HC Deb 26 May 1989 vol 153 cc766-7W
Mr. Ken Hargreaves

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence if he will publish in theOfficial Report a table setting out the pay of locally entered teachers employed on British bases in Germany and United Kingdom-based main scale teachers pay for each year from 1982 to the latest available date.

Mr. Sainsbury

[holding answer 22 May 1989]: I will write to my hon. Friend.

Mr. Ken Hargreaves

To ask the Secretary of State for Defence how many locally entered teachers employed on British bases in Germany were(a) scale 1, (b) scale 2, (c) scale 3, and (d) scale 4 teachers each year since 1982 to the latest available date.

Mr. Sainsbury

[holding answer 22 May 1989]:

1. The numbers were as follows:

2. Numbers employed following the 1988 restructuring of scales 1 to 3 into a single main scale were:

1F/T 2P/T
1 September 19883 275 58 333
1 April 19893 4 286 91 377
1 Full-time.
2 Part-time.
3 Includes teachers in receipt of incentive allowances.
4 Latest available date.

Great Britain employees in employment
Thousands
December 1979
All All males All females Of which full time females
Coal extraction and solid fuels (111)2 2992 287.8 11.4 8.7
Iron and steel (2210) 186.1 170.1 15.9 13.3
Shipbuilding and repairing (3610) 129.2 120.0 9.2 6.5
Engineering (32, 33, 34, 37) 1,990.6 1485.7 504.9 401.8
Construction (5) 1,207.9 1101.5 106.5 63.5

December 19881
All All males Of which full time males All females Of which full time females
Coal extraction and solid fuels (111)2 127.3 123.8 123.7 3.5 2.4
Iron and steel (2210) 72.2 66.4 n/a 5.8 5.1
Shipbuilding and repairing (3610) 66.8 60.6 n/a 6.2 4.6
Engineering (32, 33, 34, 37) 1,485.4 1,123.4 1,1154 362.0 307.8
Construction (5) 1,019.5 898.8 884.6 120.7 67.5
1 The latest date for which comparable figures are available.
2 Figures in brackets denote divisions, groups, classes, and activity headings of the Standard Industrial Classification 1980.

n/a Not available.

The estimates are unadjusted for the effects of seasonal variations. Estimates for iron and steel and shipbuilding and repairing are subject to severe potential estimation error due to the relatively small number of employees in the industries.

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