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Pay and Benefits in the Public Sector. Martin Rama Development Research Group Public Expenditure Analysis & Management Staff Training Course Washington, DC, May 22-24, 2001. The Problem. The wage bill is usually the largest item in public sector spending
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Pay and Benefits in the Public Sector Martin Rama Development Research Group Public Expenditure Analysis & Management Staff Training Course Washington, DC, May 22-24, 2001
The Problem • The wage bill is usually the largest item in public sector spending • Salaries and benefits result from historic legacies, fiscal adjustments, political pressures, etc. • Pay tends to be compressed compared to the private sector (low top-to-bottom ratios) • Low pay could lead to the departure of qualified staff and encourage corruption
The Solution • Pay and benefits should be similar in the public and the private sectors • An immediate alignment may not be feasible, but the direction should be clear • The alignment may lead to gains for some public sector workers, and losses for others
Methodological Issues • The “private sector” is very heterogeneous in developing countries (formal versus informal activities) • Benefits account for a different share of total compensation in the public sector and in the private sector(s) • Some important benefits (job security, low effort…) are difficult to quantify
In Practice, Two Strategies • The jobs approach: estimate the total compensation associated with “similar” jobs in the private sector (e.g. secretary, driver) • The workers approach: estimate the total compensation a public sector worker would get if he/she had to move to the private sector
The Jobs Approach • Widely used in industrial countries, and even by the World Bank (Hay points) • Relies on the identification of appropriate private sector “comparators” • Problem: the chosen “comparators” are often the best companies in the formal sector • Experience from downsizing shows that many public sector workers end up in the informal sector. • Example: the 2000 arbitration award in Guyana, doubling government pay.
The Workers Approach • Relies on the estimation of the pay and benefits a specific worker would get if he/she moved out of the public sector • This is the same as estimating the amount of compensation he/she would need in the event of job separation • Implication: a public sector worker cannot be both underpaid and reluctant to leave in exchange for generous compensation
Implementation of this Approach • Rely on household survey data (e.g. LSMS) to estimate private sector earnings as a function of worker characteristics (age, education, etc.) • Predict alternative earnings of public sector workers by plugging their individual characteristics into the estimated earnings function • Use the distribution of estimated earnings gaps to infer the value of intangible public sector benefits (more on this below)
Main Potential Weakness • Public sector workers may be different from private sector workers in unobservable ways (e.g. they could be better connected, or less entrepreneurial) • Failure to control for unobservable characteristics will bias the estimates (e.g. we will compare with the private sector earnings of someone who is not well connected, or is more entrepreneurial) • How serious is this potential bias?
An Illustration: State-owned Enterprises in Vietnam • If the bias from unobservable characteristics matters, then it has to matter in Vietnam’s SOEs • Under central planning, SOE jobs were deliberately allocated based on political loyalty and to compensate for sacrifices during independence wars • In the early 1990s, a voluntary downsizing program led to the departure of the most entrepreneurial third of the SOE workforce.
Six Ways to Estimate the Gap • OLS: Estimates earnings functions based on observable characteristics only • HECKMAN: Standard approach to correct for self-selection on unobservable characteristics • SWITCHING: More elaborate version of the above • FE-TIME: Focuses on workers who shift from public to private sector or vice-versa • FE-HHOLD: Focuses on individuals who belong to the same household but work in public versus private sector. • MATCHING: Compares with most similar private sector worker(s), rather than with a regression line.
A Crude Comparison • The jobs approach suggests that SOE workers earn 4 to 8 times less than private sector workers • The workers approach shows that they actually earn about 30 percent more • The mean and median gap are stable, regardless of the econometric technique used • Even individual gaps are quite stable, as revealed by the significant correlation coefficients
Assessing Benefits • Both the jobs approach and the workers approach assume that benefits are the same in the public and the private sectors • The comparators chosen in the jobs approach may offer similar benefits, but they require higher effort and provide less job security • Benefits such as health coverage and old-age pension are usually unavailable in the informal sector
Methods to Assess Benefits • Direct method: Calculate the value of the most significant benefits available in the public sector but not in the informal sector (e.g. old-age pension) • Indirect method: If a worker who could earn X% more in the private sector does not leave voluntarily, he/she must value the intangible benefits at X% of his/her salary at least.
Main Findings in Guinea-Bissau • All civil servants in N-Z categories would lose if they moved to the informal sector, but a quarter of them would earn more in the private formal sector • Based on the estimated gains, and the probability of finding a job in the private formal sector, the value of intangible benefits is around 20 percent of the measurable earnings • The direct method, based on the present value of old-age pension, yields similar results
Conclusions • Having clear benchmarks is important to reform public sector pay over time, minimizing risks of either over-spending or losing qualified personnel • The jobs approach yields an excessively high benchmark, because it focuses on the best companies, and not on the true alternatives of public sector workers • The workers approach can be implemented in any country with decent household survey data, of the kind we use in our poverty work
Conclusions (Contd.) • The main weakness of the workers approach is the potential bias created by unobservable worker characteristics • However, this bias does not appear to be substantial, and even simple econometric techniques (such as OLS) could yield decent results • The workers approach can also be used to estimate the value of intangible benefits offered by the public sector, which are part of total compensation
References Cited in the presentation: Bales, Sarah and Martin Rama (2001): “Are Public Sector Workers Underpaid? Appropriate Comparators in a Developing Country”, work in progress, Washington, DC: The World Bank. Chong, Alberto and Martín Rama (2001): “Do Compensation Packages Need to Be that Generous? Simulations for Government Employees in Guinea-Bissau”, in Shantayanan Devarajan, F. Halsey Rogers and Lyn Squire (eds.): World Bank Economists’ Forum, 1, p. 169-194, Washington, DC: The World Bank. Other references: Adamchik, Vera A. and Arjun S. Bedi (2000): “Wage Differentials between the Public and the Private Sector: Evidence from an Economy in Transition”, Labour Economics, 7(2), p. 203-224, March. Filmer, Deon and David Lindauer (2001): “Does Indonesia Have a ‘Low Pay’ Civil Service?” unpublished manuscript, Washington, DC: The World Bank. Hou, Jack W. (1993): “Public-Private Wage Comparison: A Case Study of Taiwan”, Journal of Asian Economics, 4(2), p. 347-362, Fall. Lindauer, David and Richard H. Sabot (1983): “The Public-Private Wage Differential in a Poor Urban Economy”, Journal of Development Economics, 12(1-2), p. 137-152, February-April. Mengistae, Taye (1998): “Wage Rates and Job Queues: Does the Public Sector Overpay in Ethiopia?”, Working Paper Series, WPS/98-20, Oxford, UK: Centre for the Study of African Economies”, December. Psacharopoulos, George, Jorge Valenzuela and Mary Arends (1996): “Teacher Salaries in Latin America: a Review”, Economics of Education Review, 15(4), p. 401-406. Stelcner, Morton, Jacques van de Gaag and Wim Vijverberg (1989): “A Switching Regression Model of Public-Private Sector Wage Differentials in Peru: 1985-86”, Journal of Human Resources, 24(3), p. 545-559, Summer. Terrell, Katherine (1993): “Public-Private Wage Differentials in Haiti: Do Public Servants Earn a Rent?”, Journal of Development Economics, 42(2), p. 293-314, December.