Planner pay packets upsized

3 June 2008
| By George Liondis |

Financial planners emerged a major winner in the 2008 Hays Banking Salary Survey with an average salary increase of 6.7 per cent.

The annual survey, which included more than 80 banking sector roles across Australia and New Zealand, found that most employers increased salaries by 3 to 6 per cent.

The financial planning sector was what Hays termed “the primary exception” with average salaries for qualified paraplanners, for example, up from $70,000 to $75,000 in Sydney, from $55,000 to $65,000 in Canberra and from $58,000 to $65,000 in Auckland.

“Steady jobs growth is still the dominant feature of Australasia’s recruitment market and there are plenty of examples of significant salary increases that testify to its ongoing strength,” Hays Banking senior regional director Jane McNeill said.

“The slowdown in the banking and related sectors is very contained. As yet, we have seen no evidence of any negative impact across the broader job market. In fact, the number of new jobs registered remains at record levels, the demand for specialist skills is up and we’re doing more overseas campaigning for talent than ever before.”

McNeill said half the respondents expect permanent staffing levels to increase over the next year, with only 4 per cent predicting a decrease.

According to Hays, salaries remained generally stable over the past 12 months, with many employers focusing on improving company benefits, work environments and performance-based bonuses.

Residential, corporate and commercial lending professionals also experienced notable salary increases, particularly in Adelaide, Perth and Auckland, as did rural lending staff in Perth and funds management staff in Melbourne and Auckland.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

Recommended for you

sub-bgsidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

MARKET INSIGHTS

GG

So shareholders lose a dividend plus have seen the erosion of value. Qantas decides to clawback remuneration from Alan ...

2 months ago
Denise Baker

This is why I left my last position. There was no interest in giving the client quality time, it was all about bumping ...

2 months ago
gonski

So the Hayne Royal Commission has left us with this. What a sad day for the financial planning industry. Clearly most ...

2 months ago

A Sydney-based financial adviser has been banned from providing financial services in the interest of consumer protection after failing to act on conduct concerns. ...

2 weeks 4 days ago

Financial advisory group AZ NGA has announced a strategic partnership with a $294 billion global investment manager to support its acquisition plans....

3 weeks 6 days ago

ASIC has cancelled the AFSL of a $250 million Sydney fund manager, one of two AFSL cancellations announced by the corporate regulator....

2 weeks 2 days ago