Failure to conduct equal pay audits (looking at the relative pay of men and women within the organisation), is leaving UK employers open to potential legal action by dissatisfied employees, according to research by IRS Employment Review.
Although more than one-third (37.2%) of employers expect equal pay to be a priority for their organisation over the next 12 months, just a quarter of organisations have already conducted, or are in the process of conducting, an equal pay audit and a similar proportion have no plans to take any action over this issue. The research into organisational pay and reward strategies forms part of the IRS HR Prospects Survey 2004.
However organisations are demonstrating their commitment to developing a coherent reward proposition for employees. The research reveals that the development of an overall reward strategy is likely to feature highly on the priority list for reward specialists in the next 12 months. In addition, employers are constantly reviewing their grading structure to ensure that it offers employees the best salary and career opportunities at the organisation.
The IRS HR Prospects Survey 2004, conducted in early 2004, is based on a survey of 519 HR departments. The questionnaire was followed up by a focus group and one-to-one interviews. The results are available in the IRS Employment Review 799 . The survey is now in its third year; more than 100 of the organisations who took part in this year’s research also participated in 2003.
Key points
Pay priorities
Pay strategy
Pensions
Pay rises
Equal Pay Audits
IRS Pay and Benefits editor, Sheila Attwood said:
“The findings on equal pay make worrying reading. Pay structures that
are viewed by the workforce as unfair will undermine morale and working relationships.
Not only is it good practice but in a tight labour market, fair pay practices
will have a positive effect on recruitment and retention.
“Employers must provide the right opportunities for staff to progress through both salary and grading structures. But despite positive signs of growth from the economy, business recovery is a slow process.
"With retention and recruitment pressures facing UK employers, HR managers will be determined to find ways of keeping staff and minimise the cost of finding new employees; the question is whether the overall business strategy will enable them to increase their staff reward package as part of this process."
The full HR Prospects 2004 survey is available from IRS customer services on
020 8662 2000.
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