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  2. Salary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salary

    Salary can also be considered as the cost of hiring and keeping human resources for corporate operations, and is hence referred to as personnel expense or salary expense. In accounting, salaries are recorded in payroll accounts. [1] A salary is a fixed amount of money or compensation paid to an employee by an employer in return for work performed.

  3. General Schedule (US civil service pay scale) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Schedule_(US_civil...

    As an example (and not including locality adjustments), an employee at GS-12 Step 10 (base salary $98,422) being promoted to a GS-13 position would initially have his/her salary set at GS-13 Step 4 (base salary $99,028, as it is the nearest salary to GS-12 Step 10 but not lower than it), and then have his/her salary adjusted to a higher step ...

  4. Pay bands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pay_bands

    Pay bands (sometimes also used as a broader term that encompasses several pay levels, ranges or grades) is a part of an organized salary compensation plan, program or system. In an organization that has defined jobs, pay bands are used to distinguish the level of compensation given to certain ranges of jobs to have fewer levels of pay ...

  5. Pay scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pay_scale

    A pay scale (also known as a salary structure) is a system that determines how much an employee is to be paid as a wage or salary, based on one or more factors such as the employee's level, rank or status within the employer's organization, the length of time that the employee has been employed, and the difficulty of the specific work performed.

  6. Compa-ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compa-ratio

    A compa-ratio of 1.00 or 100% means that the employee is paid exactly what the industry average pays and is at the midpoint for the salary range. A ratio of 0.75 means that the employee is paid 25% below the industry average and is at risk of seeking employment with competitors at a higher pay that is perceived as equitable.

  7. Wage labour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wage_labour

    Although most labour is organised as per this structure, the wage work arrangements of CEOs, professional employees, and professional contract workers are sometimes conflated with class assignments, so that "wage labour" is considered to apply only to unskilled, semi-skilled or manual labour.

  8. Salary cap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salary_cap

    In theory, there are two main benefits derived from salary caps – promotion of parity between teams, and control of costs. [5] [6] [7]Primarily, an effective salary cap prevents wealthy teams from certain destructive behaviours such as signing a multitude of high-paid star players to prevent their rivals from accessing these players, and ensuring victory through superior economic power.

  9. Performance-related pay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Performance-related_pay

    What fraction of pay depends on performance, and what is meant by performance, can vary widely. [1]Research on extreme high-stakes incentives [2] funded by the Federal Reserve Bank undertaken at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with input from professors from the University of Chicago and Carnegie Mellon University repeatedly demonstrated that as long as the tasks being undertaken are ...