Public Sector Pay: Slash or Learn
As governments the world over look to recalibrate their finances following the worst economic recession in decades, you just know that public sector compensation is in the crosshairs.
In the UK, for example, there’s a proposal to tie top public sector pay to a 20-times multiple of low pay, and to publish the salaries of the highest earners.
Amid all the huffing and puffing, the huge UK-based HR association, CIPD, is providing a gutsy contrarian view. In a recent report, CIPD argues in favour of variable pay and bonuses, a tough argument to make in these days of retrenchment.
“Politicians and, perhaps more importantly, more strident parts of the media need to stop seeing pay in the public sector as only a cost to be driven down,” the report says. “Instead, used well, it can be a tool to drive up standards and increase value to the taxpayer.”
So how should compensation be designed to deliver what public sector bosses and their political masters intend? CIPD suggests that, for the most part, what works for the private sector should work for the public. To wit:
Ensure reward practices match the purpose.
The key question is: “Are the ways that the benefit package is structured likely to make any day-to-day difference to the ability of the organisation to deliver its objectives, or the effort delivered by individuals to help it do so?”
Make compensation transparent.
Employees need to know what is expected of them and what they need to do to earn a pay raise or bonus, and what is expected of others. Transparency also builds credibility with taxpayers. In fact, CIPD likes the idea of publishing the names of high earners, not merely their job titles. U.S. states such as Utah, Washington, Nebraska, and California already have publicly accessible online databases containing the salaries of state employees.
Reward performance.
This won’t please the “slash the pay packet” crowd but CIPD suggests public sector managers make greater use of variable pay to reward individual or team behaviour. This is a good way to recognize high performance without continually ratcheting up comp levels and pension commitments. “Bonuses can help focus minds by communicating what’s important to the organisation and can be more cost-effective than consolidated pay awards.”
Adopt flexible compensation schemes.
CIPD recommends moving from national pay agreements, “pay spines/increments”, and service-related pay progression to flexible pay structures. More flexible pay grades and progression mechanisms should be adopted to allow individuals to progress through their grades faster.
