compensation ch.1
___ in ___ of the uninsured in the US are from working families
8 in 10
incentive effect
Degree to which pay influences individual and aggregate motivation
income protection
Medical insurance, retirement programs, and life insurance
team incentives
Offers higher pay if the team performance warrants it
procedural fairness
The process used to make pay decisions the way a pay decision is made may be equally as important to employees as the results of the decision
pay relationships within the organization affect all three compensation objectives
They affect employee decisions to stay with the organization, to become more flexible by investing in additional training, or to seek greater responsibility.
total compensation
Total compensation returns are more transactional. They include pay received directly as cash (e.g., base, merit, incentives, cost-of-living adjustments) and indirectly as benefits (e.g., pensions, medical insurance, programs to help balance work and life demands, brightly colored uniforms).39 So pay comes in different forms, and programs to pay people can be designed in a wide variety of ways
the hourly compensation for mexican manufacturing work are about __% of those paid in
US
total cash compensation
Wages + Bonuses
employees may see compensation as
a return in an exchange between their employer and themselves, as an entitlement for being an employee of the company, as an incentive to decide to take/stay in a job and invest in performing well in that job, or as a reward for having done so
stockholders have a particular interest in executive pay in that interests of executives are
aligned with those of shareholders
incentives
also tie pay increases to performance.51 However, incentives differ from merit adjustments. First, incentives do not increase the base wage and so must be reearned each pay period. Second, the potential size of the incentive payment will generally be known beforehand. Whereas merit pay programs evaluate past performance of an individual and then decide on the size of the increase, what must happen in order to receive the incentive payment is called out very specifically ahead of time
merit bonuses
based on a performance rating but unlike merit increases, are paid in the form of a lump sum rather than becoming a permanent part of the base salary may now become more important that traditional merit increases
how people view compensation affects how they
behave; it does not mean the same thing to everyone, need to recognize different perspectives
the network of returns is more likely to be useful if
bonuses, development opportunities, and promotions all work together
managing compensation means answering the
so what question-so what is the impact of this policy, technique, decision
an incentive program relies on an objective measure of performance, whereas a merit increase program typically relies on a
subjective rating of performance
a firm's compensation decisions have a ____ effect
temporal
objectives serve several purposes such as
guide decision of pay system develop innovative new products
small employers are much less likely than large employers to offer
health insurance to their employees
incentives are frequently referred to as
variable pay
management
means ensuring that the right people get the right pay for achieving the right objectives in the right way. The greatest system design in the world is useless without competent management.
society perspective
measure of justice-inequalities between pay for men and women (women earn 82% of what men earn under even best case scenario, employers spend about 44 cents for benefits on top of every dollar paid for wages and salaries
basic objectives of pay systems
efficiency, fairness, ethics, and compliance with laws and regulations. Efficiency can be stated more specifically: (1) improving performance, increasing quality, delighting customers and stockholders, and (2) controlling labor costs.
people in the US worry about losing manufacturing jobs to
mexico, china, and other nations
motivation, together with employee ability and work/organizational design determines e
employee behaviors such as performance
Pay can influence employee motivation and behavior in two ways
pay can affect the motivational intensity, direction, and persistence of current emploees
external competitiveness
pay comparisons with competitors. How much do we wish to pay in comparison to what other employers pay?
salary
pay for employees who are exempt from regulations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and hence do not receive overtime pay.44 Managers and professionals usually fit this category. Their pay is calculated at an annual or monthly rate rather than hourly, because hours worked do not need to be recorded.
the way people are paid affects the
quality of their work and their attitude toward customers, willingness to be flexible, learn new skills, or suggest innovations
relational returns
recognition and status, employment security, challenging work, and opportunities to learn. Other forms of relational return might include personal satisfaction from successfully facing new challenges, teaming with great co-workers, receiving new uniforms, and the =total return
compensation
refers to all forms of financial returns and tangible services and benefits employees receive as part of an employment relationship.
the peformance objective of incentives may be
expense reduction, volume increases, customer satisfaction, revenue growth, return on investments, increase in stock value
employee contributions (nature of pay mix)
important policy decision since it directly affects employee's attitudes and work behaviors
some believe that using stock to pay employees creates a sense of ownership that will
improve performance, which will in turn increase stockholder wealth
performance based pay affects fairness in that employees need to understad the basis for judging performance
in order to beleive that their pay is fair
job losses or gains in a country over time are partly a function of
relative labor costs across countries
shareholders can influence executive compensation decisions in a variety of way such as
shareholder proposals and election of directors in proxy votes
by paying executives on the basis of company performance measures such as
shareholder return-hope is that company performance will be higher
roughly __% of americans don't have health care
14%;41 million
individuals and businesses in the US spend
2.9 trillion per year or 17.4 percent of its economic output on health care
productivity in China is about __% of that in the US
22
mexican worker productivity is about __% of US workers
30
labor costs can account for
50% of total costs
hourly compensation costs
Permit a comparison of typical expenditures of compensation across countries based on the PPP exchange rate China-3.38 mexico-6.82 czech republic-12.17 germany-49.98
the answer to how strongly CEO pay and sharholder return are related depends on how
carefully the timing and measurement of performance are addressed
internal alignment
comparisons among jobs or skill levels inside a single organization. Jobs and people's skills are compared in terms of their relative contributions to the organization's business objectives. Internal alignment pertains to the pay rates both for employees doing equal work and for those doing dissimilar work. In fact, determining what is an appropriate difference in pay for people performing different work is one of the key challenges facing managers.
compliance
conforming to federal and state compensation laws and regulations. If laws change, pay systems may need to change, too, to ensure continued compliance. As companies go global, they must comply with the laws of all the countries in which they operate.
In English, compensation means something that
counterbalances, offsets, or makes up for something else. if we look at the origin of the word in different languages, we get a sense of the richness of the meaning, which combines entitlement, return, and reward.
In today's China, compensation takes on a more subtle meaning.
dai yu, is used. It refers to how you are being treated—your wages, benefits, training opportunities, and so on. When people talk about compensation, they ask each other about the dai yu in their companies. Rather than assuming that everyone is entitled to the same treatment, the meaning of compensation now includes a broader sense of returns as well as entitlement.
as the unemployment rate increases, health coverage
declines further
sorting effect
different types of pay strategies may cause different types of people to apply to and stay with (i.e., self-select into) an organization. In the case of pay structure/level, it may be that higher pay levels help organizations to attract more high-quality applicants, allowing them to be more selective in their hiring. Similarly, higher pay levels may improve employee retention.
the impact of pay decisions on expenses is one result that is
easily measured and well understood
fairness
fair treatment for all employees by recognizing both employee contributions (e.g., higher pay for greater performance, experience, or training) and employee needs (e.g., a fair wage as well as fair procedures)
the pay indivuduals receive in return for the work they perform and the value they create is usually the major source of their
financial security
some pay systems set base wage as a
function of the skill or education an employee possesses, common for engineers and schoolteachers
present-value perspective shifts the comparison of today's intial offers to consideration of
future bonuses, merit increases, and promotions
merit increases
given as increments to base pay and are based on performance.45 According to surveys, 90 percent of U.S. firms use merit pay increases.46 An assessment (or rating) of recent past performance is made, with or without a formal performance evaluation. In recent years, merit increase budgets (or average merit increases) have been just under 3 percent, creeping up to 3 percent most recently. Survey data indicate that, on average, an outstanding performer receives a 4.4 percent increase, an average performer a 2.8 percent increase, and a poor performer a 0.4 percent increase
rather than treating pay only as an expense to be minimized, a manager can also use it to
influence employee behaviors and to improve the organizations performance
long term incentives
intended to focus employee efforts on multiyear results. Typically they are in the form of stock ownership or options to buy stock at a fixed price (thus leading to a monetary gain to the degree the stock price later goes up). The belief underlying stock ownership is that employees with a financial stake in the organization will focus on long-term financial objectives: return on investment, market share, return on net assets, and the like.
the external competitiveness and employee contribution decisions should be made
jointly
compensation in japanese is
kyuyo, which is made up of two separate characters (kyu and yo), both meaning "giving something." Kyu is an honorific used to indicate that the person doing the giving is someone of high rank, such as a feudal lord, an emperor, or a samurai leader. Traditionally, compensation is thought of as something given by one's superior. Today, business consultants in Japan try to substitute the word hou-syu, which means "reward" and has no associations with notions of superiors. The many allowances that are part of Japanese compensation systems translate as teate, which means "taking care of something." Teate is regarded as compensation that takes care of employees' financial needs. This concept is consistent with the family, housing, and commuting allowances that are still used in many Japanese companies
because incentives are one time payments, they do not permanently increase
labor costs-when performance declines, incentive pay automatically declines too
wages and benefits are a major focus of
labor unions efforts to serve their members interests
relational returns
learning opportunities, status, challenging work, and so on) are psychological.
Cost-of-living adjustment (COLA)
made on the basis of changes in what other employers are paying for the same work, changes in living costs, or changes in experience or skill. Such provisions are less common than in the past as employers continually try to control fixed costs and link pay increases to individual and/or company performance.
for managers, compensation influences their success in two ways
major expense that must be managed, major determinant of employee attitudes and behaviors
allowances
often grow out of whatever is in short supply
increasingly, white collar work like finance, computer programming, and legal services is also being sent
overseas
incentives explicitly try to influence future behavior whereas merit recognizes
past behavior, which is hoped to influence future behavior
you believe sorting effects matter if
prefer to work in an organization where their pay can be much higher depending on how they perform
base wage
the cash compensation that an employer pays for the work performed reflects the value of the work or skills and ignores differences attributable to individual employees
ethics
the organization cares about how its results are achieved.
incentives can be tied to
the performance of an individual employee, a team of employees, a total business unit, or some combination of individual team, and unit
pay techniques
tie the four basic policies to the pay objectives
work-life balance
time away from work (vacations, jury duty), access to services to meet specific needs (drug counseling, financial planning, referrals for child and elder care), and flexible work arrangements (telecommuting, nontraditional schedules, nonpaid time off). Responding to the changing demographics of the workforce (two-income families or single parents who need work-schedule flexibility so that family obligations can be met), many U.S. employers are giving a higher priority to these benefit forms
external competitiveness decisions -both how much and what forms-have a two fold effect on objectives
to ensure that the pay is sufficient to attract and retain employees—if employees do not perceive their pay as competitive in comparison to what other organizations are offering for similar work, they may be more likely to leave—and (2) to control labor costs so that the organization's prices of products or services can remain competitive in a global economy.
an above market compensation level is most effective and sustainable when it exists
together with above market employee contributions to productivity, quality, customer service, or other important strategic objectives
there is a strong relationship between
total shareholder return and CEO return
nonexempts
workers who are covered by overtime and reporting provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act—nonexempts—have their pay calculated as an hourly wage. Some organizations, such as IBM, Eaton, and Walmart, label all base pay as "salary." Rather than dividing employees into separate categories of salaried and wage earners, they believe that an "all-salaried" workforce reinforces an organizational culture in which all employees are part of the same team. However, merely changing the terminology does not negate the need to comply with the FLSA