51勛圖

Arguments of merit

Published on
July 9, 1999
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Peter Humphreys may well be right that we need "a pay structure that rewards merit", but PRP is not the answer. I have been on PRP for the past four years. Each year I get a small rise roughly in line with inflation and a polite letter from my line manager thanking me for a "successful year".

At no time has anyone explained how my pay is related to my performance - does a rise in line with inflation indicate a "good" or an "average" performance? I discovered that there is a "standard" rise determined for the year in question by the directorate and (presumably) offered to most employees on PRP. I am unaffected by national pay awards, although it says in my contract that such awards should be "taken into account".

PRP is therefore being used as a means to achieve "local" pay scales without being seen to do so and to operate a closer managerial control over the pay budget. If it is being used to reward and motivate individuals through a more transparent relationship between effort and reward, then this is not evident. School-teachers know that this is what PRP will mean for them. I hope university teachers will not be duped.

Ursula Sharma, University of Derby, Soapbox, page 18

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