MGT 462 Final Study Guide
OSHA
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration - Legislation specifies number of breaks to be provided in an 8-hour workday
Social Security Advantages
- Old age or disability benefits - Dependent benefits - Survival benefits surviving family - Lump-sum payments
Maslow's Needs Hierarchy
- People are motivated by inner needs - Needs form a hierarchy from most basic (food and shelter) to higher order (Self-esteem, love, self-actualization)
Factors for LEAVING
- People who feel unfairly treated in pay react by leaving - Poor performers leave when they pay systems are based on individual performance
Productivity/gain sharing Advantages
- Performance reward links - Productivity and quality improvements - Knowledge of business increases - Fosters teamwork, cooperation
FSLA restricts hours and conditions of employment for minors
- Persons under 18 cannot work in hazardous jobs - Persons under 16 cannot be employed in jobs involving interstate commerce except for nonhazardous work for a parent or guardian
Disparate impact
- Practices that have a differential effect on members or protected groups - Are illegal, unless the differences are work-related
Division Between Direct Wages and Employee Benefits
- Presence of unions adds 30-40% to END employee benefits - Percentage of total cost of employee wages allocated to employee benefits
The Equal Pay Act (1963)
- Prohibits wage discrimination on the basis of gender - Differences in pay between men and women doing equal work are legal if based on: Seniority Merit or quality of performance Quality or quantity of production Some factor other than sex - Requires that jobs be equal and not identical
Broad-Brand
- Provides flexibility and control - Involves collapsing salary grades into a few broad bands, each with a sizable range - Set the # bands or levels - Price the bands/levels (Range midpoint often not used)
Characteristics of promotional pay increases
- Size of increment is approximately double a normal merit increase - Represent a reward to employees for commitment and exemplary performance
Types of Surveys
- Subscriptions/Published Surveys - Custom - On-Line Self-Reported - Practices Surveys
Lump sum (Merit) bonuses
- Substitute for merit pay - Based on performance and rec'd as a bonus, not built into base pay - Viewed as less of an entitlement that merit pay
Reasons for Pay Structures
- To standardize pay practices - Balances internal value of job with external market data - Method to communicate company's pay philosophy and priorities/values
Unions do make a difference in wages
- Union workers earn 9-12% > non-union - Union employees in public sector earn 22% more than their non-union counterparts - Managers in union firms > wages non-union
Unions and Alternative Reward Systems
- When employers face extreme competitive pressures, unions are receptive to alternative reward systems linking pay to performance - Preserves their jobs - 20% of all U.S. collective bargaining agreements permit alternative reward systems that link pay to performance
Peer Group: Two Approaches
- Where you compete for as a company - Where you compete for talent
Employee or Independent Contractor: Internal Revenue Service Tests - Behavior control
- Whether the business has a right to control how a task is done, includes: •Instructions that the business gives to the worker •Training that the business gives to the worker
Economic approach
- Worth compared to value/impact on organization - Value of CEO should correspond to some measure of organizational success
Are benefits effective for attracting and retaining?
- Yes and no - Like compensation, as long as an organization's benefit are reasonably competitive (not significantly under market), not. A primary reason for attracting or retaining talent
Balance scorecard Advantages
- communicates organizational priorities
Workers' Compensation
- form of no-fault insurance Covers work-related injuries, diseases, such as: - Medical care for work-related injuries - Temporary disability benefits - Permanent partial and permanent total disability benefits - Survivor benefits - Rehabilitation
Match job description
Don't match title alone, look at scope of role and match to job descriptions Generally, 60-100% of jobs can be mapped to a benchmark job
Importance of choice on perception of benefits
Employees are not necessarily looking for more benefits but rather for greater choice in the benefits they receive
Expatriates
Employees temporarily working and living in a foreign country
Pay transparency under the Act
Employer's may not prohibit employees from disclosing or discussing their own wages or the wages of others, or firm aiding or encouraging other employees to exercise their rights under the law
Restricted stock plans
Grant of stock at a reduced price with the condition that it may not be sold before a specified date
Exporter
"Headquarters Knows Best" - Using the same system increases flexibility - Basic pay systems designed at headquarters
Localizer
"Think Global, Act Local" - May have many systems and competes by providing locally tailored products or services - Pay designed in local areas
Globalizer
"Think/Act Globally and Locally" - Seek a common system to support consistency across all global locations - Global approaches focus first on global business strategy and then adapt to local conditions
National Systems: Comparative Mind-Set: Germany
"nanny state", government regulation on pay; bonuses not widely used; egalitarian; generous social benefits
Midpoint
(Max + Min) / 2 The salary level that is midway between the minimum and maximum of the salary range.
Range width/spread
(Max-Min)/Min Distance from the salary range minimum to the salary range maximum.
Midpoint Differentials
(Midpoint B - Midpoint A)/Midpoint A The % increase in the midpoints from one salary grade to the next.
Short Term Incentives ("STIs")
- 1 year or less 1. Merit pay 2. Lump-sum bonuses awards 3. Individual spot plans 4. Individual Incentive plans 5. Group/team incentive plans
U.S. Federal Pay Regulations
- 1990: Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) - 1993: Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
Special compensation problems
- A graduate's knowledge is valuable but becomes obsolete - When salary plateaus arise, many make career changes - It's not all about cash - interesting work, cutting edge technology, training - A dual-career ladder provides two ways of progressing in an organization
Stock Option
- A right to purchase Company stock at a future date, at a specified price - During a specified period of time - No investment (cost) at time of insurance (grant)
Organizational strategy
- A sales compensation plan should link desired behaviors to organizational strategy - Salespeople must know when to stress customer service and when to stress sales - Relying on straight sales commission motivates aggressive sales behavior - Incentive plans state the size of incentive and necessary performance objectives
Productivity/gain sharing Disadvantages
- Administratively complicated - Drop-off in quality - Management must open the books - Payouts occur even if company's financial performance is poor
Challenges for German Model
- Aging population - Low birth rates - Early retirement ages - High pension and unemployment benefits - Inflexible labor markets
Social comparisons
- Between levels - Executive salaries bear a consistent relative relationship to subordinates pay
Agency theory
- CEOs will maximize their own pay, sometimes at the expense of shareholders and the company - Compensation should ensure that executives have the best interests of stockholders during decision making.
Union declining in importance
- Change in structure of American industry - Unions no more a solution to workers' problems - Reduced intensity of union organizing efforts - Management's hand stance against unions
Equity theory
- Employees are motivated when perceived outputs are equal to perceived inputs - Fairness!
Compensation and influence on desired behaviors
- Employers want employees to perform in ways that lead to better organizational performance - Organizational success ultimately depends on human behavior which is influenced by HR practices
The Social Contract outside the US
- Employment relationship, viewed as part of the social contract, is more than an exchange between an individual and an employer - Compensation decisions require understanding of these "contracts" - Social contracts evolve over time
CA Fair Pay Act of 2016:
- Existing laws relating to pay equity were expanded in three significant ways: 1. Pay Equity 2. Pay Transparency under the Act 3. Record retention
Employee or Independent Contractor: Internal Revenue Service Tests - Financial control
- Extent to which the worker has unreimbursed business expenses - Extent of the worker's investment - Extent to which the worker makes his or her services available to the relevant market - How pays the worker - Extent to which worker can realize a profit or loss
Overtime
- FSLA requires payment at one-and-a-half times the standard for working more than 40 hours per week - Goal is to make less costly hiring another person versus paying overtime
Changes in traditional model
- Focus on long-term employment rather life-time employment - Young employees seek employment in non-Japanese firms - Companies are increasingly using performance-based pay
Demand on the Labor Market
- Government a big employer (16% US labor force) = 2.7M people - Indirectly affects labor demand through its purchases (military) & financial policy decisions
Supervisors Solutions
- Higher-base than subordinates - Pay Overtime - Add variable pay
Health Care Cost Control Strategies
- Motivate employees to change their demand for health care through changes in 1. Plan design: deductibles, co-insurance amounts 2. Administration: co-pays, eligibility - Change structure of health care delivery systems - Direct contracting with doctors and hospitals Limited PPOs - Promote wellness
Expectancy Theory
- Motivation is the product of three perceptions; expectancy, instrumentality, and valence - It argues that people behave as if they cognitively evaluate what behaviors are possible in relation to the value of rewards offered in exchange
P=f(M, A, E)
- Motivation, Ability, Environment (Opportunity) - Compensation alone can't change behavior
Performance-based incentives
- Profit sharing - Stock/equity ownership
Social Security
- Provides replacement income such as: -Old age/disability benefits (69%) - Benefits for dependents of retired or disabled workers (16%) - Benefits for surviving family members of deceased worker (16%) - Lump-sum death payments
Employee or Independent Contractor
- Regulations that help classify a worker as an employee or independent contractor - Employers must pay: Social security, unemployment and workers compensation taxes on wages and salaries
Team/group incentives Advantages
- Reinforces teamwork and team identity/ - Stimulates ideas and problem solving - Minimizes distinctions between team members - May better reflect how work is performed
Compa ratios
- Relationship of base salary to the midpoint - Base salary/midpoint - Employees are higher in their salary range: - They are overpaid, they are ready for promotion, and they are high in demand
Problems in designing pay
- Salary plateaus due to knowledge obsolescence of mature professionals - Dual-career ladder shows two different ways of progressing in an organization
Number of data points in survey data
- Sample size ("n") is a significant consideration in evaluating survey data - Larger sample size means more valid the data is - You want the denominator in data to be larger - Sample sizes includes both # of companies represented in the data and number of incumbents represented in the data
Challenges for Japanese Model
- Slow economic growth - Controlling labor costs - Availability of cheap labor in Asian countries
Long term incentive plans ("LTIPs")
- greater than 1 year 1. Stock options 2. Restricted stock units ("RSUs") 3. Employee stock ownership plans ("ESOPs")
Long-Term Incentives for Executives
- incentive stock options - non qualified stock options - phantom stock plans - restricted stock plans - performance share/unit plans
Cash profit sharing Disadvantages
- profit influenced by many factors beyond employee control - may be viewed as an entitlement - limited motivational impact
Pay for performance
- signals movement - away from entitlement pay towards a pay that varies with individual or organizational performance - also called variable pay programs, at risk pay, incentive pay
Cash profit sharing Advantage
- simple, easily understood - Low administrative costs
Furor Over Executive Compensation Academics
- social comparisons - economic approach - agency theory
Importance of benefits
- they are VERY important
Unemployment Insurance Coverage
- weekly benefit amount for 26 weeks - must meet state requirements for wages earned or time worked during an established (one year) period of time (base period) - must be determined to be unemployed through no fault of your own & meet other eligibility requirements of State law
Merit increases and distribution theories
1. Budget 2. Performance 3. Range Penetration
Where you compete for as a company:
1. Company Size 2. Industry 3. Company Type:
Process of Market Pricing
1. Competitive rates for jobs which external market data available are calculated 2. Remaining, non-benchmark jobs, are blended into pay hierarchy
Steps in Designing a Pay Structure
1. Create Job Worth Hierarchy 2. Collect Market Data 3. Create the salary structure. 4. Create pay ranges
Three general global compensation strategies
1. Localizer 2. Exporter 3. Globalizer
Governments' interests typically related to
1. Pay fairness & discrimination 2. Safety nets • Minimum wage & unemployment insurance 3. Protection from exploitation • Overtime pay & child labor - People, and countries, differ in their view of what role government should pay
Matching your job
1. Start with benchmark jobs 2. Slot non-benchmark jobs
Characteristics of special groups
1. They don't quite fit the basic or traditional model 2. Tend to be strategically important 3. Positions tend to have built-in conflict - Special groups receive special treatment
3 elements of motivation
1. What is important to a person (needs) 2. Offering rewards in exchange for desirable employee behavior (exchange) 3. Setting goals with the intent to influence desired behavior (motivation)
Equity
A long-term incentive that uses stock/options are the payout vehicle
Use of Surveys
A. To understand external pay levels B. To understand pay mix/vehicles C. To understand pay practices D. For Budgets E. Information for Communications F. For Diagnosing Pay Issues G. foundation for creating pay structures that align pay philosophy and business strategy
International Geographic Scope
Across several countries
National Geographic Scope
Across the country
Gain sharing plans
An incentive plan that engages employees in a common effort to achieve productivity objectives and share the gains
Profit sharing plans
An inventive plan that engages employees in a common effect to achieve profitability objectives and share the profits
Cost-of-living adjustments
Based on economic factors in the region you are making the adjustments, has nothing to do with performance.
Phantom stock plans
Cash or stock award determined by increase in stock price during any time chosen (by the executive) in the option period
Performance share/unit plans
Cash or stock award earned through achieving specific goals
CPI or Consumer Price Index
Change in price of goods
Local country nationals (LCNs)
Citizens of a foreign country where the parent employer operates
Third country nationals (TCNs)
Citizens of neither the employer's parent country nor the foreign country
Parent-country Nationals (PCNs)
Citizens of the employer's home country living and working in another country
Create the salary structure
Cluster/group jobs that have similar internal value and external value (internal ranking and market pay levels into salary/pay grades or levels)
HMO (Health Maintenance Organization)
Comprehensive benefits for a fixed fee to provider
Custom
Conducted on behalf of sponsor company/organization
Linking pay to performance
Decide how much of a merit increase is given for different levels of performance
Overlap
Degree to which adjacent salary ranges or grades in a given salary structure include the same pay.
Create pay ranges
Determine the minimum, maximum, midpoint, range, etc.
PPO (Preferred Provider Organization):
Direct contract with selected providers
Disparate treatment
Disparate or unequal treatment applies different standards to different employees
Range widths
Distance from the salary range minimum to the salary range
Herzberg's two-factor theory
Employees are motivated by two types of motivators; hygiene factors and satisfiers
Noncontributory
Employer only
Defined benefit plans
Employers establish the limits of their responsibility for employee benefits in terms of a specific benefit and the options included. As the cost of these options rises in future years, the employer is obligates to provide the benefit as negotiates, despite its increased cost.
Practice Surveys
Focus more "how", eligibility, timing, turnover, equity burn rates, etc.
Supervisors Issue
Generally exempt, so not paid overtime, while their subordinates are
Compensatory time off
Government workers
Quality-based measures
Growing trend toward linking sales compensation to customer satisfaction measures
Actual Pay
How you performed or how the company performed in the job.
Benchmarking jobs
Identify your internal jobs that are standard across industries, relatively stable jobs, such as HR Generalist, Accountant, etc
Hygiene Factors
In their absence prevent behaviors, but in their presence cannot motivate performance
Collect Market Data
Incorporate external market values from salary surveys
Target Pay
Is what the job is worth.
The Social Contract in the US
Known for the small role of government and lack of relationship between government, employees, and employers,
National Systems: Comparative Mind-Set: US
Less job security; market-sensitive pay; cost control (variable pay; reward individual performance (meritocracy)
National Systems: Comparative Mind-Set: Japan
Loyalty, security (lifetime), seniority-based promotions, egalitarian (internal alignment vs market alignment); the "nail standing too high gets pounded down"
Funding
Many team/group incentive plans have thresholds or triggers before they are funded.
Why use base pay in setting structures?
Measures basic value of the work, rather than performance level of the employee
General increase
Merit is given annually for performance
Minimum (relative to the midpoint):
Midpoint/ (1+(Range Spread/2))
Maximum (relative to the midpoint):
Minimum *(1+Range Spread)
Standard compensation might not work
More reliance on incentive payments tied to individual performance
Product to be sold
Nature of product, type of customers sold into have most significant influence on designing pay plans
Minimum
New in job
On Call
No legal requirement to pay, unless limit person's activities while on call
The Spillover Effect Outcomes
Nonunion management continues to enjoy freedom from union "interference" in decision making and workers enjoy the "spillover effective" rewards
Examples of Pay Philosophies
Our competitive strategy will deliver rewards at the market competitive median for median performance, at the 75th percentile for 75th percentile performance and so on. We emphasize work-life balance, our benefits ensure that every person is fully present and focused when they are at work
Employee benefits
Part of the total compensation package (other than pay for time worked) provided to employees in whole or in part by employer payments
Midpoint
Proficient and meeting performance expectations
Subscriptions/Published Surveys
Publisher collects, analyzes, summarizes, and reports on data
Nonqualified stock options
Purchase of stock at a stipulated price, not conforming with Internal Revenue Code
Incentive stock options
Purchase of stock at stipulated price, conforming with Internal Revenue Code
Which of these vehicles always has an inherit value?
Restricted stock plans
What Can Comp Do
Self-audits
In the Dan Pink video, the basic premise is the money motivates but only for rudimentary tasks?
TRUE
Over time, will lump-sum bonuses cost employers less than merit pay?
TRUE
Above midpoint
Tenure, performance, skills, high demand job
Midpoint progression
The % increase in the midpoints from one salary grade to the next
Record retention
The Act extends, from 2 to 3 years, an employer's obligation to maintain records of wages & pay rates, job classifications, & other terms of employment
What income is covered?
The Worker Economic Opportunity Act makes stock options and bonuses exempt from overtime pay calculations
Slot non-benchmark jobs
The differences are quantified when jobs content does not sufficiently match survey jobs
Aging or trending the survey data
The process of updating pay data to forecast the competitive rates for the future when pay decisions will be implemented.
Purpose of Surveys
The systematic process of collecting and making judgements about the compensation paid by other employees. They provide information about how the market values jobs and provide data to help to translate policy into pay levels, pay mix, and structures.
Portal-to-Portal Act
Time spent on activities before beginning the "principal activity" is generally not compensable; but if "integral" to principal activity is compensable
On-Line Self-Reported
Timely, cost-effective, easy to use; emerging type of survey
Market Pricing
To base most of the internal pay structure on external competitiveness & rates, breaking down the boundaries between internal organization and external market forces
Unemployment Insurance Financing
Unemployment compensation is financed 100% by employers that pay federal and state unemployment insurance tax in the majority of states
Create Job Worth Hierarchy
Use your relative ranking of jobs according to the organization's internal value
Traditional Time-Off (TTO):
Vacation time and sick time tracked separately
Regional Geographic Scope
Within a particular area of the state or several states
Local Geographic Scope
Within relatively small areas such as cities or Metropolitan Statistical Areas
Workers show strong interest in unions when
Workplace relations are bad, management is not trustworthy, or workers feel they have little influence over decisions affecting them
Coinsurance
a proportion of insurance premiums are paid by the employee
Red circle
above maximum of pay range
Deductibles
an employee claim for insurance is preceded by the requirement that the first $x be paid by the claimant
Green circle
below minimum of pay range
Defined contribution plan
employers establish the limits of their responsibility for employee benefits in terms of a dollar contribution maximum
The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act
increases compliance challenges
Peer group
list of companies similar to your own based on SIZE, INDUSTRY, LOCATION, type of company that are either-competitors in your product market or talent market.
Variable pay types
monetary & non-monetary rewards
• Definition of Pay Philosophies
o Average pay of benchmark jobs set to average pay of similar jobs in comparable companies
The Spillover Effect
occurs when employers avoid unionization by offering wages, benefits, and conditions won unionized firms
Example of employee benefits
vacations, time off, life insurance, pension, workers compensation
Sales compensation
very reliant on performance-based incentives based on individual performance
Restricted Stock
- An award of actual company shares of stock - There is no price paid - There is a vesting period, like stock options - There is always some value unless the share price goes to zero - Vesting criteria varies and is defined by your company
Self-audits
- Analyze compensation regularly based on gender, national origin, and age •Base salaries •merit increases •promotions •training opportunities •bonus payments •special awards
Why would organizations use market pricing?
- Assumption is there is little value in internal alignment; de-emphasizes internal value - Time and expense of internal alignment process - Takes pay off the table, not a competitive advantage or disadvantage - Fairness presumed to be reflected by market rates
Goals of compensation
- Attract, retain, motivate - Reinforce desired behaviors - Sufficient to recruit and hire good employees (attract) - Ensure good employees stay with the company (retain) - Build further knowledge and skills (training) - Motivate employees to perform well on their jobs
Paid Time-Off (PTO)
- Combines vacation, sick and other medical time-off - More expensive than TTO
Contingent Workers
- Defined as anyone hired: Through a temporary agency On an on-call basis As an independent contractor - As the employee status is temporary and benefits are less or nonexistent Higher wages tend to compensate
Two theories of discrimination behavior
- Disparate treatment - Disparate impact
Union-nonunion wage differential varies from year to year
- During periods of higher unemployment, impact of unions is larger - During strong economies, union-nonunion gap is smaller
Defined Benefit (DB) Plans
- Dying breed - cost and unfavorable accounting rules - Employer provides specific pension level defined in terms of: • Fixed dollar amount of percentage-of-earnings amount which varies with seniority - Employer finances this obligation by: • Following an actuarially determined formula • Making current payments that will yield the future pension benefit for a retiring employee
Pay Equity
- Employee comparison based on location - Employee comparison based on responsibility - The permitted reasons for pay differences are: A seniority system A merit system A system t• The permitted reasons for pay differences are: o A seniority system o A merit system o A system that measures earnings by quantity or quality of production o A bona fide factor other than sex, including skills, education, training, experience, shift, or geography
Trade Unions and Employee Involvement
- Europe remains highly unionized - Asia is less heavily unionized - Some countries set pay by collective agreement even without unions - In addition to unions, some countries allow work councils, which must be involved in any changes to a pay plan
Furor Over Executive Compensation Counter arguments
- Executive compensation is a reflection of changes in the market - to compete must pay market relevant comp packages - High risk, high reward - Executives earn compensation by linking pay to performance
Supply on the Labor Market
- Government affects labor supply through legislation - Immigration policy and how rigorously it is enforced is an important factor in labor supply
Defined Contribution (DC) Plans
- Growing over DB plans - Specific contributions by employer - Popular forms of these plans • 401 (k) plan • Basic employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) • ESOP as a pension vehicle - cash at retirement based upon stock value at that time • Qualified deferred compensation plan • Cash balance plans - hybrid of DB and DC plans
Range penetration
- How far into the range the employees pay is - Employee pay-minimum/maximum-minimum
Balance scorecard Disadvantages
- If financial targets are not met, there may be a reduced payout - Can be complex
Stock ownership or options Disadvantages
- Indirect pay/performance ink - Employees may be required to put up money to exercise grants
Factors for JOINING
- Level of pay - Pay system characteristics such as: job satisfaction, pay and benefits, social, and organizational commitment.
Furor Over Executive Compensation Critics' arguments
- Levels of compensation not justified under any circumstances - Pay in other countries are much lower
Bonuses
- Linked to company profits or personal performance - Incentives linked to completion of projects on or before deadlines - Bonuses for achievements
Focal Review
- Linking performance and pay (performance review + merit increases) - Determine performance review ratings - Establish merit budgets - Evaluate where employee is in relation to salary range (or market) = range penetration
Merit pay
- Links increases in base pay to how highly employees are rated on a performance evaluation - Pay for individual performance based on performance evaluation - USED THE MOST!!
Team/group incentives Disadvantages
- May be difficult to isolate impact of team - Not all employees can be placed on a team - Can be administratively complex - May create team competition - Difficult to set equitable targets for all teams
Stock ownership or options Advantages
- Minimal impact on the financial statements - Have powerful impact on employee behavior - Tax deferral to employees
Executive Compensation
- More emphasis on pay-for-performance - More pay at risk in form of long-term incentive (performance equity) - Far fewer "perks"
How to Age Data
1. Find effective date of survey data 2. Decide on a target date for the data 3. Determine the annual adjustment factor 4. Apply aging factor to market data
Employee or Independent Contractor: 2 General Criteria to Classify
1. How much control the firm exercises - behavioral control & financial control 2. The type and permanence of the relationship
Fair Labor Standards Act (1938): Three Major provisions
1. Minimum wage 2. Hours of work 3. Child labor
Advantages of group benefits
1. Most benefits are not taxable - provision of a benefit rather than an equivalent wage increase avoids payment of federal and state personal income tax. 2. Many group-based benefits, health, life, legal insurance, etc., can be purchases at lower rates than could be obtained by employees acting on their own 3. Group insurance also has relatively easy qualification standards, giving security to a set of employees who might not otherwise qualify
Where you compete for talent
1. Occupation 2. Geography/location
Merit Guidelines
1. What should the poorest performer be paid as an increase? 2. How much should average performers be paid as an increase? 3. How much should top performers be paid? 4. What should be the size of the percentage increase differential between different levels of performance?
ADEA
prohibit discrimination based on age
ADA
prohibit discrimination based on disability
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
prohibits discrimination based on: Sex, race, color, religion, or national origin in any employment condition
Satisfiers Factor
recognition, promotion, and achievement
Regulation
relates to the legal and regulatory environment for HR decisions - Countries differ on regulatory restrictions • Maximum hours worked • Hiring and firing workers The social contract in Europe Comes at a cost • Generous worker protection may undermine worker incentive • The tax burden is 60% higher than U.S. to help insulate workers from unemployment
Sales professionals
require high initiative and low supervision
Contributory
shared cost
Contracts
specify hourly and overtime pay, premium pay and pay schedule and occupation-wage differentials