Job evaluation.
Job evaluation.
- Geneva, Switzerland : ILO, c1986
- xi, 203 pages ; 24 cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
Chapter 1. Some general considerations -- Chapter 2. Job analysis and job description: the first stage of job evaluation -- Chapter 3. Non-analytical method -- Chapter 4. Analytical methods -- Chapter 5. Some new methods and recent research in job evaluation -- Chapter 6. Practical problems in applying a job evaluation scheme -- Chapter 7. Choosing a job evaluation method -- Chapter 8. International trends in the use of job evaluation -- Chapter 9. Equal remuneration and job evaluation -- Chapter 10. Attitudes of employers, workers and trade unions towards job evaluation -- Chapter 11. Final remarks.
Among the many pay problems regularly confronting enterprises throughout the world, those associated with internal pay differentials are amongst the most common. The difficulties normally arise from the belief by certain workers or categories that the position they occupy in the existing jobs and pay hierarchy is inappropriate. But responding to such concerns by means of upward pay adjustments does not necessarily represent a solution as other workers, with whom comparisons are traditionally made, may not accept having their relative position deteriorate in this way.
JOB -- EVALUATION
HF 5549.J62 .J63 1986
Includes bibliographical references.
Chapter 1. Some general considerations -- Chapter 2. Job analysis and job description: the first stage of job evaluation -- Chapter 3. Non-analytical method -- Chapter 4. Analytical methods -- Chapter 5. Some new methods and recent research in job evaluation -- Chapter 6. Practical problems in applying a job evaluation scheme -- Chapter 7. Choosing a job evaluation method -- Chapter 8. International trends in the use of job evaluation -- Chapter 9. Equal remuneration and job evaluation -- Chapter 10. Attitudes of employers, workers and trade unions towards job evaluation -- Chapter 11. Final remarks.
Among the many pay problems regularly confronting enterprises throughout the world, those associated with internal pay differentials are amongst the most common. The difficulties normally arise from the belief by certain workers or categories that the position they occupy in the existing jobs and pay hierarchy is inappropriate. But responding to such concerns by means of upward pay adjustments does not necessarily represent a solution as other workers, with whom comparisons are traditionally made, may not accept having their relative position deteriorate in this way.
JOB -- EVALUATION
HF 5549.J62 .J63 1986