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Gary Palmer

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Gender Male
Age 70
Web site palmer.house.gov
Date of birth May 14,1954
Zodiac sign Taurus
Born Haleyville
Alabama
United States
Office R
AL 6th District
Spouse Ann Palmer
Children Claire Palmer
Kathleen Palmer
Rob Palmer
Job Politician
Movies/Shows 10 Year Reunion
Summer Forever
The Openers
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID461775
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Gary Palmer Life story


Gary James Palmer is an American politician from the state of Alabama. Elected to the United States House of Representatives in 2014, he represents Alabama's 6th congressional district.

Pay rises fail to keep up with the cost of living

Feb 16,2020 7:49 am

Average pay rises are failing to keep up with The Rise in the cost of living, the latest official statistics show.

While wages rose in the Year to November, they did not rise as fast as prices over the same period.

This meant that average weekly earnings - adjusted for price rises - Fell for the First Time since July 2020.

" Salaries are growing reasonably strongly, But Some People are saying they are not feeling much better due to rising prices, " the ONS told The Bbc .

Regular pay, excluding bonuses and adjusted for inflation, Fell 1% in November compared to the same month in the previous Year .

In November, the inflation rate rose to 5. 1% and is expected to reach at least 6% in spring, according to The Bank of England.

The Resolution Foundation Think Tank said: " Real wages officially began to Fall In November, and the current period of shrinking pay packets is likely to get worse before it starts to ease in the Second Half of 2022. "

Salaries, however, are still above pre-pandemic levels. Average weekly pay, excluding bonuses, rose to £550 in November compared with £510 in March 2020.

Over the longer three-month period, between September and November, wages rose at an annual rate of 3. 8%, the ONS said. That was slower than the 4. 3% recorded in the three-month period between August and October.

Today's figures showed that pay increases failed to match the accelerating cost of living for the First Time in over a Year in November.

However, with the jobs market heating up, economists say that may be short-lived.

The latest numbers suggest that not only have the vast majority of livelihoods survived The End of The Furlough scheme, But - with vacancies at a record high of 1. 24 million - Many employers are grappling with a shortage of skilled workers.

That's been heightened by The Departure of More Than 400,000 people from the labour market since the pandemic started - typically those who have become students, taken early retirement or are long-term sick.

Those factors are likely to give workers the upper hand when It Comes to seeking - and getting - Bigger pay rises this Year .

Overall, The Office for National Statistics said that the unemployment rate Fell to 4. 1% - Close to pre-pandemic levels.

Meanwhile, companies added 184,000 people to their payrolls between November and December, taking the total to 29. 5 million.

UK job vacancies soared to a record high of 1. 24 million between October and December, the ONS data showed, with vacancies 462,000 higher compared with the three months before the pandemic.

Darren Morgan , director of economic statistics at the ONS, said the total number of people on payrolls was " now well above pre-pandemic levels".

He added: " New survey figures show that in the three months to November, the unemployment rate Fell Back almost to where it was before Covid-19 hit. "

However, He Said that while job vacancies had reached a new record, " they are now growing more slowly than they were last summer".

Hannah Slaughter, senior economist at The Resolution Foundation, said: " While falling wages will add to the pressure on Britain's cost of living crunch, the jobs market is in good health, with unemployment falling and employment rising late Last Year - a remarkable success given the damage inflicted by the pandemic. "

'Pay me what I'm worth'

As the cost of living rises, refuse workers across The South East want a pay boost.

They argue that HGV drivers, who are in short supply and great demand, are better paid than The Lorry drivers who work in rubbish.

Refuse truck drivers in Eastbourne have now gone on strike after The Local council offered a 7% pay rise which officials described as " very generous".

But Gary Palmer , an HGV driver and local GMB union organiser, says: " It's not only the cost of living, people are understanding that the poor are going to work and in-work poverty is growing.

" All those points have come together and GMB members here have said: 'No, enough. Pay me what I'm worth and recognise my True Value '. "

The Union is Holding Out for an offer closer to 20% and has said that if refuse drivers are not offered a " decent pay rise" they will be tempted elsewhere by higher pay packets.

" Workers right across the country have seen 10 Years of flat-lining wages and it's time they saw some of the benefits that are coming to society come to them, " Mr Palmer says.



Source of news: bbc.com

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