Fortune | FORTUNE 07月10日 20:50
Looming pay transparency laws could create chaos for multinational companies and only 19% are ready for the new normal
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随着全球范围内薪酬透明化法规的逐步实施,企业面临着新的合规挑战。尽管71%的组织表示过去一年薪酬透明度准备有所提高,但仅有19%认为已做好准备。文章指出,清晰的沟通和管理层培训对于透明化至关重要。特别是在欧盟2026年法规生效后,企业需要进行薪酬公平报告,并披露性别薪酬差距。未能积极应对的企业,不仅面临合规风险,还可能影响人才的吸引和留用。

💰 调查显示,尽管71%的组织表示薪酬透明度准备有所提高,但只有19%认为已准备就绪。

📢 薪酬透明化在不同地区逐渐普及,美国多个州已强制要求在招聘信息中披露薪资范围。

🇪🇺 欧盟2026年将实施薪酬透明化法规,要求雇员超过100人的公司进行公平报告,并披露性别薪酬差距。

A wave of pay transparency regulations in different parts of the world are expected to go into effect over the next few years, but the majority of employers are unprepared to meet the new requirements.

Around 71% of organizations say their pay transparency readiness has improved over the past year, according to a survey of 1,4000 companies globally from professional services firm Aon. But only 19% of organizations consider themselves ready for pay transparency. Around 26% say they’ve conducted a pay equity analysis in the past 12-18 months, and just 9% have confidence that their managers fully understand pay policies and can discuss compensation effectively.

“Clear, consistent communication and manager training are critical to transparency efforts,” Kelly Voss, head of rewards and career advisory for North America at Aon wrote in a statement accompanying the report. “Without them, even well-intentioned strategies can fall short.”

Pay transparency has slowly been catching on in the U.S. Since the start of this year, Illinois, New Jersey, Vermont, Minnesota, and Massachusetts have joined other states like Colorado, California, New York, and Maryland in mandating pay range disclosures in job postings, among other salary-related provisions, according to ADP. And while North American survey respondents posted the highest percentage of companies who believed they were ready for pay transparency—25%—around 59% of companies still said they were still “getting ready,” and 16% said they were not ready. 

Large employers, however, should think long and hard about being more proactive about their pay transparency progress. Especially considering a European Union pay transparency regulation goes into effect in 2026. It will require companies with 100 employees or more to conduct equity reports, and disclose any gender pay gaps of more than 5% for people in the same level across an organization. It will also allow employees to request information about how their pay measures up to employees at the same level within their organization. And while 12% of companies surveyed in the Europe, Middle East and Africa region said they were ready for pay transparency, 62% said they were still getting ready, and 26% said they were unprepared. 

“Pay transparency is no longer a buzzword. It’s a baseline expectation from employees and a regulatory imperative across an increasing number of jurisdictions, yet our data shows a concerning lack of progress,” Lisa Stevens, chief administrative officer at Aon, wrote in the report.“Organizations that fail to act face risks not only in compliance, but in their ability to attract, retain and engage talent.”

Brit Morse
brit.morse@fortune.com

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