Many employers don’t buy into pay transparency, study finds

While more companies are offering pay ranges in their job postings, many are doing it begrudgingly. Many others don’t even see a reason why.

A new Payscale survey found that 45% of employers now include that salary information in job ads, more than double the number (22%) that did a year ago. But 18% of those only do it when they are required by law, according to the report.

Similarly distressing: Over a quarter of firms surveyed said that leadership is unconvinced of the merits of pay transparency and a fifth say they don’t want to be transparent. One in 9 organizations say they are resisting pay transparency altogether.

The results come as state and local laws requiring pay disclosures gain momentum with legislation in California and Washington state going into effect Jan. 1 and a similar one following later this year in New York state. Comparable pay disclosure laws are already in place in Colorado and New York City, while Maryland and Rhode Island require salary information to be provided when an applicant requests it.

Still “most employers do not appear to be ready for pay transparency laws,” Ruth Thomas, pay equity strategist at Payscale, told Yahoo Finance, even though by the end of this year, roughly 1 in 4 workers will be covered by a state or local law that requires businesses to be transparent about their pay ranges, a development that can have many advantages for workers.

Resisting revealing salary ranges

Even the companies who are bowing to the legal requirements are not always doing so in full spirit of the law. The biggest shortcoming so far of new state salary transparency laws is laughably wide pay ranges, often covering more than a six-figure span.

Payscale
Source:Payscale 2023 Compensation Best Practices Report · Payscale

And it is not just in job postings where employers prefer to keep salaries hidden. Disappointingly, a tiny fraction (13%) of organizations don’t share pay ranges with employees at all, at any point in the employment process, according to Payscales’s report.

“Many organizations fear adding pay ranges to job ads because they suspect it will lead to discontent in the current workforce,” Thomas said. “Employees might discover these posts and find that they are paid lower on the advertised range–or below the range–than they might expect or feel entitled to. Often, the hang-up around pay transparency is a lack of internal pay equity or a lack of confidence in salary data or pay structures.”

Just a little over half of organizations (55%) reported they have a compensation strategy, up 7% since last year, according to Payscale.“This is critical because a compensation strategy is required for building formal pay structures and complying with pay transparency legislation,” Thomas said.