统计数据研究表明:同私企工比较,政府工的收入不是过高,而是过低

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Study says public employees still under paid

A Rutgers University professor 'debunks' the right's constant criticism

Download:
EPIreport.pdf



Take a look at the following paragraph:

Several governors have identified excessive public employee compensation as a major cause of their states' fiscal duress. The remedies they propose include public employee pay freezes, benefits reductions, privatization, major revisions to the rules of collective bargaining and constitutional amendments to limit pay increases, each as a necessary antidote to the supposed public employee overpayment malady.

Sound familiar? It should, because you've heard much the same thing from our current Oregon governor, candidates to succeed him and countless aspirants for other offices.

But a major national report released recently says a statistical analysis of all public employees, in both state and local government, yields this conclusion: public employees are not overpaid, and in fact, all told, are slightly underpaid relative to their counterparts in the private sector.

Specifically, the report found:

  • Overall, U.S. public employees are under-compensated by an average of 3.7 percent relative to private sector counterparts.
  • Local government employees do better relatively, and are under-compensated by 1.8 percent.
  • State employees, in contrast, are under-compensated to the tune of 7.6 percent.
The report was issued by the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C. It's a nonprofit think tank that was created in 1986 "to broaden the discussion about economic policy to include the interests of low- and middle-income workers." The EPI's full-time staff includes eight Ph.D.-level researchers, and the organization works closely with a national network of prominent scholars.

One of those scholars is Jeffrey Keefe, an associate professor of labor and employment relations at Rutgers University. Keefe is the primary author of Debunking the Myth of the Overcompensated Public Employee, the EPI report referenced above.

Keefe's report, 14 pages including references and an appendix, covers a variety of topics, some frequently reported on, but others often overlooked. For example:

  • Public employees are, on average, more highly educated than private sector employees. That means the "typical" public employee may indeed make more than the "typical" private worker if you don't line them up in an apples-to-apples comparison. In other words, all of the minimum wage earners in the private sector are logically going to drag down the private sector's average wage. However, state and local government pays its college-educated labor 25 percent less than the private sector pays its college-educated labor. And the earnings differential is even higher for professional class employees, doctors and lawyers.
  • Given the findings above, Keefe notes that public jurisdictions may in fact want to look at reverse contracting out, saying that the earnings differential between college-educated private and public sector employees "may create opportunities for cost savings by reviewing professional outsourcing contracts to examine what work might be performed by lower cost public employees."
  • Benefits are simply allocated differently between private and public sector full-time workers. State and local government employees receive a higher percentage of their overall compensation in the form of benefits than do their private sector counterparts (which means the wage difference between the two is even more striking). But again, when it comes to overall compensation — wages and benefits — public employees remain slightly under-compensated.
It's worth noting that both John Kitzhaber and Chris Dudley, in different ways, have made mention of the need to view Oregon state employees' remuneration from a total compensation perspective. The difference is that Kitzhaber has used the phrase to buttress his view that state workers' salaries are not the primary cause for Oregon's budget woes, whereas Dudley has strongly maintained that overall compensation for state employees is simply too high.

A full PDF version of Debunking the Myth of the Overcompensated Public Employee is attached to this article. More about the Economic Policy Institute is available at the EPI website.

http://www.oregonafscme.com/docs/EPIreport.pdf
 
美国的事情,你也管啊?
 
别人工资高低,和你有毛关系?:eek:
 
连续两天舆论攻势啊,看来,这工资是势在必涨了 。。。
公众都是被资本家,政治家和媒体牵着鼻子走的。

370688
 
政府工的工钱是现在拿一份,退休再拿75%。私企的退休后能拿多少?
 
薪酬本来就是政府工的劣势。政府工的优势是工作清闲,养老不愁,所以一定要努力活得久,才能把优势充分体现。
 
怎么可能是0, 难道CPP也没有吗?

再说65岁以上的老都可以拿$5000的OAS。。。
你有的,政府工都有(如果他们的退休金不够高);他们有的那个大头(工资的%),我们都没有(我们得自己买)。
 
政府工的工钱是现在拿一份,退休再拿75%。私企的退休后能拿多少?
最高的是70%,这要干35年才有,而且要扣工资的8%到12%, 和私企比不一定合算
 
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