The FT's Steve Bird, joint head of the paper's National Union of
Journalists group, wrote to FT editors and journalists across
the world, saying Ridding's pay was absurdly high and that he
should give some back to help those on lower salaries.
FT accounts, filed on July 27, showed that the paper's
highest-paid director, Ridding, earned 2.55 million pounds in
2017. The accounts restated his earnings for 2016 at 2.04
million pounds.
"We believe that John Ridding should give back his absurdly
large pay increases since 2016 and use the funds to reward all
staff, especially those on lower salaries, and to help bridge
the gender pay gap," Bird wrote in the email dated Aug. 1.
Ridding did not respond to a request for comment.
Bird confirmed that the FT's union committee sent the email to
all journalist staff expressing outrage at Ridding's salary.
"We don't comment publicly on individual pay," a spokeswoman for
the FT said. "However, reward at the FT is performance related
and the FT grew both revenues and profits in 2017 while
investing in new products and services."
In the email, which was signed by over 20 FT journalists, Bird
said the paper had suffered years of negligible pay rises,
real-terms pay cuts and squeezed resources.
"The company's decision to pay its chief executive 100 times the
salary of a trainee journalist makes a mockery of any concept of
fairness and breaks the bounds of corporate integrity," Bird
wrote.
Japanese media group Nikkei bought the Financial Times from
Britain’s Pearson <PSON.L> for $1.3 billion in 2015.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Dale Hudson)
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