Compensation (Milkovich) Terms
ability to pay
The ability of a firm to meet employee wage demands while remaining profitable; a frequent issue in contract negotiations with unions; this is constrained by its ability to compete in its product market
ability
an individual's capability to engage in a specific behavior
appeals processes
mechanisms are created to handle pay disagreements- provide a forum for employees and managers to voice their complaints and receive a hearing
across-the-board increases
A general adjustment that provides equal increases to all employees
agency theory
A theory of motivation that depicts exchange relationships in terms of two parties: agents and principals. According to this theory, both sides of the exchange will seek the most favorable exchange possible and will act opportunistically if given a chance. As applied to executive compensation, agency theory would place part of the executive's pay at risk to motivate the executive (agent) to act in the best interests of the shareholders (principals) rather in the executive's own self-interests.
access discrimination
Discrimination that focuses on the staffing and allocation decisions made by employers. It denies particular jobs, promotions, or training opportunities to qualified women or minorities; illegal under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
affirmative action
Firms with government contracts must take affirmative steps to hire women and minorities in proportion to their presence in the labor force.
ADA
Legislation passed in 1990 that requires that reasonable accommodations be provided to permit employees with disabilities to perform the essential elements of a job
ADEA of 1967
Legislation that makes nonfederal employees age 40 and over a protected class relative to their treatment in pay, benefits, and other personnel actions. The 1990 amendment is called the Older Workers Benefit Protection Act.
all-salaried workforce
Pay approach in which not only exempt employees (FLSA), who traditionally are paid a salary rather than an hourly rate, but also nonexempt employees receive a prescribed amount of money each pay period that does not primarily depend on the number of hours worked.
alternation ranking
a job evaluation method that involves ordering the job description alternately at each extreme.