HRM Chapter 11
Pay Policy Line
A mathematical expression that describes the relationship between a job's pay and its job evaluation points.
Comparable Worth
A public policy that advocates remedies for any undervaluation of women's jobs (pay equity)
Efficiency Wage Theory
A theory stating that wages influence worker productivity.
Job Evaluation
An administrative procedure used to measure internal job worth.
Compa-Ratio
An index of the correspondence between actual and intended pay.
Key Jobs
Benchmark jobs used in pay surveys, that have relatively stable content and are common to many organizations
Benchmarking
Comparing an organization's practices against those of the competition.
Rate Ranges
Different employees in the same job may have different pay rates.
Exempt
Employees who are not covered by FLSA. Not eligible for overtime pay.
Pay Grades
Jobs of similar worth or content grouped together for pay administration purposes
Minimum Wage
Lowest amount that employers are legally allowed to pay; FLSA permits subminimum wage to workers under the age of 20 for 90 days
Skill-based pay
Pay based on the skills employees acquire and are capable of using.
Delayering
Reducing the number of job levels within an organization.
Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
The 1938 law that est. the minimum wage and overtime pay.
Pay Level
The avg. pay, including wages, salaries, and bonuses, of jobs in an organization
Compensable Factors
The characteristics of jobs that an organization values and chooses to pay for.
Range Spread
The distance between the min. and max. amounts in a pay grade
Pay Structure
The relative pay of different jobs (job structure) and how much they are paid (pay level).
Job Structure
The relative pay of jobs in an organization
Nonkey Jobs
Unique jobs to an organization. Cannot be directly valued or compared through the use of market survey