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Incomparable Worth - Pay Equity Meets the Market (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R1,831
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Incomparable Worth - Pay Equity Meets the Market (Hardcover, New)
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Challenging proponents of equal pay for comparable worth, Steven
Rhoads argues that implementation has been plagued by critical and
insurmountable problems. Where success has been more frequently
touted - in Minnesota, England, and Australia - job evaluation
results are arbitrary and political rather than objective. In some
cases, Rhoads demonstrates, comparable worth has paid workers more
than their bosses, while others previously paid equally for doing
equal work have been assigned unequal pay. These and other bizarre
outcomes have created severe problems for public and private
managers. But the most significant costs of comparable worth go far
beyond the administrative. By substituting administered wages for
market-determined ones, it produces gross inefficiency in labor
markets. Wages are held down in the face of shortages, thereby
preventing companies and governments from attracting the skilled
workers they need. Wages are inflated in the face of surpluses,
thus reducing employers' willingness to hire and creating new
unemployment. More important still, in the only long-established
comparable-worth system - in Australia - the political costs of
comparable worth are as severe as the economic ones. In Australia
the ill will and bitterness already apparent among the losers in
Minnesota localities are magnified many times. People there have
come to think of wages as reflecting society's judgment about an
individual's worth, and deep and abiding quarrels emerge over tiny
differences in pay. In the politicized Australian system,
male-dominated unions seek to get the attention of arbitration
commissions or recalcitrant companies by strikes, veiled threats,
and even physical intimidationand sabotage. The Australian
wage-fixing system has produced an unusually contentious politics,
dismal economic performance, and few if any real gains for women
workers. This is the first book to look at the implementation of
comparable worth from a critical perspective. It shows that the
principles of comparable worth or pay equity are not reconcilable
with those of a market economy.
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