Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Wage disclosures lead to salary cuts, job change

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Oct, 2014 07:06 AM
    In the era of transparency, publicly disclosing personal information - such as government officials' income - may result in unintended consequences.
     
    According to a new research, the highest-paid city employees in California saw an eight percent reduction in pay after their salaries were disclosed to the public.
     
    These cuts also triggered a 75 percent increase in the quit rate among city managers.
     
    The findings suggest that top salaries are cut because they appear excessive, regardless of whether the reductions in pay are good policy.
     
    Additionally, the research suggests that media exposure restrained high wages in cities where the top salaries were already disclosed.
     
    "This paper shows that there may be unintended effects from these policies. If the public has an averse response to large salaries, regardless of whether these salaries are justified, there might be adverse consequences," explained Alexandre Mas, professor of economics and public affairs from Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs.
     
    For the study, used an internet database of historical webpages and newspaper archives to research which cities disclosed wages, and he used public records requests to gather payroll information.
     
    He then compared the evolution of wages between cities that had and previously had not disclosed city manager wages.
     
    Once their wages were disclosed, city managers saw an average pay cut of about eight percent, according to Mas' calculations.
     
    Interestingly, Mas found that wage declines mostly came from male managers.
     
    On average, compensation did not decline for female managers.
     
    The findings were released by the US National Bureau of Economic Research.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Job Loss Fears May Put People At Asthma Risk

    Job Loss Fears May Put People At Asthma Risk
    Work-related stress and a fear of losing one's job may put people at the risk of developing asthma, warns an observational study.

    Job Loss Fears May Put People At Asthma Risk

    Sexually active young girls more prone to bullying: Study

    Sexually active young girls more prone to bullying: Study
    Sexually active high school girls are more likely to be bullied compared with boys who are also sexually active, says an important study.

    Sexually active young girls more prone to bullying: Study

    2014 may become hottest year on record

    2014 may become hottest year on record
    The year 2014 is poised to become the warmest year ever measured, suggests new data released by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

    2014 may become hottest year on record

    Goodbye Summer! Tuesday Heralds Autumn

    Goodbye Summer! Tuesday Heralds Autumn
    Tired of hot days and sweaty nights? Well, autumn is here! At 7.59 a.m. Sep 23, autumn will officially begin in India and the rest of the Northern Hemisphere.

    Goodbye Summer! Tuesday Heralds Autumn

    How to prevent depression risk among teens

    How to prevent depression risk among teens
    If you wish to shield your kids from depression, driving home the point that personalities can be changed may help, a study suggests.

    How to prevent depression risk among teens

    Too much selfie sharing can harm real-life relationships

    Too much selfie sharing can harm real-life relationships
    Sharing selfies too much on social media can lead to decreased intimacy with your near and dear ones, a study has found.

    Too much selfie sharing can harm real-life relationships