KEY POINTS
  • The governor of the Bank of England has sparked serious backlash after telling Britons they should not ask for a pay raise this year.
  • British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and workers unions have been among those to decry his comments.
  • Bailey told the BBC last week that businesses should assert “restraint” in pay negotiations to help battle 30-year high inflation.
Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, speaks at a press conference on the Monetary Policy Report at the Bank of England on Feb. 3, 2022 in London, England.

The governor of the Bank of England has sparked serious backlash after telling Britons they should not ask for a pay raise this year, even as the country grapples with its greatest cost of living crisis in decades.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and workers unions have been among those to decry Andrew Bailey, who last week said that employees should not pressure their bosses into boosting wages as the economy needs time to recalibrate amid soaring inflation.