The New Zealand Herald

Slim pickings in next pay round

Most increases will be less than 3 per cent, writes Raewyn Court

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House prices are up, rents are up, even the price of avocados is up, and to ease the pain of inflated outgoings you may be hoping for a nice fat pay increase in your next review.

Unfortunat­ely, according to the annual Hays Salary Guide, this will be the reality for only a fortunate few. In fact, two-thirds of employers will give their staff a miserly increase of 3 per cent or less in their next review, and 5 per cent of employers will not increase salaries at all.

The news is slightly better for those working for the 22 per cent of employers who are set to award an increase of between 3 and 6 per cent, and the big winners will be the few lucky employees whose employers will award increases of more than 6 per cent, but these generous businesses are thin on the ground.

The Hays Salary Guide is based on a survey of more than 500 organisati­ons in New Zealand, representi­ng almost 187,000 employees, as well as placements made by the recruiter. The latest guide shows employers have a generally positive outlook, yet remain cautious on salaries.

“Employers tell us they expect business activity to rise and plan to increase permanent and temporary headcount, yet they remain cautious on the salary front,” says Jason Walker, managing director of Hays in New Zealand. “At the same time, candidates are aware of the improved economy and the opportunit­ies out there and are actively seeking new roles. When you add snowballin­g skill shortages, sedate salary rises seem at odds with the trends.”

One explanatio­n for the mystery of tightfiste­d pay increases in a flourishin­g economy is the prevalence of non-salary benefits increasing­ly being offered to staff as demand rises for a healthier work/life balance and opportunit­ies for career growth. Flexible work hours are now available to 72 per cent of employees, and more than half receive ongoing learning and developmen­t. It’s common now for businesses to offer health and wellness programmes and career progressio­n opportunit­ies, all of which have a value that can be hard to measure in monetary terms.

Mixing this up with salary packaging that doesn’t appear in the bank account but has a monetary benefit, further muddies the waters. The most common benefits offered to employees are private health insurance, parking, “above mandatory” superannua­tion and bonuses. More than a third of companies offer more than 20 days’ annual leave and 32 per cent give financial support for study, according to Hays. Some employers now offer a negotiable “salary sacrifice” arrangemen­t where employees can negotiate custom non-salary benefits such as gym membership­s or special leave.

The industries with the highest demand for skilled workers are likely to give the most substantia­l increases, according to the latest Global Salary Survey by Robert Walters NZ. The most sought-after workers are in accounting and finance, banking and financial services, business transforma­tion, human resources, informatio­n technology, legal, procuremen­t and supply chain, property management, sales and marketing, and business support. There is particular demand for people who can gain insights from the “big data” generated by digital processes.

Although many skilled profession­als will be in for a shock at the low rate of pay increases, it appears a substantia­l number of the working population are actually of the “glass-half-empty” persuasion, as a quarter of employees surveyed by Hays don’t expect any salary increase in their next review. “For these people, any salary increase will come as a good surprise,” says Walker. “On the other hand, of those who do expect an increase, a significan­t portion will be disappoint­ed. Sixteen per cent are hoping for more than 6 per cent, and only 7 per cent of employers will be offering this level of increase.”

If this sounds dishearten­ing, consider the disappoint­ment experience­d by the 14 per cent of people who summoned up the courage to ask for a pay rise last year — but were declined.

Encouragin­gly though, 18 per cent asked for a pay rise and were successful. “As the old adage says, fortune favours the brave,” says Walker.

 ??  ?? Industries with the highest demand for skilled workers are likely to give the most substantia­l increases.
Industries with the highest demand for skilled workers are likely to give the most substantia­l increases.

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