February 12, 2010

HR Fact Friday: U.S. Salary Increase Budgets Hit 25-Year Low

Filed under: Compensation,Salaries & Pay — Tags: , , , — Paul @ 6:00 am

U.S. companies’ budgets for salary increases in 2010 fell to their lowest level in more than two decades, The Conference Board reported Tuesday, February 9.

The 2010 median forecast of salary budgets for increases is 2.8 percent for all employee groups, the lowest level in the 25-year history of The Conference Board’s annual survey on salary-increase budgets.

In addition, changes to salary structures (changes to minimum, midpoints and maximums of pay scales) to account for changes in cost of living and other factors aren’t expected to top 2 percent, according to the survey. That’s below The Conference Board’s forecast of a 2.6 percent inflation rate.

In the statement released with highlights of the research, “Salary Increase Budgets for 2010—Winter Update,” Linda Barrington, the organization’s managing director for human capital, said: “U.S. workers will continue to face downward pressure on their salaries and wages. Without the purse strings loosening on financial rewards, employers are going to have to rely on other ways of engaging employees, especially top performers, in order to keep their companies competitive.”

The survey included 285 U.S. organizations.

Source: Workforce.com

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October 2, 2009

HR Fact Friday: Show Me The Money

Filed under: Salaries & Pay — Tags: , , , , — Paul @ 1:42 pm

Do you live in a state that is know for paying the highest wages? Not sure? CNNMoney.com reported that recent Census Bureau reports the states with the highest median incomes.  High incomes do not always translate to higher standard of living however as areas with higher incomes share a common malady — a high cost of living.

Maryland has the highest median income level in 2008 at $70,545. Mississippi ranked last with $37,790.

The states with the highest median incomes are concentrated in the far West and in the Northeast around the District of Columbia. Most of the lowest earning states are in the South. Rounding out the bottom 5 following Mississippi are: West Virginia ($37,989), Arkansas ($38,815), Kentucky ($41,538), and Alabama (42,538).

The four highest earning states following Maryland are: New Jersey ($70,378), Connecticut ($68,595), Alaska ($68,460), Hawaii ($67,214).

But don’t pack up and move just yet. The cost of living in Bethesda, MD is about 52% higher than it is in Tupelo, MS. This difference translates to a housing cost differential for an average apartment rental in Bethesda of $1,464 compared to $512 in Tupelo.

Florida was the only state where median income declined, falling 0.01% before adjusting for inflation. Louisiana saw the biggest jump in income, up 6.9%. This may be attributed to the influx of Federal dollars flowing into the state following Katrina.

Another winner was the District of Columbia, which saw a median income rise of 6.7% in a year when the White House changed hands.

The current economic downturn which really ramped up in the second half of 2008 may have given these median income levels a boost. That’s because when times get tough, many of the lowest paying jobs disappear, artificially boosting income statistics.

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May 15, 2009

HR Fact Friday: College Degree Pay Holds in 2007 as Earnings Fall

Filed under: Compensation — Tags: , , , , — Paul @ 8:54 am

Earnings growth slowed or declined in 2007 among workers at most education levels, while falling sharply from the prior year for men with only a high school degree, according to figures released April 27, 2009 by the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau.

Among all full- and part-time workers ages 18 and older, those with a bachelor’s degree earned $25,895, or 83% more per year than workers with a high school diploma, about the same difference as in 2006, the agency said in releasing annual data on educational attainment of the U.S. population.

(more…)

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October 31, 2008

HR Fact Friday: Women’s Pay Remains Above 80% of Mens

Filed under: Salaries & Pay — Tags: , , , — Paul @ 7:25 am

The earnings gap between women and men who work full time grew slightly in 2007, as men’s weekly pay incresed more than that of women, according to figures released recently by the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

Among the nation’s 106.1 million full-time wage and salary workers, median usual weekly earnings of women rose to $614 last year, up 2.3%, or $14, from the median of $600 in 2006, BLS said in a report posted on its Web site.  The median is the midpoint, meaning that half of the workers earned more than that amount while the other half earned less.

Men who worked full time saw their earnings climb even more, to a median of $766 per week in 2007, a gain of 3.1% or $23 from $743 the prior year.

As a result, the ratio of women’s earnings to those of men declined to 80.2% last year, down from 80.8% in 2006.

(more…)

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