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Bricklayers’ pay up 20% as price hikes threaten recovery

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  1. Our money halved overnight big developers didnt half the house prices all we want is a fair wage and I agree as do many others 50k is not out of the way .soon they will be no one to build with no apprentices and people keeping out of the game .50k a year and holiday money youll have them queing up

  2. Will this industry never learn? Every time we have a down turn we slash wages, bully subcontractors into ever lower prices, then moan and panic when the upturn arrives and everyone wants a better deal.
    I am passionate about this industry, but for those on the outside looking in it is a poor advert.
    Further more, the industry wages have been falling behind other sectors for years, along with the percentage margins.

  3. You lot didn’t worry much when you cut our money by 30% over the last 4 years I am lucky enough to have a wife in work who has subsidised me for those four years, otherwise I would have left the industry.
    Brickies on 40k a year – don’t make me laugh. Over the last 4 years we have been lucky to make 15k, someone is making money but not brickies. Yes our money has gone up in the last 6 months but still not back to what it was 4 years ago.
    Contracts are not worth the paper they are printed on contract managers had the ‘take it or there’s the door attitude’ but now things are changing.

  4. We deserve 40.000 a year, we are treated just like the british weather. think…no brickies no houses, wise up developer! Before it’s too late.

  5. What is not being talked about is the extremely high level of corruption in the construction industry. On every site I have worked on, the small independent tradesmen (who are the most skilled) are talking to each other about the projects that they haven’t been paid for. This is widespread and has happened to everyone that I meet and not just an extreme minority of homeowners that the media has made fashionable to label all tradesmen cowboys based on an infinitely small minority of traders.

  6. What people don’t realise is the manual labour and what it does to your body being a brickie, let alone the stresses the job brings? In my opinion £50,000 + is not unreasonable for a bricklayer these days.

  7. I have to agree with the comments above its a disgrace how we were treated when the recession hit.I was a foreman with 20 plus top trowels working with us. We only had good rates 2 years prior to the recession then they went to 1999 rates overnight.
    Main contractors didn’t care as normal and the jobs we did get were tight as hell.
    Subby bashing was reborn main contractors taking jobs on with no proffit margin was only pointing at one thing.5 years on and they’re making out as tho rates are brilliant but they aint touching pre recession rates to this day and if the cost of living has risen then we should be getting 450-500 tho and 13m2 100mm block to the lad oh and paid for everything else ties, lintels etc not all in for 280 p th.

    Footballers paid daft money as their career is short every brickie I know has several issues from bad back , knackered elbows etc. so a true wage in this booming economy (lol) should be 1k a week for 5 days which gives you half a chance of survival if you factor in the bad weather days….
    should create a bricky club and drive the prices up ourselves as in all fairness we have some of the best brickies in the world.

  8. Wise up fellow tradesmen!
    the average house has 12000 bricks and 350M2 block plus bits and pieces OK
    We a 4+2 gang were getting on average £10,000.00 for building this average house which sold for £375,000 to make any money we had to complete this house in 12 days, that is hard graft.
    we are mugs but we have to work !!
    I say make hay whist the sun is shining my friends and get what you can before this bubble bursts again.

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