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Academic Contests? Merit Pay in Canadian Universities
Resource type
            
        Author/contributor
                    - Grant, Hugh (Author)
Title
            Academic Contests? Merit Pay in Canadian Universities
        Abstract
            The application of merit pay in Canadian universities is examined. Designed to motivate and reward greater productivity, the effectiveness of merit pay depends upon the relative importance of competitive versus cooperative behavior in the academic workplace, the capacity to evaluate individual performance, and the ability to design clear financial signals appropriate to the objectives of the institution. Differences among universities can be expected to produce differences in compensation methods. A logit analysis is conducted that suggests that an institution's likelihood of having a merit pay scheme varies according to region; that it increases with the emphasis placed on graduate training and research; and that it declines in the presence of a unionized faculty association. This suggests that the adoption of performance-based pay is apt to meet stronger resistance in undergraduate and unionized institutions.
        Publication
            Relations industrielles / Industrial Relations
        Volume
            53
        Issue
            4
        Pages
            647-666
        Date
            Fall 1998
        Language
            English
        ISSN
            0034379X
        Accessed
            3/9/15, 10:47 PM
        Rights
            Copyright Les Presses de L'Universite Laval Fall 1998
        Citation
            Grant, H. (1998). Academic Contests? Merit Pay in Canadian Universities. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 53(4), 647–666. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/1998/v53/n4/index.html
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