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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
Lesson
29
BENEFITS
After
studying this chapter, students should be
able to understand the
following:
A.
Total Compensation
B.
Employee Benefits
LESSON
OVERVIEW
We
begin the chapter with a discussion of
benefits, both mandated and
voluntary. Then, legislation
related
to
benefits and the proper communication of
information about benefit packages is
discussed. Next, we
present
various types of incentive compensation
and describe non-financial
compensation and the job as
a
total
compensation factor.
A.
Total Compensation
Tottal
Compensattiion
To
al
Compensa on
Total
compensation constitutes of
two
types of the rewards which
are
Direct
Indirect
Direct
Indirect
direct
rewards and indirect
rewards.
Direct
rewards include the salaries
TiimeNottWorrked
Tme No Wo
ked
Wages
//Sallaries
Wages
Saaries
··Vacations
wages,
commis-sion, bonuses
and
Vacations
··Brreaks
Beaks
··Holida
ys
gain
sharing all of these rewards
are
Holida
ys
Commiissions
Commssions
directly
paid to employees in
IInsurancePllans
nsurance
Pans
··Medicall
Medica
Bonuses
monetary
or financial terms, second
Bonuses
··Denttal
Denal
··Life
Life
type
of the rewards are benefits
Gaiinsharing
Gansharing
SecurrityPllans
Secu
ity Pans
provided
by organization. Benefits are
··Pensions
Pensions
not
direct payments in financial
terms.
EmplloyeeSerrvices
Empoyee
Se
vices
··Educationallassistance
Educationa
assistance
··Recrreaionallprrograms
Rec
eattiona
pograms
B.
Employee Benefits
Benefits
are all financial rewards
that generally are not paid
directly to an employee. Benefits absorb
social
costs
for health care and retirement
and can influence employee
decisions about
employers.
I.
Benefits
(Indirect Financial
Compensation)
Most
organizations recognize that they
have a responsibility to provide their
employees with insurance
and
other
programs for their health,
safety, security, and
general welfare. These
benefits
include
all financial
rewards
that generally are not paid
directly to the employee.
Ii.
Mandated
Benefits (Legally Required)
Although
most employee benefits are
provided at the employer's discretion,
others are required by law.
Legally
required benefits include Social Security,
unemployment compensation, and workers'
compensation.
a)
Social
Security--It is a
system of retirement benefits that provides benefits
like disability
insurance,
survivor's benefits, and, most recently,
Medicare.
b)
Unemployment
Compensation--An
individual laid off by an organization
covered by the Social
Security
Act may receive unemployment
compensation for up to 26 weeks.
Although the federal
government
provides certain guidelines, unemployment
compensation programs are
administered
by
the states, and the benefits vary state
by state.
c)
Workers'
Compensation--Workers'
compensation benefits provide a degree of
financial
protection
for employees who incur
expenses resulting from job-related
accidents or illnesses.
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Resource Management
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d)
Family
And Medical Leave Act Of
1993 (FMLA)--The
Family and Medical Leave Act
applies
to
private employers with 50 or
more employees and to all
governmental employers regardless
of
the
number of employees. The act provides
for up to 12 workweeks of unpaid
leave per year
for
absences
due to the employee's own
serious health condition or the need to
care for a newborn or
newly
adopted child or a seriously ill
child, parent, or
spouse.
III.
Discretionary
Benefits (Voluntary)
Organizations
voluntarily provide numerous
benefits. These benefits may be
classified as (1) payment
for
time
not worked, (2) health and
security benefits, (3)
employee services, and (4)
premium pay. Generally
speaking,
such benefits are not
legally required.
a)
Payment For Time Not
Worked--In
providing payment for time
not worked, employers
recognize
that employees need time
away from the job for
many purposes, such as paid
vacations,
payment
for holidays not worked, paid
sick leave, jury duty,
national guard or other
military reserve
duty,
voting time, and bereavement time.
Some payments are provided
for time off taken
during
work
hours, such as rest periods,
coffee breaks, lunch periods,
cleanup time, and travel time.
·
Paid
Vacations: Payment for time not
worked serves important
compensation goals.
Paid
vacations
provide workers with an
opportunity to rest, become
rejuvenated, and
hopefully,
become
more productive.
·
Sick
Leave: Each year many firms
allocate, to each employee, a
certain number of days of
sick
leave, which they can use
when ill.
b)
Health Benefits--Health
benefits are often included as part of an
employee's indirect financial
compensation.
Specific areas include health, dental,
and vision care.
·
Health
care:
Benefits for health care
represent the most expensive
and fastest-growing cost in
the
area
of indirect financial compensation. Many
factors have combined to create this
situation: an
aging
population, a growing demand
for medical care,
increasingly expensive medical
technology, a
lack
of price controls, and inefficient
administrative processes. In addition to
self-insurance and
traditional
commercial insurers, employers
may utilize one of several
options. Health
maintenance
organizations
(HMOs) are
one option in which all
services are covered for a
fixed fee; however,
employers
control which doctors and
health facilities may be used. Point-of-service
(POS) permits
a
member
to select a provider within the
network, or, for a lower
level of benefits, go outside the
network.
Preferred
provider organizations (PPOs)
are a
more flexible managed care
system. Although
incentives
are provided to members to
use services within such a
system, out-of-network providers
may
be utilized at greater cost.
Exclusive
provider organizations (EPO)
offer
a smaller PPO
provider
network
and usually provide little,
if any, benefits when an out-of-network
provider is used.
·
Capitation:
Typically, the reimbursement method used
by primary care physicians is an
approach
to
health care where providers negotiate a
rate for health care for a
covered life over a period
of
time.
It presumes that doctors
have an incentive to keep patients
healthy and to avoid
costly
procedures
when they are paid per patient rather
than per service.
·
Defined-Contribution
health
care system: Companies give
each employee a set amount of
money
annually
with which to purchase health
care coverage.
·
Utilization
Review: A
process that scrutinizes
medical diagnoses, hospitalization,
surgery, and
other
medical treatment and care
prescribed by doctors.
·
The
Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of
1996:
Provides new protections
for
approximately 25 million Americans who
move from one job to another,
who are self-
employed,
or who have preexisting medical
conditions.
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Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
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·
Dental
and Vision Care:
Relative newcomers to the list of
potential health benefits. Both types
of
plans
are typically paid for
entirely by the employers.
c)
Security Benefits--Security
benefits include retirement plans, disability
insurance, life
insurance,
and
supplemental unemployment
benefits.
·
Retirement
Plans: Private
retirement plans provide income
for employees who retire
after
reaching
a certain age or having served the
firm for a specific period
of time. In a defined
benefit plan,
the
employer agrees to provide a specific
level of retirement income that is either a
fixed dollar
amount
or a percentage of earnings. A defined
contribution plan is a retirement
plan that requires
specific
contributions by an employer to a retirement or
savings fund established for
the employee.
A
401(k)
plan is a
defined contribution plan in
which employees may defer
income up to a
maximum
amount allowed. An employee
stock ownership plan (ESOP)
is a
defined contribution plan
in
which
a firm makes a tax-deductible
contribution of stock shares or
cash to a trust.
·
Disability
Protection:
Workers' compensation protects
employees from job-related accidents
and
illnesses.
Some firms, however, provide additional
protection that is more
comprehensive.
·
Supplemental
Unemployment Benefits
(SUB):
Supplemental unemployment benefits
are
designed
to provide additional income
for employees receiving unemployment
benefits.
·
Life
Insurance:
Group life insurance is a
benefit commonly provided to protect the
employee's
family
in the event of his or her death.
Although the cost of group
life insurance is relatively
low,
some
plans call for the employee
to pay part of the premium.
d)
Employee Services--Organizations
offer a variety of benefits that can be
termed employee
services.
These benefits encompass a number of
areas including relocation benefits,
child care,
educational
assistance, food services/
subsidized cafeterias, and financial
services.
·
Relocation
Benefits:
Include shipment of household goods and
temporary living expenses,
covering
all or a portion of the real
estate costs associated with
buying a new home and
selling the
previously
occupied home.
·
Child
Care:
Another benefit offered by
some firms is subsidized child
care. Here, the
firm may
provide
an on-site child care center, support an
off-site center, or subsidize the
costs of child care.
·
Educational
Assistance:
According to a recent benefits survey, 81
percent have educational
benefits
that reimburse employees for
college tuition and
books.
·
Food
Services/ Subsidized
Cafeterias: Most
firms that offer free or
subsidized lunches feel
that
they
get a high payback in terms
of employee relations.
·
Financial
Services: One
financial
benefit that
is growing in popularity permits
employees to
purchase
different types of insurance
policies through payroll
deduction.
·
Unique
Benefits: A
tight labor market gives
birth to creativity in providing
benefits.
e)
Premium Pay--Compensation
paid to employees for working
long periods of time or
working
under
dangerous or undesirable
conditions.
·
Hazard
pay:
Additional pay provided to
employees who work under
extremely dangerous
conditions.
·
Shift
differentials: Paid
to employees for the inconvenience of
working undesirable
hours.
f)
Benefits for Part-Time
Employees--Recent
studies indicate that employers
are offering this
group
more benefits than ever.
Growth in the number of part-timers is due to the
aging of the
workforce
and also to an increased
desire by more employees to
balance their lives between
work
and
home.
IV.
Other
Benefit-Related Legislation
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Human
Resource Management
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a)
Employee
Retirement Income Security Act Of
1974 (ERISA)--The
Employee Retirement
Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)
was passed to strengthen existing
and future retirement
programs.
Mismanagement of retirement funds was the primary
factor in the need for
this
legislation.
b)
Older
Workers Benefit Protection
Act (OWBPA)--The
Older Workers Benefit
Protection Act
(OWBPA)
is a 1990 amendment to the ADEA and
extends its coverage to all
employee benefits.
The
act has an equal
benefit or equal cost principle.
V.
Communicating
Information about the Benefits
Package
Employee
benefits can help a firm recruit
and retain a quality workforce.
Management depends on an
upward
flow of information from
employees in order to know when
benefit changes are needed,
and,
because
employee awareness of benefits is often
severely limited, the program information
must be
communicated
downward.
vi.
Incentive
Compensation
Compensation
programs that relate pay to
productivity.
a)
Individual
Incentive Plans--A
specific form of performance-based
pay is an individual incentive
plan
called piecework. In
such a plan, employees are paid
for each unit
produced.
b)
Team-Based
Compensation Plans--Team
performance consists of individual
efforts. Therefore,
individual
employees should be recognized and
rewarded for their
contributions. However, if the
team
is to function effectively, a reward
based on the overall team
performance should be provided
as
well.
c)
Companywide
Plans--Companywide
plans offer a feasible alternative to the
incentive plans
previously
discussed. They may be based
on the organization's productivity, cost
savings, or
profitability.
·
Profit
Sharing: A
compensation plan that
results in the distribution of a
predetermined
percentage
of the firm's profits to employees. There
are several variations, but the
three
basic
forms are current, deferred, and
combination. Current
plans provide
payment to
employees
in cash or stock as soon as
profits have been
determined. Deferred
plans involve
placing
company contributions in an irrevocable trust to be
credited to the account of
individual
employees. The funds are
normally invested in securities
and become available
to
the employee (or his/her survivors) at
retirement, termination, or death.
Combination
plans
permit
employees to receive payment of
part of their share of
profits on a current
basis,
whereas payment of part of
their share is deferred.
Profit sharing tends to
tie
employees
to the economic success of the
firm.
·
Employee
Stock Option Plan
(ESOP): A
defined contribution plan in
which a firm
contributes
stock shares to a trust.
·
Gain
Sharing:
Plans that are designed to
bind employees to the firm's
performance by
providing
an incentive payment based on improved
company performance. The
first gain
sharing
plan was developed by Joseph
Scanlon during the Great
Depression, and it
continues
to be a successful approach to group
incentive, especially in smaller
firms.
·
Scanlon
Plan:
Provides a financial reward to employees
for savings in labor costs
that
result
from their
suggestions.
Vii.
Non-financial
Compensation
Compensation
departments in organizations do not
normally deal with
non-financial factors.
However,
non-financial
compensation can be a very powerful
factor in the compensation
equation.
Viii.
The
job
Some
jobs can be so exciting that the
incumbent can hardly wait to get to
work each day.
131
Human
Resource Management
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IX.
The
Job as a Total Compensation
Factor
The
job itself is a central
issue in many theories of
motivation, and it is also a
vital component of a total
compensation
program.
a)
Skill
Variety--The
extent to which work requires a number of
different activities for
successful
completion.
b)
Task
Identity--The
extent to which the job includes an
identifiable unit of work
that is carried
out
from start to finish.
c)
Task
Significance--The
impact that the job has on
other people.
d)
Autonomy--The
extents of individual freedom and
discretion employees have in performing
their
jobs.
e)
Feedback--The
amount of information employees receive
about how well they have
performed
the
job.
f)
Cyber-work--A
possibility of a never-ending workday created
through the use of technology.
X.
The
Job Environment as a Total Compensation
Factor
Employees
can draw satisfaction from
their work through several
non-financial factors.
a)
Sound
Policies--Human
resource policies and
practices reflecting management's concern
for its
employees
can serve as positive
rewards.
b)
Competent
Employees--Successful
organizations emphasize continuous development
and assure
that
competent managers and non-managers
are employed.
c)
Congenial
Coworkers--Although
the American culture has historically embraced
individualism,
most
people possess, in varying degrees, a
desire to be accepted by their
work group.
d)
Appropriate
Status Symbols--Organizational
rewards that take many forms
such as office size
and
location, desk size and
quality, private secretaries,
floor covering, and
title.
e)
Working
Conditions--The
definition of working
conditions has
been broadened considerably
during
the
past decade.
XI.
Workplace
Flexibility
Flexible
work arrangements do more
than just assist new
mothers' return to full-time
work. They comprise
an
aspect of non-financial compensation
that allows many families to
manage a stressful
work/home
juggling
act.
a)
Flextime--The
practice of permitting employees to
choose, with certain
limitations, their
own
working
hours.
b)
Compressed
Workweek--Any
arrangement of work hours
that permits employees to
fulfill their
work
obligation in fewer days
than the typical five-day workweek.
c)
Job
Sharing--An
approach to work that is attractive to
people who want to work fewer
than 40
hours
per week.
d)
Flexible
Compensation (Cafeteria Compensation)--Plans
that permit employees to
choose
from
among many alternatives in deciding
how their financial compensation
will be allocated.
e)
Telecommuting--Telecommuting
is a work arrangement whereby
employees are able to
remain
at
home, or otherwise away from
the office, and perform
their work over telephone
lines tied to a
computer.
f)
Part-Time
Work--Use
of part-time workers on a regular basis
has begun to gain momentum
in
the
United States. This approach
adds many highly qualified
individuals to the labor market
by
permitting
both employment and family
needs to be addressed.
g)
Modified
Retirement--An
option that permits older
employees to work fewer than
regular hours
132
Human
Resource Management
(MGT501)
VU
for
a certain period of time
proceeding retirement. This option allows
an employee to avoid an
abrupt
change in lifestyle and more gracefully
move into retirement.
XII.
Other
Compensation Issues
Several
issues that relate to
compensation deserve mention.
These issues include comparable
worth, pay
secrecy,
and pay compression.
a)
Severance
Pay--Although
some firms are trimming the
amount of severance pay
offered,
typically,
one to two weeks of
severance pay is given for
every year of service, up to
some
predetermined
maximum. Severance pay is
generally shaped according to the
organizational level of
the
employee.
b)
Comparable
Worth--Requires
the value for dissimilar
jobs, such as company nurse
and welder, to
be
compared under some form of
job evaluation and pay rates
for both jobs to be
assigned
according
to their evaluated
worth.
c)
Pay
Secrecy--Organizations
tend to keep their pay
rates secret for various
reasons. If a firm's
compensation
plan is illogical, secrecy may
indeed be appropriate because only a
well-designed
system
can stand careful scrutiny. An open
system would almost certainly require
managers to
explain
the rationale for pay decisions to
subordinates.
d)
Pay
Compression--Occurs
when workers perceive that
the pay differential between
their pay and
that
of employees in jobs above or
below them is too
small.
Key
Terms
Flextime:
The
practice of permitting employees to
choose, with certain
limitations, their own
working
hours.
Capitation:
Typically, the reimbursement method used
by primary care physicians is an approach
to health
care
where providers negotiate a rate
for health care for a
covered life over a period
of time.
Disability
protection: Workers'
compensation protects employees
from job-related accidents and
illnesses.
Some
firms, however, provide additional
protection that is more
comprehensive.
(ESOP):A
defined contribution plan in
which a firm contributes stock
shares to a trust.
Gain
sharing:
Plans that are designed to
bind employees to the firm's
performance by providing an
incentive
payment based on improved
company performance
Scanlon
plan:
Provides a financial reward to employees
for savings in labor costs
that result from
their
suggestions
Telecommuting:
Telecommuting
is a work arrangement whereby
employees are able to remain
at home,
or
otherwise away from the
office, and perform their
work over telephone lines
tied to a computer
Autonomy:
The
extent of individual freedom and discretion
employees has in performing
their jobs.
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