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Base Pay and Variable Pay Trends

Pay increases in 2009 were at an all-time low, at least since good records have been kept on this type of data. In 2009, over 50% of companies either froze pay or worse, by far the highest pay pull-back/retrenchment numbers I have seen in my 25+ year career in HR and compensation.

2010 portends to be a bit better for employees, but employers are still keeping a pretty tight clamp on their purse strings, and understandably so, with economic recovery still looking a bit tepid.  Predictions are for pay increase budgets of about 2.7% in 2010, a vast improvement compared to an average 1.8% increase in 2009, by far the lowest year on record. Both of these data points are from a recently released Hewitt report.

Variable pay budgets (budgets for incentive or "bonus" programs) are expected to remain stable at about 12% for 2010. While the 2010 variable pay budgets are about in line with 2008 and 2009, the long-term trend has seen a slow but steady upward march, and we at the StrategicPay Series expect that trend to continue.  In 1990, corporate variable pay budgets were about 5% of payroll, and today they are more than double that, while merit pay budgets have been at historically low levels since the 2001 recession. 

Hewitt expects variable pay budgets to slowly continue upwards.  In a study released in the spring of 2009, Hewitt predicted  an average variable pay budget of 16% of payroll and a base pay increase pay budget of 2.0% in 2020.

While, of course, no one knows what's going to happen 10 years into the future, the predicted trends are clear: continued pressure on fixed-cost compensation increases (i.e. base pay), combined with a continued willingness to pay for performance, in the form of variable pay.  We agree.

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