Green - Labour market
Cap organisation pay ratios at 10:1
Limit highest total remuneration to ten times the lowest full-time-equivalent pay in each organisation.
Last updated: May 2026.
Binding cap
The estimate models an economy-wide legal cap, not the existing quoted-company disclosure regime.
- Current law requires disclosure, not a cap.
- FTSE 100 CEO pay gives only a scale check.
- Avoidance risk is very high.
Core trade-offs
Lowest-paid workers may gain if firms lift the floor. Senior workers, shareholders, customers and taxpayers may bear costs. Firms may also outsource low-paid roles.
- Low-paid workers may gain.
- High earners lose taxable pay.
- Firms may restructure around the cap.
Illustrative fiscal impact
-GBP 0.5bn to +GBP 5.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 1.2bn.
- Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Gross costs are separated from tax, NI and benefit offsets.
- Private business costs are not automatically fiscal costs.
- Behavioural responses widen the range materially.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2027-28
- Jobs: Likely negative at the margin if firms outsource, split entities or relocate senior roles.
- Wages: Could lift bottom pay, cut top pay, or both; incidence is uncertain.
- Prices: Some firms may raise prices if they increase bottom pay.
- GDP / productivity: Likely negative under a strict economy-wide cap; talent and restructuring risks are material.
Assessment
This is not a normal labour-market regulation. A binding 10:1 cap would change remuneration design, outsourcing incentives and executive location choices. The fiscal range is deliberately wide because the taxable remuneration above the threshold is not public.
Confidence: Low. The missing quantity is taxable remuneration above each organisation-specific 10:1 threshold.
Main risks
- Avoidance design: Firms can shift pay into contractors, partnerships, shares, overseas roles or separate entities.
- Tax-base loss: Cut high PAYE remuneration can reduce tax receipts unless profits or low pay rise.
- Output risk: Rigid pay compression may reduce senior-role location or firm productivity.
Safeguards
- Define total remuneration comprehensively.
- Include contractors and group entities.
- Require HMRC/Companies House audit data.
Academic evidence
Farber, Herbst, Kuziemko and Naidu, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2021
Unions and Inequality Over the Twentieth Century
Unionisation historically reduced wage inequality, partly by compressing pay within and across workplaces.
Explains who may gain from collective-bargaining reforms.
DiNardo, Fortin and Lemieux, Econometrica, 1996
Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992
Labour-market institutions can compress wage inequality through wage floors and bargaining power.
Useful for distributional channels, not for claiming free fiscal gains.
Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992 (1996)
UK government evidence
BEIS, 2018
The Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018: Q&A
Quoted companies with more than 250 UK employees already disclose pay ratios.
Provides the reporting baseline before a binding cap.
The Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018: Q&A (2018)
High Pay Centre, 2026
Fat Cat Day 2026
The High Pay Centre reports median FTSE 100 CEO pay of about GBP 4.4m.
Sizes executive-pay exposure, but not full-economy remuneration.
HMRC, 2026
Rates and thresholds for employers 2026 to 2027
HMRC thresholds define income tax, employee NI, employer NI and statutory-pay recovery.
Used for tax and statutory-payment offsets.
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology for cap organisation pay ratios at 10:1 Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- The Companies (Miscellaneous Reporting) Regulations 2018: Q&A UK government guidance - BEIS, 2018
- Fat Cat Day 2026 Research briefing - High Pay Centre, 2026
- Rates and thresholds for employers 2026 to 2027 UK government guidance - HMRC, 2026
- Unions and Inequality Over the Twentieth Century Academic article - Farber, Herbst, Kuziemko and Naidu, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2021
- Labor Market Institutions and the Distribution of Wages, 1973-1992 Academic article - DiNardo, Fortin and Lemieux, Econometrica, 1996
- Workers' Charter 2026 Party policy source - Green Party of England and Wales, 2026
Other Green policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.