are still ancient suspicions of the Rose Law Firm of Little Rock, Arkansas, in which Hillary Clinton was a partner when her husband was Governor.

In the United States, the main problem of finance for politicians comes from the cost of elections. The 2008 Presidential election will end up costing $1 trillion, or perhaps more. Much of the money goes on political advertising, of which the more effective half is spent on attacking the competence or integrity of the other candidates. The American lobbying system involves the lobbyists – who have their hands out for political favours – raising money from their clients to pay to politicians to spend on these negative campaigns.

In Europe, the personal expenses of candidates or sitting Members of European parliaments, seem to be more of a problem. In Britain, Derek Conway, a Member of Parliament has been suspended for two weeks for paying his son out of parliamentary funds for research work he did not actually carry out. About a third of Members of Parliament use parliamentary funds, intended for their political staff, to pay members of their families. This applies to all major parties, Labour, Conservative or Liberal Democrat.

Even the Speaker of the House of Commons has been accused of bad judgment, though not of breaking the law, for using Air Miles from official visits to pay for family travel and claiming his wife’s taxi journeys on official expenses.

There is another and graver scandal in the European Parliament, which has produced, but not published, a report on the claims for expenses of the European Parliament itself. This includes claims for club class flights when the cheapest airlines had in fact been used, but it also includes more serious matters, in which downright fraud is alleged, and the sums involved go up to five or six figures.

Naturally, politicians are reluctant to investigate their own, or their colleagues’, minor expenses fiddles. The judgment of a legitimate expense is usually left to the individual parliamentarian. No man should be a judge in his own cause. Many politicians have given up well-paid jobs or even highly rewarding partnership in law firms or fund management. They know that they are out of pocket as a consequence of pursuing a public career. They may think that a somewhat inflated expenses claim is a way to redress part of their loss of income.

It is also true that young politicians often find it hard to finance their careers. Very often the first stages of a political career are assisted by the earnings of a husband or wife. A young married couple, perhaps with children, can afford to live on two incomes after one of them has won a seat in Parliament or Congress, but may find it difficult to live on a single income while the political partner is still a candidate.

In most countries, there are pressures to keep down the pay of politicians. In Britain, median pay of all workers is about £20,000 a year and Members of Parliament are paid about £60,000 a year, but enjoy additional staff and other expenses of over £100,000. If one compares Members of Parliament with doctors in the National Health Service, the MPs seem underpaid. General Practitioners are the professional basis of health care; they are paid £100,000 a year, sometimes more, sometimes less. That is £40,000 more than MPs.

There are measures which could remove some of the temptations which face even honest politicians. All election expenditure could be limited. If the nominees in the United States accept public funding, they will apparently be limited to $85 million each, a reasonable sum to spend on an election. Unfortunately Barack Obama has raised more money than anyone else, more than Hillary Clinton, more than John McCain. He will be tempted to make use of his advantage, though that would make his statements on Campaign expenditure seem hypocritical.

In Europe, the Members of Parliaments may need to be paid more, and related to some acceptable standard of professional pay. Democracy is undermined when voters think that the politicians are on the take, and the present reliance on expenses to supplement income is a temptation for too many politicians who are, in Shakespeare’s phrase, “indifferent honest.”

Regards,

William Rees-Mogg
For the Daily Reckoning

post a comment

   Name

  Email

  Comment

I wish to receive the Fleet Street Daily
There is no case for MPs to receive greater pay. K60 + legitimate (honest) expenses should be quite enough. there was a time people were called to public service, unfortunately we are now offered career politicians of mediocre caliber, who would not greatly succeed in the real world. If a ships steward can make it to deputy prime minister then there is proof of mediocrity
By Ashley Gregory, 08 Mar, 2008, 07:00
llRewarding fiddlers with a pay increase ;I don't think so. All claims {ALL] should be supported by documentation.A full and indepentdent enquiry followed by disciplinary action.;preferably legal.Name .the crooks
By NICHOLAS HARDAKER, 08 Mar, 2008, 10:51
When compating remunerations it is important to include the value of pension schemes as these vary so widely. Why do 'we' require 646 MPs when powers have been devolved to Brussels, Scotland, Wales and N Ireland? We should reduce the number of MPs to say 200 then give clear responsibilities and authorities. Modern communications systems should be used to reduce need for so much travel. Pay and benefits brought into line by outside review body.
By Des Desforges, 07 Mar, 2008, 08:32
Politics shoud be like jury service and for the same pay and expenses. There should be no such thing as a professional career in politics. These people are nothing but corrupt ,scummy parasites and always will be. The only way to limit the thieving and other damage is to cut their single term to a bare minimum and the fewer of them the better.
By gordonisamoron, 07 Mar, 2008, 01:17
This is an incredibly weak case for increasing the pay of politicians - they steal our money so lets pay them a bit more to cover it, then they're bound to stop stealing! The most revealing comment was "many politicians have given up well-paid jobs or even highly rewarding partnership in law firms or fund management. They know that they are out of pocket as a consequence of pursuing a public career - DON'T DO IT THEN! IF YOUR FAMILY CAN'T LIVE ON £60K P.A. PLUS UP TO £100K EXPENSES STAY AT YOUR LAW FIRM. Perhaps goes some way to explaining why people fell so disenfranchised from our parliamentary democracy.
By Steve P, 07 Mar, 2008, 01:08
When MPs have a defined job descripton like everyone else, their pay may be properly evaluated by an independent body. MPs are not social workers nor councillors as some might think. They are there primarily to represent consituents in parliamentary debate, a fact which the majority of MPs seem to conveniently forget.
By Mr Nicholas C.Watkis, 07 Mar, 2008, 10:42
Lord Rees-Mogg has started at the wrong end. Better not to pay MP's at all. Then it would again become a public service rendered by experienced men of independant means whose opinions and decisions would not be guided by vote catching, job safety or personal gain.
By John Collier, 07 Mar, 2008, 07:46
I cannot see that any chyange in salary or allowances will change the penchant of many (if not most) politicians to stretch the boundaries of allowable expenses. Their ability is in creating backdoors. They don't need more money; they are looking to the cushy jobs when they leave Westmenster / Brussells either in government employed companies or the lecture circuit or writing. Given that most are inca[pable of getting outside employment then perhaps they should be paid according to their outside earning ability. As for expenses - choose 10 FTSE 100 companies and average out their expenses regulations and apply those. ie no second homes - they have to move lock, stock and barrell with their jobs. Let an outside firm of auditors scrutinise all claims and publish them - those agreed and those refused.
By David Brown, 06 Mar, 2008, 11:39
It would be fine if MPs did a good job- but they do not. They continually interfere and make 'issues' of trivialities (which are usually non-existant) to justify there existance and to appear as if they are 'doing something'. And, in an elcted dictatorship, most MPs are the poodle of the whips. We have the appearance of debate but usually the Government does what it wants. In practice, once a Government is elected, our system is not much different to Mr. Putin's.
By John Harmer, 06 Mar, 2008, 11:05
1 GP's along with most other groups of similar earnings carry resopnsibilities. MP's generally and currently even ministers appear to carry no resopnsibility whatsoever. 2 The true value of MP's renumeration including tax free expenses and go;d plated pensions is much higher than the £40k quoted. 3 Talking about corruption, strange the Blair's are in the market for a £4m mansion. They must have saved really hard.
By steve gladstone, 06 Mar, 2008, 05:20
I couldn't disagree with you more. If you decide to take up public office you do so on your own volition one assumes for the greater good. You are placed in a position of trust to manage the public purse and oversee its good values for the benefit of all. If that trust is abused, then remove the politician completely from office never to be able to enter public service again, and take away their right to an index linked pension and other benefits they all seek to achieve when entering the public arena. Far too much money is spent on politicians, their campaigning and general expenses. The average worker will never achieve the levels of salaries and over the top expense allowances. Politicians should be grateful for what they receive and work accordingly and stop stealing, which is what it tantamount's too. If we carried out just a fragment of what Politicians did, we would be locked up. In this case, your argument is most definitely flawed.
By T.I.Lock, 06 Mar, 2008, 04:13
I find this idea hard to fathom. You suggest that people in public life should be paid more because they are cheating on their expenses. This is the legitimisation of petty criminality. If a politician cannot make ends meet, then he/she must adapt their lifestyle - in exactly the same way private citizens must. Let us not be diverted by the politicians' dream that they are in some way superior beings.
By Stephen Hitchens, 06 Mar, 2008, 04:09
Wait a minute - wrong premise here. 'young politicians ...hard to finance their careers' !!!!!! What absolute baloney - total rubbish. Firstly, why have 'young politicians' - far better to have older potential MPs who have more life experience rather than the muppets who have only been involved with politics and nothing else. And if a young couple are finding it difficult financially - well tough - all young couples find it difficult. I think our MPs are paid far too much; they should be paid only the average national wage - that would concentrate their minds fully on the results of the decisions they make that affect us all. If it hurts their pockets - then good. It might make them stop and think. I would also end all their chauffeur driven cars and put these MPs back on public transport. That way they could endure what 'ordinary' people have to. And they would also have to listen to what the tax-payers are talking about - be it their views on MPs, EU. crime, feral kids or anything else. Make the MPs live normally, on a normal wage - bring them down to earth...
By Anne Smith, 06 Mar, 2008, 04:06

Show more articles by this authorPrint this pageshare thissend to friend
Recent Comments
2 issues: 1. Why should doctors be considered as a reasonable comparison to MP's - the two jobs are nothing alike. Wouldn't it be more reasonable to compare MP's salary with senior figures in industry or commerce? My husband is a doctor and I can categorically state that he earns A LOT less than an MP on £60k. I am sure he works at least as many hours too. In fact I can remember a good few 120 hour weeks when he earnt just over £20k at a time when MP's earnt over £40k. Due to NHS cuts hospital doctors dont get to claim their expenses including the costs of such frivolous expenditure as Advanced Life Support training courses which are pretty necessary or the not insignificant cost of the exams they have to take to become eligible for registrar training. Why is W R-M pandering to government objectives to turn public opinion against doctors? Not all doctors are GP's or on anywhere near the equivalent of the wage stated in the article. It is this kind of thoughtless constant referencing to overpaid fat cat doctors that is turning public opinion and making it easy for the government to marginalise doctors as an unnecessary expense in the NHS. 2. I dont buy the argument that if you paid MP's more they wouldnt fiddle their expenses. An MP's wage of £60k certainly means they are not subsidising the fact that they are doing this job out of other income. The fact MPs are fiddling their expenses is more a reflection of the type of people who become MP's and it is naive to think that raising wages would affect this. MP's dont fiddle their wages because they are too poor not to, they do it because they can and this would happen whatever they were paid because it is purely down to the kind of people they are. By Galit Hart
If this had been me I would have been locked up for fraud, and has for the European meps,what a gravey train, if I said to you give me all the money you have saved and I will put in a corrupt bank, that is what is happening in europe they have not signed the accounts for 13 years. terry shead By terry shead
post a comment
Related Lessons From History Articles
05 May, 2008Whitsunday
24 Apr, 2008Following Rome
24 Apr, 2008The Ascension
Most Popular Articles
Recieve Articles like this by email
Name
Email address


FSP Logo