Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Why Bonuses Are Hurting Worker Salaries
Why Bonuses Are Hurting Worker Salaries Wage growth hasnât been this slow since 1982. In the second quarter, raises and salaries ticked up a minuscule 0.2% percent, according to Labor Department data released Friday. For private-sector workers, in fact, wage growth hasnât been this low in the entire 35 years the Labor Department has been tracking it. The bottom line is that even as companies have been hiring more, theyâve been able to hold the line on pay. The likely culprit, say experts, is the continued adoption of one-time bonuses given in lieu of raises. âThe raise has gone the way of the gold watch,â Gary Burnison, CEO of executive recruitment and talent management company Korn Ferry, tells the Washington Post. âVariable Payâ Hits Record What has been a frustrating trend for workers first attracted widespread attention about a year ago, after a report by HR consulting firm Aon Hewitt found that a record amount â" 13% â" of employee payroll costs were going to whatâs termed âvariable pay,â a category that covers bonuses and related performance-based payments. (In 1988, when the company started tracking it, variable pay made up only about 4% of payroll costs.) âPerformance-related pay, of which bonuses are an example, will become more and more prevalent,â predicts Iwan Barankay, a management professor at University of Pennsylvaniaâs Wharton School who has addressed the wage vs. bonus issue in the past. Read next: How to Tell If Now Is a Good Time to Ask for a Raise Companies like giving bonuses instead of raises because it requires less commitment on their part, and because they can tie payouts to company or departmental performance metrics, explained Aon Hewitt compensation, strategy and market development leader Ken Abosch in an article published by the Society for Human Resource Management. âThey feel like they need to be careful about adding to their fixed costs,â he says. âThis is one of the main reasons variable pay programs are so attractive.â Incurring a one-time expense â" one the company wonât have to pay again if certain performance targets arenât met â" is a better deal for them than raising wages across the board, then having to cut employees or pay if business slows down. âThe more compensation you can give in other forms, the more nimble you can be in a recession,â Linda Barrington, executive director of Cornell Universityâs Institute for Compensation Studies, tells the New York Times. Workers Lose Out But even when bonuses are paid out, performance-based pay can be a bum deal for workers. Your base salary is an important factor in calculating everything from how much interest youâll pay on a loan to how much Social Security youâll earn when you retire. For young adults, a lower starting salary can potentially put a drag on decades of future earnings. A bonus-heavy pay structure also divides a workforce more sharply into winners and losers, Barankay notes. âUnfortunately, not all employees benefit from bonuses equally,â he says. âHigh performers can still command high fixed wages since â" should an employer not offer them a raise â" they can credibly threaten to get another job elsewhere.â For everyone else, though, the picture looks a lot less rosy. âLow performers are less lucky as they [can] struggle to get a good alternative job offer and are stuck in a system where bonuses are hard to get,â he adds. âThe consequence is a situation where wage inequality will increase in the workplace,â Barankay says. Read next: Hereâs How Much The Nurse Next Door Makes Video Player is loading.Play VideoPlayMuteCurrent Time 0:00/Duration 0:00Loaded: 0%Stream Type LIVESeek to live, currently playing liveLIVERemaining Time -0:00 SharePlayback Rate1xChaptersChaptersDescriptionsdescriptions off, selectedCaptionscaptions settings, opens captions settings dialogcaptions off, selectedAudio TrackFullscreenThis is a modal window. This video is either unavailable or not supported in this browser Error Code: MEDIA_ERR_SRC_NOT_SUPPORTED Technical details : No compatible source was found for this media. Session ID: 2019-12-30:f96c9826cfc12403e192bc2e Player Element ID: jumpstart_video_1 OK Close Modal DialogBeginning of dialog window. 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