MPs will receive a 1.9 per cent pay increase, the
Remuneration Authority confirmed this afternoon.
The salary increases are deemed to have come into effect on
July 1, meaning MPs will receive back pay for the last six
months. That works out to $1400 for backbench MPs and $3895
for the Prime Minister.
The increase takes a backbench MP's base pay from $141,800 a
year to $144,600 while Prime Minister John Key's pay goes
from $411,510 to $419,300.
Opposition Leader David Shearer's base salary rises from
$257,800 to $262,700.
In a statement, the authority said MPs pay had not kept pace
with increases in the cost of living or general wage
movements.
That was partly at the request of Parliament and partly down
to the authority taking into account "adverse economic
conditions".
Since 2009 general salaries and wages had risen by 5.6 per
cent while Parliamentary salaries excluding the $2000 and
$5000 increases to make up for the loss of travel perks, had
risen only 2.9 per cent, the authority said.
The increase announced today "still leaves Members of
Parliament receiving lower remuneration increases than the
general population".
MPs also received a 1 per cent increase in the tax free
allowance they get for entertaining visitors, gifts,
donations and other sundry purposes.
That means the prime minister's tax free allowance rises to
$21,600, and MPs' to $16,200.
The authority also released its salary determination for
judges, giving them a 2.5 per cent increase in base salary.
That sees a High Court judge's base pay rise to $395,000 and
a District Court judge's salary rise to $300,500.
Those increases are effective from October this year.
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