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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

John Lewis Partnership brings back annual staff bonus thanks to record £4.9bn sales

Better results mean almost 80,000 members of staff will get a 3 per cent bonus – or one-and-a-half weeks’ wages

John Lewis in Birmingham(Image: Jacob King/PA Wire)

The John Lewis Partnership has brought back its annual staff bonus after posting record sales.

The chain was forced to scrap the payouts last year for the first time since 1953 because of lockdown losses.

Better results this year mean almost 80,000 members of staff will get a 3 per cent bonus – or one-and-a-half weeks’ wages – in April, worth a combined £46 million.

Staff will also get a 2 per cent raise on top of a management pledge to pay the real living wage to help meet the rising cost of living.

Amid warnings of price hikes and “significant” cost pressures, John Lewis, which also owns upmarket supermarket chain Waitrose, said it had seen underlying annual profits rebound by 38 per cent.

They rose to £181 million in the year to January 29 thanks to a record £4.9 billion in sales, which were up 8 per cent on a like-for-like basis.

Chairwoman Dame Sharon White hailed a “good start” to the group’s five-year overhaul, but warned of “uncertainties” amid the Ukraine conflict and rising inflation, with prices having to increase in some areas.

Speaking to the PA news agency, she said the group is facing “significant persistent pressures” on costs.