Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
38% of public-sector workers are close to quitting, TUC poll reveals
[João Ferrão / Creative Commons]

NEARLY two-fifths of public-sector workers are taking steps to leave their profession or are considering quitting, a new TUC poll published yesterday reveals.

The shocking findings show that austerity-hit public services face a “mass exodus” of key workers unless Tory ministers address falling take-home pay and unsustainable funding levels, the union body stressed.

It warned that the average public servant now earns £200 a month less when adjusted for inflation than in 2010, following more than a decade of attacks on real-terms wages.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Protesters during the Protect The Right To Strike march in L
BFAWU Conference 2024 / 12 June 2024
12 June 2024
Sarah Woolley addresses the BFAWU Conference
BFAWU Conference 2024 / 12 June 2024
12 June 2024
BFAWU Conference 2024 / 11 June 2024
11 June 2024
Similar stories
Junior doctors and members of the British Medical Association (BMA) outside Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham, January 3, 2024
Britain / 22 May 2025
22 May 2025

Unions slam use of review bodies and long-term decline in value of wages

A view of £5, £10, £20 and £50 bank notes
Britain / 28 February 2025
28 February 2025
FAIR PAY: Health workers march to Downing Street, London
Features / 13 December 2024
13 December 2024
For its own good the Labour government should take a radical, progressive approach to investing in public services instead of tinkering around the edges, argues DIANE ABBOTT