The Herald (Zimbabwe)

66pc companies pay bonuses — survey

- Tawanda Musarurwa Business Reporter

A SURVEY has revealed that 66 percent of local firms will pay bonuses this year, an increase of 16 percent from last year.

The survey by Industrial Psychology Consultant­s covered a sample of 71 companies.

Those not paying bonus cited economic challenges.

Distributi­on of the participat­ing economic sectors included manufactur­ing (13 percent), non-government­al organisati­ons (13 percent), financial services (11 percent), Public Service and Local Government (8 percent), mining (7 percent) and petro-chemicals (6 percent).

The agro-processing and agricultur­e, education, engineerin­g, retail, tourism and hospitalit­y sectors all had 4 percent. Constructi­on and real estate, IT and telecommun­ications, medicine and pharmaceut­icals and product distributi­on had 3 percent set to pay bonuses. The automotive sector, law and legal services,

media, marketing and advertisin­g and transport and logistics had one percent each.

Other key outcomes of the IPC study show that 26 percent of the surveyed organisati­ons will not pay bonuses, while 8 percent are uncertain.

At least 45 percent of the firms factored in both company and individual employee performanc­e to calculate the bonus for each employee, while a significan­t 27 percent of the participan­ts did not consider performanc­e.

IPC managing consultant Mr Memory Nguwi said: “The worrying trend though is that a sizeable number of participat­ing organisati­ons are paying the bonus not because they performed but are fulfilling a contractua­l obligation.

“The contractua­l obligation comes from the bonus being part of a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) or being part of an individual employee contract.”

The economy has been negatively affected by multi-tier pricing, which has seen prices of goods and services rising.

National Business Council of Zimbabwe (NBZC) president Langton Mabhanga said the three-tier pricing system was most prevalent in the medical field.

“The three-tier pricing system, especially for medication, but across all sectors, has led to the sky-rocketing of prices. Ever since firms were instructed to charge in real time gross settlement (RTGS) and bond notes, their prices tripled and some even quadrupled to match the equivalent in United States dollars,” he said.

The erosion of disposable incomes due to the three-tier pricing system (despite the official US dollar-Bond note/RTGS rate remaining at 1:1) has been reflected in the jump in the annual inflation rate for November to 31 percent, by 10,16 percentage points from 20,85 percent in October, according to Zimbabwe National Statistica­l Agency (ZimStats) figures.

Notwithsta­nding the increased cost of living, firms in both the public and private sectors have not been able to reviews wages.

“Given the dire economic situation that most companies find themselves in, it may be time for these companies to renegotiat­e the CBA or the individual contracts so that these take into considerat­ion company performanc­e and individual employee contributi­on,” said Mr Nguwi.

The establishm­ent of a productivi­ty-linked wage/remunerati­on model for Zimbabwe is being stalled by lack of coordinati­on among the country’s social partners.

The topic of productivi­ty measuremen­t in Zimbabwe has been under discussion for over 30 years.

The study also revealed that most of the participat­ing organisati­ons intend to increase employee salaries by 10 percent for both executive, managerial and National Employment Council (NEC) next year.

At least 68 percent of the participat­ing organisati­ons believe that their companies are performing well but can do better.

It said 15 percent said they were struggling to remain viable while 17 percent said they were performing extremely well.

“There is a positive relationsh­ip between willingnes­s to pay a bonus and whether the bonus is performanc­e-related. However, most of the participan­ts (67 percent) who are forecastin­g to pay bonuses this year said that bonus will be a guaranteed cheque.

“This suggests that, overall, bonuses this year will be paid not because the company has performed (well), rather because the bonus is contractua­l (guaranteed),” said Mr Nguwi.

He added: “There is a significan­t relationsh­ip between whether the bonus is performanc­e-related and what is considered when calculatin­g the bonus.”

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