TY - JOUR
T1 - PAY TRANSPARENCY AS A MOVING TARGET
T2 - A MULTISTEP MODEL OF PAY COMPRESSION, I-DEALS, AND COLLECTIVIST SHARED VALUES
AU - Wong, Man Nok
AU - Cheng, Bonnie Hayden
AU - Lam, Leon Wai Yuan
AU - Bamberger, Peter A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Academy of Management. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Drawing from research on the transparency-privacy dilemma in management, we theorize that firm-level pay transparency elicits a multistep process involving managers and employees that shifts the dispersion in remuneration from more to less observable forms, thus making pay transparency a “moving target.” We posit a serial indirect effect of pay transparency on firm-level rates of i-deal grants (a less observable form of remuneration) via variable pay compression and heightened rates of employee i-deal requests, with this indirect effect amplified in firms characterized by collectivist shared values. First examining the role of managerial agency and collectivist shared values in the pay transparency–compression relationship in a simulation-based experiment, we test the overall model in a multisource field study using a sample of 111 medical device distribution firms. Our findings demonstrate that: (a) firm-level pay transparency is predictive of greater pay compression, (b) firm-level rates of i-deal grants are largely explained by this pay compression via its effects on employee i-deal requests, and (c) this sequential effect is amplified in firms with more collectivist shared values. Accordingly, we explicate how transparency triggers unintentional hiding, and suggest that accompanying more transparent pay may be an increased reliance upon rewards that, by their very nature, are less transparent.
AB - Drawing from research on the transparency-privacy dilemma in management, we theorize that firm-level pay transparency elicits a multistep process involving managers and employees that shifts the dispersion in remuneration from more to less observable forms, thus making pay transparency a “moving target.” We posit a serial indirect effect of pay transparency on firm-level rates of i-deal grants (a less observable form of remuneration) via variable pay compression and heightened rates of employee i-deal requests, with this indirect effect amplified in firms characterized by collectivist shared values. First examining the role of managerial agency and collectivist shared values in the pay transparency–compression relationship in a simulation-based experiment, we test the overall model in a multisource field study using a sample of 111 medical device distribution firms. Our findings demonstrate that: (a) firm-level pay transparency is predictive of greater pay compression, (b) firm-level rates of i-deal grants are largely explained by this pay compression via its effects on employee i-deal requests, and (c) this sequential effect is amplified in firms with more collectivist shared values. Accordingly, we explicate how transparency triggers unintentional hiding, and suggest that accompanying more transparent pay may be an increased reliance upon rewards that, by their very nature, are less transparent.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85136134445&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.5465/amj.2020.1831
DO - 10.5465/amj.2020.1831
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AN - SCOPUS:85136134445
SN - 0001-4273
VL - 66
SP - 489
EP - 520
JO - Academy of Management Journal
JF - Academy of Management Journal
IS - 2
ER -