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Brown, Jon Brow
14th October 2014, 17:26
If you live in the UK you may be aware that the minimum wage has increased by 19p/hour this October. This is a higher increase than in previous years due to the the minimum wage rising slower than inflation in previous years.

For the last 8 years my employer has always increased its hourly rate at the same rate as the minimum wage increase. Keeping it at a fixed level above the minimum wage. For instance, if the minimum wage increased 8p/hour, my pay also increased by 8p/hour.

However, this year my basic pay has increased by a significantly lower amount than the minimum wage increase. I stress that I am still paid above the minimum wage, but not by the same level as the previous years.

Do I have a legitimate grievance? I think it's quite insulting.

steveaki13
14th October 2014, 18:12
When I actually get a pay rise, I will let you know. :p:(

Starter
14th October 2014, 18:22
Depends on whether everyone else got the same raise as you did or more or less. Everything's relative in a case like this.

gadjo_dilo
14th October 2014, 18:25
I'd like to be insulted with any rise. But at my institution salaries are frozen for years. :s

I think a private employer is obliged to pay the minimum level but otherwise he's free to decide the rise for those who gain over that level.

Brown, Jon Brow
14th October 2014, 18:35
Of course a private employer can pay what it wishes if they pay at least the minimum wage, but it still feels like my work is valued less in comparison to what it was previously.

D-Type
15th October 2014, 00:11
Complain to your boss that you feel you've been shabbily treated.

At the same time, apply for other jobs to establish what you're market value is, then offer your boss the opportunity to match it.

GridGirl
15th October 2014, 18:39
I would say a rise is a rise and that you shouldnt complain. :)

My worst ever payrise was £500pa but I have also had years when I have had no rise and once took a pay cut in the short term when swithing to my current job although I have since had rises which mean that I now earn more than I previously did.

We get an appraisal grade where I work and last year my grade although perceived as the 'norm' and achieved by approximately 80% of staff didn't qualify for a pay rise. The only people getting a rise were those that got promoted or were deemed to be consistently performing above their grade which was about 10% of the firm. I did get a payrise but only because I asked for a rise in my appraisal meeting and gave reasons as to why I thought I deserved one. Sometimes if you dont ask, you dont get. :D

Mark
16th October 2014, 21:25
Yeah I had three years of no rise at all that was pretty insulting I can tell you.

schmenke
16th October 2014, 21:59
Part of my annual wages are paid through cashing in company stock options, granted at a share price set 12 months ago. Right now, with the way the markets are declining, I actually owe the company money :s .

D-Type
17th October 2014, 00:23
How do options work?

I thought it was if the price goes up you have the option to buy shares at the old price. But if the share price goes down, you have the option of not buying.

Cashing them in is simply selling the right to someone else. Or is it buying at the old price and immediately selling at the new higher price? This year your option is worthless so you can't sell it and you don't want to buy your shares for more than the current market price. The only way you can owe the company money is if you foolishly opt to buy the shares anyway even though the price you pay is higher than market price.

But I could be wrong.

Mark
17th October 2014, 12:25
How do options work?

I thought it was if the price goes up you have the option to buy shares at the old price. But if the share price goes down, you have the option of not buying.

Right. We had that when our company was taken over. The purchase value of the shared was less than the options, therefore if we'd cashed them in at that point, we'd have lost money.



Cashing them in is simply selling the right to someone else. Or is it buying at the old price and immediately selling at the new higher price? This year your option is worthless so you can't sell it and you don't want to buy your shares for more than the current market price. The only way you can owe the company money is if you foolishly opt to buy the shares anyway even though the price you pay is higher than market price.

But I could be wrong.

You have to buy them at the option price then you can either keep them, or immediately sell them. I have a few stock options in web.com but I have to wait 2 years before I can use those options, and if I leave the company I lose the options right.

Even so, I would expect it would be 'night out' sort of money rather than it forming any significant part of my salary.

schmenke
20th October 2014, 16:12
Essentially the company grants me a loan of a number of shares at a set (“grant”) price. After 12 months (“vesting” period) I have the option to “exercise” the stocks, meaning I have three options:

1. I can purchase the shares from my company at the grant price and immediately sell them at the current (vested) price. This is of course assuming that the vested price is greater than the grant price. I would have to repay the company the loan and keep the difference as (taxable) income to me. This is the most popular option.

2. I have the option of not purchasing the shares and have the company hold them until a later time. This is what I've been doing, and is the obvious choice when the vest price is lower than the grant price. I can then choose to exercise the options at any time as long as, in my case, I do it within 7 years. The advantage here is that I can exercise at any time when I feel the stock price is favourable.

3. I can, after 12 months, purchase the shares outright from the company at the vest price and keep them as stocks in my personal portfolio. I would have to repay the company the initial loan though. The difference with option 1 here is that the stocks are mine and not held by the company.

Jag_Warrior
27th October 2014, 17:47
When I was in automotive, yeah, I did once get a raise which I wasn't happy with, considering that my annual evaluation was high... and the CEO gave himself a helluva raise! But hey, a 60-something year old man with a 30-something mistress and a (soon-to-be) ex-wife has bills and legal expenses to pay. So I was fairly forgiving. :mad: I got a restricted stock grant the next year (which would have more than made up for the short-fall... for years to come). I'd been there for ten years and had been happy. But things were changing. So I joined a new company the year after that, and none of my restricted shares vested. The new company set my salary at a level to make up for me losing my stock so I took the offer.

If business/economic conditions allow it, when/if I get a raise I'm not happy with, I immediately start updating my resume and finding out who will "love me" more. Once upon a time, I had a certain amount of loyalty to a particular company. I was happy & proud to work there. We were heavy CART sponsors, as well as other racing series. And they gave a good opportunity to move laterally and vertically... and learn about different facets of the business. But I'm not "young" anymore. These days, I have no loyalty to anyone but myself and my family. So I'm in it for the money now. Pay me or I'll find someone who will. No hard feelings.

Malbec
28th October 2014, 19:35
Haven't had a pay rise in 3 years, but did have my pensions contribution involuntarily doubled during the same period for a less valuable payout at a later retirement date... does that count?

Jag_Warrior
29th October 2014, 04:52
Haven't had a pay rise in 3 years, but did have my pensions contribution involuntarily doubled during the same period for a less valuable payout at a later retirement date... does that count?

Would you expand on that? They doubled your contribution, cut the payout and also pushed out your retirement date?

Let me ask you something... is a guy named Lewis Campbell running your company now? Does he run around in a private jet with a woman (his "assistant") about half his age - maybe he married her by now? At the same time he was cutting your benefits, did he increase his compensation package???

Run! Run now! Run fast!