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    Still working on the ever expanding document that will be our response to the consultation on T&S (14000 words and counting!) and I could do with your help again. I have worked out that travel and subsistence costs have risen substantially over the last 7 years - 13% for fuel, 10% for accommodation and 24% for food but our figures show that, since 2012, rates have pretty much remained stagnant. I don't have figures for prior to 2012 available so I wondered if you'd be able to give me an idea of rate differences between now and 2008???
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    #2
    Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View Post
    Still working on the ever expanding document that will be our response to the consultation on T&S (14000 words and counting!) and I could do with your help again. I have worked out that travel and subsistence costs have risen substantially over the last 7 years - 13% for fuel, 10% for accommodation and 24% for food but our figures show that, since 2012, rates have pretty much remained stagnant. I don't have figures for prior to 2012 available so I wondered if you'd be able to give me an idea of rate differences between now and 2008???
    I believe a typical c# developer has been on roughly £300-350 outside London since about 2002.. Rates haven't changed at all...
    merely at clientco for the entertainment

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      #3
      Currently at the mid way point of the high and low I have earned over the past 8 years, a spread of approx. 180pd.

      Highs in my experience don't last long and get cut back, lows don't last long because I don't renew.
      Never has a man been heard to say on his death bed that he wishes he'd spent more time in the office.

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        #4
        Originally posted by Scrag Meister View Post
        Currently at the mid way point of the high and low I have earned over the past 8 years.

        Highs in my experience don't last long and get cut back, lows don't last long because I don't renew.
        Scraggy!! How you diddling?
        'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!

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          #5
          Originally posted by Scrag Meister View Post
          Currently at the mid way point of the high and low I have earned over the past 8 years, a spread of approx. 180pd.

          Highs in my experience don't last long and get cut back, lows don't last long because I don't renew.
          Yep, exactly my experience as well SM.
          "I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
          - Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...

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            #6
            My last gig paid precisely £16 a day more than my first one in 1996. A rough calculation shows that my average day rate has been around £50 a day above that original rate.

            So no, on average I don't think average day rates have changed in the slightest over the years, and Banks, CLAS consultants and SAP-knowledge people apart (all paid more by around 20%, but that's the side-effect of closed shops), the industry average is pretty much what I've been getting.

            However, the rise in permie salaries over that time has been pretty much constant; coders that used to get around £25k would now be on £45k pa.
            Blog? What blog...?

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              #7
              Thanks guys - actual figures would be especially useful as I am comparing rates to costs - have worked out that hotel prices in London have risen about 30% between 2008-2015 and subsistence costs about 24%. Bet rates haven't gone up anywhere near that
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                #8
                Originally posted by LisaContractorUmbrella View Post
                Thanks guys - actual figures would be especially useful as I am comparing rates to costs - have worked out that hotel prices in London have risen about 30% between 2008-2015 and subsistence costs about 24%. Bet rates haven't gone up anywhere near that
                Mine's varied because I've been taking gigs nationally but general going rate for my line of work in Greater Manchester area is £300-350/day and hasn't changed over that time. I think warchests, experience and getting into the negotiations of contracting properly help boost your rate but the rates themselves are no better as a general rule.

                I know someone who was on £550 in London in 2008 and is again on £550 in London having had higher and lower rates.
                The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist

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                  #9
                  After the rate cuts, Lloydes and RBS for example people who worked for me for £450 a day in 2011 are now on £296 !!! That have remained at the banks

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by tarbera View Post
                    After the rate cuts, Lloydes and RBS for example people who worked for me for £450 a day in 2011 are now on £296 !!! That have remained at the banks
                    If you are accepting a rate cut of 34% you really aren't valuing your skills or your skills really aren't that great.
                    merely at clientco for the entertainment

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