Measures of employee earnings based on SOC 2020, UK: 2021

Comparison of measures of employee earnings using data from the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings based on Standard Occupation Classification 2020.

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18 November 2022 09:30

An error has been identified in the mapping of Annual Survey for Hours and Earnings (ASHE) 2021 results to Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) 2020, published on 27 June 2022. This will mainly affect occupation breakdowns and tables 2, 3, 14, 20 and 26.

Employee earnings in the UK: 2022 published 26 October 2022 include revised 2021 ASHE data, with a SOC 2020 basis. As these revised figures will in any case supersede the preliminary estimates for 2021 on the SOC 2020 basis published in June, this article will not be corrected.

The provisional estimates on a SOC 2010 basis published in our Employee earnings in the UK: 2021 release on 26 October 2021 are unaffected by this error.

We apologise for any inconvenience caused.

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Contact:
Email Nicola White

Release date:
27 June 2022

Next release:
To be announced

1. Main points

  • This bulletin provides April 2021 Annual Survey for Hours and Earnings (ASHE) results on a Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) 2020 basis; estimates published in our Employee earnings in the UK: 2021 on a SOC 2010 basis remain the headline April 2021 estimates.

  • Most top-level earnings estimates produced on a SOC 2020 basis are generally slightly higher than they were on a SOC 2010 basis; earnings for female employees have been affected more than males because of the composition of this group.

  • Median gross weekly earnings have increased from £611 to £613 among full-time employees, a 0.3% increase.

  • Median gross annual earnings have increased from £31,285 to £31,349 among full-time employees, a 0.2% increase.

  • Median hourly earnings excluding overtime among full-time employees have increased from £15.59 per hour to £15.64 per hour, a 0.3% increase.

  • Changes to the proportion of jobs defined as low or high paid are minimal.

  • The gender pay gap among full-time employees of all age groups changed from 7.9% to 7.8%, because of the greater shift in wages for female employees caused by SOC 2020 reweighting.

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Statistics in this bulletin relate to the pay period that includes 21 April 2021, at which time approximately 3.7 million employees were on furlough under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS). The estimates in this bulletin include furloughed employees and are based on actual payments made to the employee from company payrolls and the hours on which this pay was calculated, which in the case of furloughed employees are their usual hours.

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2. Employee earnings based on Standard Occupational Classification 2020

The Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) 2010 has been revised to produce SOC 2020. The 2021 Annual Survey for Hours and Earnings (ASHE) results were first published on a SOC 2010 basis on the 26 October 2021 and these remain our headline April 2021 estimates. Estimates for ASHE earnings in 2022 and onward will be on a SOC 2020 basis.

The move to SOC 2020 has an impact across all breakdowns, including those that do not include occupation, because of occupation forming part of the methodology by which ASHE data are weighted to produce estimates for the UK.

Estimates for earnings in April 2021 on a SOC 2020 basis represent a break in the ASHE time series. Estimates will not be directly comparable with estimates for earnings on a SOC 2010 basis and, as such, should not be used in direct comparison with each other. The Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) is a common classification of occupational information for the UK. It aims to divide jobs into meaningful categories by skill level and job content in order to provide analysis for users. More recent versions of SOC will provide better divisions of occupation according to the changing role of staff within the labour market as a whole.

The main areas of change in SOC 2020 are:

  • a review of the classification of roles as professional or associate professional

  • the reclassification of occupations associated with information technologies

  • disaggregation into less heterogenous unit groups

More information can be found on the SOC 2020 reclassification in our SOC 2020 Volume 1: structure and descriptions of unit groups.

Overall, most top-level earnings estimates produced on a SOC 2020 basis are higher than they were on a SOC 2010 basis. This is primarily because of employees with high wages in groups with low weightings moving to groups with higher average weightings and higher average wages. For example, a substantial number of employees reclassified from the lower paid and lower weighted "caring, leisure and other service occupations" to the higher paid and higher weighted "associate professional and technical occupations". These movements are also consistent with the published Labour Force Survey (LFS) results on SOC 2020. However, note that the differences are small in magnitude and similar across breakdowns by different metrics.

Changes to earnings by occupation, unlike other breakdowns, are mostly negative. This is linked to the disaggregation of occupations into less heterogenous groups. As a result, a number of jobs which were highly paid for their SOC 2010 group moved into major occupational groups in SOC 2020 with a higher average pay, decreasing the pay of their previous group.

Estimates are weighted by both age group and major occupational group, so the changes to occupation when going from SOC 2010 to SOC 2020 have an affect on earnings and estimates for the number of jobs.

The impact of the SOC changes among the major occupation groups are mixed. Among all employees, pay for associate professional occupations has decreased by 3.9%. This change is caused, in part, by the group of approximately 405,000 above-average earners being reclassified from associate professional occupations to professional occupations. Also, approximately 131,000 employees being reclassified from “caring, leisure and other service occupations” to “associate professional and technical occupations” has contributed to this change. The movers are primarily composed of veterinary nurses and higher-level teaching assistants.

Among all employees, pay for sales and customer service occupations has decreased by 2.1%. This decrease is mainly because of approximately 34,000 employees being reclassified from “sales and customer service occupations” to “administrative and secretarial occupations”. The movers are primarily composed of customer service managers, a group which comes from the disaggregation of customer service managers and supervisors.

Among all employees, pay for elementary occupations has decreased by 1.3%. This is primarily because of the movement of employees which earned above-average wages for the group being reclassified into a sub-major group called “community and civil enforcement occupations”, which is new in the SOC 2020 classification.

Among all employees, pay for “managers, directors and senior officials” increased by 0.7%. This change primarily comes from jobs with below-average earnings moving to “professional occupations” and “sales and customer service occupations”, with a number of high earning jobs also being reclassified from “professional occupations” into “managers, directors and senior officials”.

Among all employees, pay for “professional occupations” decreased by 0.4%. This is less than expected given approximately 405,000 employees have been reclassified from “associate professional and technical occupations” to “professional occupations”. This minimal change is because of movers being primarily composed of graphic designers, finance and investment analysts and advisers, taxation experts and sales accounts and business development managers. These occupations have average wages similar to that of professional occupations.

The magnitude of changes to earnings in breakdowns which do not include occupation are generally smaller, since estimates in these groups are only affected by the reweighting and the groups are not redefined under SOC 2020.

Low Pay

In April 2021, the proportion of jobs within each group, weighted by the SOC 2020 has changed by less than half a percent from SOC 2010. The number of jobs defined as low earners by hourly earnings excluding overtime has increased. This is primarily because of jobs previously classified as middle earners, moving into the low earners group because of the increase in median earnings, caused by reclassification of the survey weights.

Under SOC 2020, in April 2021, there were approximately 1,074,000 employee jobs with employees aged 16 years and over who were paid below the National Minimum Wage (NMW) or National Living Wage (NLW) (3.8% of employee jobs); under SOC 2010, this was 1,084,000 (3.8%). For context, this compares with 2,085,000 (7.4%) in 2020 and 409,000 (1.4% of employee jobs) in 2019.

Gender Pay Gap

The April 2021 gender pay gap change after reweighting for both full-time and part-time employees was minimal, decreasing by 0.1% and increasing by 0.2%, respectively.

The gender pay gap has been most affected for part-time employees aged 40 to 49 years and those aged 50 to 59 years. The gender pay gap decreased by 0.7% for those aged 40 to 49 years and increased by 0.7% for those aged 50 to 59 years.

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3. Measures of employee earnings based on SOC 2020 data

A detailed set of data tabulations containing employee earnings estimates from the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) based on Standard Occupation Classification 2020 broken down by aspects such as age, region, occupation and industry are available.

Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings: 2021 provisional based on SOC 2020
Dataset | Released 27 June 2022
The tables show employee earnings estimates as outlined in the ASHE guide to tables.

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4. Glossary

Full-time and part-time

Full-time is defined as employees working more than 30 paid hours per week (or 25 or more for the teaching professions). Part-time is defined as employees working less than or equal to 30 paid hours per week (or less than 25 hours for the teaching professions).

Median

A measure of the average. The median is calculated by identifying the exact middle point in a set of observations. When the observations are ranked from lowest to highest, the median is the value in the exact middle of the observed values. It is the Office for National Statistics' preferred measure of average earnings as it is less affected by a relatively small number of very high earners than the mean is.

National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage

The National Minimum Wage (NMW) is a minimum amount per hour that most workers in the UK are entitled to be paid. There are different rates of minimum wage depending on workers' age and whether they are apprentices. The NMW applies to employees aged 16 to 22 years. The government's National Living Wage (NLW) was introduced on 1 April 2016 and applies to employees aged 23 years and over.

On the Annual Survey for Hours and Earnings (ASHE) reference date in April 2021, the NMW and NLW rates were:

  • £8.91 for employees aged 23 years and over

  • £8.36 for employees aged 21 to 22 years

  • £6.56 for employees aged 18 to 20 years

  • £4.62 for employees aged 16 to 17 years

  • £4.30 for apprentices aged 16 to 18 years and those aged 19 years and over who are in the first year of their apprenticeship

Standard Occupational Classification (SOC)

The Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) is a common classification of occupational information for the UK.

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5. Measuring the data

The estimates in this bulletin are based on information gathered from a sample of 1% of employees in the UK. Prior to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, the achieved sample size on Annual Survey for Hours and Earnings (ASHE) was approximately 180,000 each year. However, given the challenges to data collection during the coronavirus pandemic and response rates not recovering, the final achieved sample size was 144,000 for 2020 and 140,000 for 2021. As such, ASHE estimates for 2020 and 2021 are subject to more uncertainty than usual.

All estimates for 2021 are provisional and relate to the pay period that includes 21 April 2021, at which time 3.7 million employees were furloughed under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme (CJRS). Furloughed employee jobs received 80% of normal pay from the scheme, to a maximum £2,500 a month. Employers were able to top up employees' pay, but they were not required to. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has estimated that approximately half of employees had their pay topped up for both years.

The ASHE collected actual payments made to the employee and the hours on which this pay were calculated, which in the case of furloughed employees would be their usual hours.

As with 2020, we have revised the exclusion criteria for the 2020 and 2021 data tables to be "those employees who were not furloughed but whose pay was affected by absence". This results in the ASHE data tables excluding 4.4% of employee jobs in 2021 and 6.0% in 2020 (compared with approximately 5% in previous years).

The 2021 ASHE estimates have been weighted using the reweighted Labour Force Survey (LFS) weights from July 2021 and do not use the most recent weights. You can find out more about the impact the most recent weights have had in our Impact of reweighting on Labour Force Survey key indicators: 2022 article.

The 2021 ASHE estimates in this article have been weighted using the new Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) 2020 definitions of occupation. More information on the weighting process and further information about ASHE can be found in our Quality and Methodology Information (QMI) report.

Our Guide to interpreting ASHE estimates addresses common questions about the data.

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6. Strengths and limitations

The strengths and limitations of the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) can be found in our Qualityand Methodology Information (QMI) report and our Guide to sources of data of earnings and income.

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Contact details for this Statistical bulletin

Nicola White
earnings@ons.gov.uk
Telephone: +44 1633 456120