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Differentiation in pay for performance within organizations: an occupational perspective

Mark Williams (School of Business and Management, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK)
Ying Zhou (Surrey Business School, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK)
Min Zou (Henley Business School, University of Reading, Reading, UK)

International Journal of Manpower

ISSN: 0143-7720

Article publication date: 9 September 2020

Issue publication date: 22 June 2021

510

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to address the question of why organizations do not uniformly apply pay for performance (PFP) throughout the organization, focusing on the wider occupational structure in which they and the jobs they create are embedded. The authors propose a model of “occupational differentiation” whereby the probability of a job within a given organization having PFP increases with the levels of monitoring difficulty and requisite human asset specificity characterizing the occupation to which a job belongs, being highest in occupations characterized by high levels of both (generally managerial and professional occupations).

Design/methodology/approach

Using the Workplace Employment Relations Survey (a nationally representative matched employer–employee dataset for Britain), this paper investigates this question for all 350 occupations delineated by the UK's Office for National Statistics using regression methods that adjust for other confounding factors such as demographic factors and workplace fixed effects.

Findings

The authors find organizations “occupationally differentiate” the use of PFP in ways consistent with the model, i.e. PFP is most likely to be found in occupations characterized by both high monitoring difficulty and high requisite human asset specificity (mainly managerial and professional occupations) and least likely in occupations scoring low in both. The finding holds across PFP types (individual, group, organizational), whether organizations are large or small, and hold across most industrial sectors.

Research limitations/implications

The main implication of this study is that organizations appear to be taking into consideration whether the wider profession to which a job belongs when implementing PFP, irrespective of their own human resource management strategies and organizational context. There are a few limitations to this study, with the main one being that this model is mainly confined to empirical support is only found in the private sector. The public sector appears to be beyond the reach of the model, where PFP implementation is generally rarer. A second limitation is that the dataset is from 2011 and only covers a single country.

Practical implications

Given organizations appear to be implementing PFP based on occupation, this may lead to equity concerns, as different groups are being treated differently within organizations based upon their occupational group.

Social implications

As PFP jobs tend to pay more than non-PFP jobs and PFP prevalence has been growing, by being more likely to implement it for generally high-paid groups (generally higher managerial and professional occupations), PFP may contribute to wider pay differentials within and between organizations.

Originality/value

By introducing the occupational-level of analysis and the differential nature of tasks across occupational groups, the model offers a new midrange, sociological perspective to understanding intra-organizational dynamics in PFP use and potentially human resource practices more broadly.

Keywords

Citation

Williams, M., Zhou, Y. and Zou, M. (2021), "Differentiation in pay for performance within organizations: an occupational perspective", International Journal of Manpower, Vol. 42 No. 4, pp. 537-555. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-01-2020-0038

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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