11:32 GMT
Nicholas Barrett
BBC Verify researcher
With a fresh strike by resident – or junior – doctors due to happen just before Christmas, this morning on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme there was a heated discussion about whether their pay has risen or fallen.
The answer depends on how far back you go and what measure of inflation you use to calculate how their pay has been affected by rising prices over time.
The doctors’ union – the British Medical Association – has looked at pay since 2008 and has used the retail price index (RPI) measure of inflation (which includes housing costs) to calculate how much it has been “eroded” by rising prices.
RPI has been criticised for exaggerating price rises and lost its official statistics status in 2013, external.
Using this measure, resident doctors’ pay was around 19% lower in 2024/2025 than it was in 2008, according to the Nuffield Trust health think tank, external.
But using the standard measure of inflation, the consumer prices index (CPI), it was down around 7%.
The government says resident doctors’ pay has risen and is using a different starting point – 2015 – and CPI.
Since 2015, resident doctors’ pay has risen by 7.9% on CPI and fallen by 4.2% on RPI, according to the Nuffield Trust.
What’s happened to resident doctors’ pay since 2008?