On the Friday before Labor Day, President Joe Biden issued a decision that has upset the federal labor force he has done much to please.
The White House, in a letter to Congress, officially proposed an average 2 percent pay raise for civilian federal workers in 2025 — less than half the proposed 4.5 percent bump for military personnel and way below the 7.4 percent hike pushed by congressional Democrats.
Bidenâ€
“This below-market pay increase fails to reflect trends in the private sector, where wages and salaries have risen, and unemployment rates are low,� said William Shackelford, president of the National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association (NARFE). “Nor does it keep up with persistent inflation, leaving civil servants with diminished purchasing power.�
Two government reports have differing perspectives on federal pay compared with other employers.
In April, the Congressional Budget Office said “overall, total compensation was about 5 percent higher, on average, for federal workers than for similar private-sector workers.� That was according to data from 2022, before the 2023 and 2024 pay raises. Total compensation includes pay and benefits. In a February report not mentioning benefits, the Federal Salary Council said feds overall were paid 27.5 percent less than nonfederal workers in similar occupations in 2023.
Democratic Rep. Gerry Connolly (Va.), whose legislation with Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) calls for the 7.4 percent jump, said he splits with Biden on “two fundamental� points — the below-inflation-rate increase and the lack of pay raise parity with the military. Pay parity generally has been the case in recent years, so “this sets us back,� Connolly said by telephone.
“Is inflation higher for the military than it is for civilians?� he asked rhetorically. “Is the cost of living different on military base and or in military communities than it is elsewhere in the United States? Are there unique inflationary or cost pressures affecting the military that civilian workforce does not face? The answer to all of that, of course, is no.�
Although Bidenâ€
Despite the disparities with recent increases and the inflation rate, Biden said the 2 percent bump “will continue to allow the Federal Government to employ a well‑qualified Federal workforce on behalf of the American people, acknowledging wage growth in the labor market and fiscal constraints.�
Curiously for a president who proclaimed “we have the best economy in the worldâ€� during this yearâ€
The law “authorizes me to implement alternative plans for pay adjustments,â€� he wrote, adding “because of ‘national emergency or serious economic conditions affecting the general welfare,â€
What national emergency? What serious economic conditions?
The letter doesnâ€
Federal worker advocates often cite the Federal Salary Council figures on pay disparity when calling for pay increases, but no one really expects budget-busting bumps in the vicinity of the huge gap cited in its reports.
The appropriate level of federal pay compared to nonfederal salaries has long fueled arguments between Democrats and Republicans, conservative think tanks and federal unions, with Democrats and unions favoring higher increases. Republicans on the House Oversight and Reform Committee, which oversees the federal workforce, did not respond to requests for comment.
In January, when Connolly, who represents a slice of Northern Virginia where many federal workers reside, proposed the 7.4 percent hike in the Federal Adjustment of Income Rates (FAIR) Act, he said: “The federal government has a history of chronic underinvestment in its most valuable asset: the federal workforce … A lack of competitive pay hurts the recruitment, retention, and quality of the civil service.�
Now the strong Democrat and vocal federal employee supporter says the presidentâ€
Connolly didnâ€
Disappointed union leaders generally have high praise for Biden. But even loved ones disappoint.
American Federation of Government Employees President Everett Kelley called Biden “the most pro-union president of my lifetimeâ€� in 2022, after the White House quickly reversed the Trump administrationâ€
“Letâ€
“President Joe Biden has been great for federal employees throughout his administration,� Erwin added, “which is what makes this proposed 2 percent adjustment so mystifying.�