Title: Master Slide
1Trends in pay systems for public servants across
OECD Member countries by Elsa
Pilichowski, Administrator, OECD April 2005
2The pay system is a crucial public management
tool (1)
3The pay system is a crucial public management
tool (2)
4The features of general pay levels in OECD
countries
- Relatively high pay levels for new entrants,
slower pay developments - Relatively lower pay dispersion
5What counts in establishing overall pay levels?
- Overall compensation costs and wage bill compared
to economic indicators - The overall attractiveness of the public employer
- The role of the public employer vis-à-vis the
wider labour market - Specific skills labour shortages
- Signalling expectations and rewarding collective
behavior
6The basic governance model
- Common grading for all posts, where each grade is
associated with a pay level or a pay scale with
discrete steps - Progression based on seniority, and individual
merits and skills only taken into account in
selections for promotion to a post in a higher
grade.
7The move towards differentiation in HRM
- General move towards
- Delegation of establishment, compensation levels,
post classification, recruitment and dismissals,
conditions of employment, and pay - Limited diversification in most countries
- Complex effects on incentives and behaviour
- Sine qua non conditions high level of
professionalism among senior managers, trust and
transparency
8The move towards pay differentiation
- Delegation Introduction of sector or agency
specific fixed pay increments to possible full
delegation of pay levels - Differentiation according to tasks and functions
and skills availibility on the market - Individualisation Introduction of pay
progression dependent on discretionary
assessments of the employees skills and
performance. - Final stage Devolution of individual pay
decisions to the operational units with central
control on costs development
9Limited pay individualisation
10The reasons for pay differentiation and delegation
- Delegating managerial responsibility
- Increased heterogeneity of the workforce
- The need to clarify organisational goals
- Encouraging innovation
- The need to increase investment in training
- Realigning pay to the market situation
- The move towards more position based systems
- Criteria for differentiation
- Competition for skills
- Specific skills merits and performances of each
employee - Specific requirements of each organisational unit
11Difficulties and challenges of increased pay
differentiation and delegation
- Higher transaction costs
- Opaque wage signals
- Capture by local interests
- Maintaining coherence and a whole of government
perspective - Difficulties with mobility
- Increased competition between ministries and
difficulties in reallocating staff
12The conditions for success in pay delegation and
differentiation are very restrictive
- Very well functioning goal setting approach at
both the organisational and individual level - A highly sophisticated central control
- A strategy oriented central HRM body
- A very professional senior civil service and a
healthy political administrative interface - A high level of trust and transparency
- Acquiring the skills and competencies for
decentralised pay setting
13The pros and cons of the individualisation of
performance pay
- Limited direct impact on motivation
- Forces a goal setting approach
- Difficulties with the management of performance
pay - Conditions of success are very restrictive
- A well functioning performance management process
- High level of delegation, transparency, trust,
and dialogue between senior management and staff