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Teachers' Salaries in 2020 and Beyond: Will the Czech Republic Rest on Its Laurels?

1 September, 2021

The level of teachers' pay is a factor in attracting interest in teaching as a profession. Raising interest is necessary not only in order to recruit sufficient numbers of teachers, but to allow selectivity into the profession, allowing for more emphasis on the quality of teaching, a new study by Daniel Münich and Vladimír Smolka from the think-tank IDEA at CERGE-EI suggests.

In relative terms, teachers' pay in the Czech Republic was lower than in most EU and OECD countries until 2017/18. Thanks to an unusually fast pace of growth in the past few years, in 2021, teacher's pay will almost reach the average for OECD countries and the EU, which is around 90% of the average salary for a university-educated employee in the national economy.

To maintain the current relative level of teachers' pay in the coming years, the Czech government will have to raise teachers' salaries at the rate of growth of nominal wages in the national economy. During the next few years, it will also be necessary to budget for a much-needed increase in numbers of teachers. The additional funds required for the education budget will further reduce the already low pay of many other pedagogical and non-pedagogical professionals in our schools.

In 2020, just as in 2019, the greatest growth in relative pay went to the youngest teachers, whose salaries are far more attractive than those of their elder colleagues. Teachers in the middle age category of 30–49 currently have the lowest relative pay. This is because Czech teachers' salaries increase only very slowly with years of experience (even by international comparison), although they increase throughout the whole teaching career. This is evidently a consequence of the continuing absence of career development system and the absence of teaching quality standards in the Czech teaching profession.

When comparing teachers' pay over time or across countries, it is important to consider the details of the methodology of calculations. There are many reasons values may vary for apparently identical indicators, and these are not always sufficiently elucidated in discussions accompanying the methodologies and data sources used. It is crucial to be clear, for example, whether or not the pay includes all components of pay, including end-of- year bonuses, whether the pay includes that of the school principals, whether only teacher's salaries are counted, or if there is a broader range of pedagogical positions included. It is also important to note whether private school data is included, whether the figures are only for primary schools, or if they are for a whole regional education sector including preschools and upper-secondary schools.

Full text of the study (in Czech)