Privately-owned contractor rewards director with industry's first ever eight-figure salary despite fall in pre-tax profit
The highest paid director at Bowmer & Kirkland is to receive 拢10.2m for 2009, by far the highest wage in construction, even though the firm鈥檚 pre-tax profit fell by a third.
Bosses at the Derbyshire-based contractor have chosen the deepest recession for 60 years to hand out what is thought to be the first ever eight-figure pay packet in the building industry.
The salary, believed to be for chair John Kirkland, is up more than 50% on last year鈥檚 figure of 拢6.7m and is almost three times the rate of the next top payer in the industry, Wates Group, which paid its top executive 拢3.8m in 2009.
In total, Bowmer directors will receive 拢20.7m, up 40% on 2008.
The news comes as other high-paid directors have cut salaries over the past year, with the top pay at Stewart Milne, Carillion and Berkeley Group all falling.
One fellow construction chief executive said: 鈥淚t鈥檚 excessive and a bit insensitive in an industry that is already suffering. It doesn鈥檛 make it easy to cut staff costs or salaries because staff will see it as one rule for one and one rule for another.鈥
Another construction boss said it was difficult to compare the pay of owners of privately held companies with chief executives of listed companies, as they take on more risk and can take profit from the firm in different ways.
Helen Kersley, economic researcher at the New Economics Foundation, said: 鈥淎s well as a moral issue here, there is strong evidence it is bad for both morale and productivity when directors receive extremes of pay.鈥
Bowmer saw its pre-tax profit fall by a third to 拢28.8m, on a marginally reduced turnover of 拢874m. However, unlike other firms making staff redundant in 2009, it took on 200 more people. Average pay was 拢44,199, compared with 拢40,386 last year.
Bowmer & Kirkland declined to comment.
2 Readers' comments