The House is expected to pass a bill by freshman Rep. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., which would extend a federal pay freeze first enacted in 2011. The legislation is intended to override an executive order would have raised federal salaries by 0.5% in March.
“These pay raises are not merit-based and apply to bureaucrats whose total compensation averages 16% more than their private sector counterparts,” explained DeSantis in an op-ed for The Hill. He also claimed that his law would save taxpayers an estimated $11 billion.
According to the Bureau for Labor Statistics, annual mean wage for a federal employee in 2011 was $70,100, though some federal employees make as little as $26,360. However, the Republican-controlled House Oversight and Government Reform Committee says [PDF] the figure in 2012 was closer to $72,714 “during the so-called pay freeze,” due to other types of salary increases such as merit pay. By contrast, the median household income overall between 2007 and 2011 was $52,762.









