1 / 17

Pay Reform Perspectives in Jordan Amman-Jordan September 2006

Ministry of Public Sector Development. Pay Reform Perspectives in Jordan Amman-Jordan September 2006. Current Status. Autonomous Authorities have much higher salary scale, plus variation in pay across line ministries Around 15% of the employees are hired on projects and as daily wages workers

svivian
Télécharger la présentation

Pay Reform Perspectives in Jordan Amman-Jordan September 2006

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ministry of Public Sector Development Pay Reform Perspectives in JordanAmman-JordanSeptember 2006

  2. Current Status • Autonomous Authorities have much higher salary scale, plus variation in pay across line ministries • Around 15% of the employees are hired on projects and as daily wages workers • Pay scale in civil service based on educational qualification and length of service • Responsibility in not appropriately rewarded

  3. Current Status • Lack of incentive schemes to attract and retain talents • Small differentials between highly skilled and unskilled staff • Low base salaries and low core wages • Ad hoc pay adjustments every now and then • Changes in allowances strongly influenced by pressure groups • Reduce anomalies and ensure the equitability across job families • Develop analytical job classification and job evaluation schemes

  4. Objectives: • Develop effective organizational structure for the concernedgovernmental entities • Enable line ministries to attract and retain qualified employees • Reduce anomalies and ensure the equitability across job families • Develop analytical job classification and job evaluation schemes

  5. Objectives: • Develop a systematic pay and grading structure that is: • compatible with all human resource policies • remunerates based on relative worth of jobs • addresses all aspects of remuneration • consolidates allowances with salary • strengthen control over remuneration • introduces de-compressed pay differential

  6. Job Evaluation: • A formal and systematic comparison of jobs in order to determine the worth of one job relative to another • The comparison results in a salary hierarchy • Compensable factors are fundamental elements of a job

  7. Job Evaluation Methods:1: Ranking • Obtain job information • Select raters and jobs • Select compensable factors • Rank Jobs (ordering by importance, weighting, paired comparison) • Group jobs to determine the appropriate salary level • Combine ratings

  8. Job Evaluation Methods:1: Ranking Advantages • Appropriate for small companies (few jobs) • Simple to administer Disadvantages • Difficult for large #s of jobs or new job • Rank judgments are subjective • No standards used for comparison

  9. Job Evaluation Methods:2: Job Classification • Rates categories of jobs into groups. • Groups called classes if jobs are similar • Called grades if groups contain different jobs of similar difficulty

  10. Job Evaluation Methods:2: Job Classification Advantages • Simple • New jobs can be classified more easily than the ranking method Disadvantages • Classification judgments are subjective • The standard used for comparison (the grade/category structure) may have built in biases that would affect certain groups of employees. • Some jobs may appear to fit within more than one grade/ category

  11. Job Evaluation Methods:3: Point Method • It is a more quantitative method • Identified compensable factors (skills (experience, education, ability), effort (physical and mental), responsibility (fiscal and supervisory) and working conditions (location, hazard, extremes in environment) • The degree to which each of these factors in present • Assume five degree of “responsibility • Most widely used method

  12. Job Evaluation Methods:3: Point Method Advantages • The value of the job is expressed in monetary terms • Can be applied to a wide range of jobs Disadvantages • The pay for each factor is based on judgments that are subjective • The standard used for comparison (the grade/category structure) may have built in biases that would affect certain groups of employees

  13. Job Evaluation Methods:4: Factor Comparison • A widely used method to rank jobs by variety of skilled and difficulties, then adding these to obtain a numerical rating for each job • Rank each job several times- once for each of several compensable factors

  14. Job Evaluation Methods:4: Factor Comparison Advantages • The value of the job is expressed in monetary terms • Can be applied to a wide range of jobs • Can be applied to a newly created jobs Disadvantages • The pay for each factor is based on judgments that are subjective • The standard used for comparison (the grade/category structure) may have built in biases that would affect certain groups of employees

  15. Main Outcomes: • Revised organizational structure • Job descriptions of all positions • A standardized pay and grading methodology • A complete job classification, and job evaluation of all existing jobs in the civil service • A new integrated pay and grading structure • A computer based system that has a pay modeling capability for conducting job evaluations for all public service jobs • Mechanisms for reviewing the pay and grading structure.

  16. Areas of Concern: • How to guarantee effective organizational structures with no exaggerations • How to ensure controlled promotion mechanisms in the absence of credible competency assessment tools • How to address some job titles with different responsibilities due to the difference of volume and size of the entity • What are the most appropriate factors • How to mange financial ramifications • How to guarantee the credibility of the raters

  17. Thank You

More Related