PRIMARY headteachers have welcomed the latest “enhanced” pay offer from the Scottish Government.

Greg Dempster, general secretary of the Association of Headteachers and Deputes in Scotland (AHDS), said the proposal was “meaningfully better” than the current deal.

The comments come after the Educational Institute of Scotland recommended a move to a ballot on strike action in a bid to secure a ten per cent increase - a move backed by the AHDS.

If it goes ahead it will be the first national strike over pay since the 1980s when Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister.

However, since then the Scottish Government has made an enhanced proposal to the EIS and has asked council umbrella body Cosla to also agree it at a meeting later this week.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said the proposal would mean all teachers receiving a minimum nine per cent increase between January 2018 and April 2019, with a further three per cent in April 2020.

Mr Dempster said: “Our calculations tell us this proposal is meaningfully better than the current offer over the period of the pay award.

“We hope that Cosla will make this enhanced offer, funded by the Scottish Government, following their meeting.

“If the offer is made, AHDS would consult members on whether the offer should be accepted and would strongly recommend to members that they support acceptance.”

However, primary headteachers have also called for reform of the current system which decides how much additional cash promoted teachers get paid.

Mr Dempster said the so-called toolkit failed to properly measure different roles such as headteachers in charge of a number of different schools. It also fails to ensure “meaningful financial incentives” for school deputies to move into headship.

He added: “We were very pleased that a review of the toolkit sizing formed part of the offer. This is very important to our members.

“We are keen that this commitment remains in any new offer and that it is progressed quickly when the pay award has been settled.”

Ms Sturgeon told the Scottish Parliament last week: “The Scottish Government has made an enhanced proposal to the EIS and has asked Cosla to also agree it.

“The proposal ... is a clear indication of our commitment to recruit and retain teachers, and it is the best offer in the public sector anywhere in the United Kingdom.

“I urge Cosla to adopt the proposal as a formal offer, which is a necessary step to resolving the dispute. If it does so, I urge the teaching unions to consider the offer favourably.”