ESRC: Breaking the silence on aid workers salaries

Wednesday, 18 May 2011 12:00 AM

A new international Task Force has been set up to promote 'a fair day's work for a fair day's pay' for workers and to develop organisational capacity in lower income countries.

The research which found discrepancies between the salaries earned by local and those earned by expatriate aid workers was instrumental in setting up the task force. According to the findings from a jointly funded project by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and Department for International Development (DFID) an expatriate aid worker will be paid on average four times more (and sometimes much more) than a local employee doing a similar job, with local salaries pushing workers below the poverty line.

Led by Professor Stuart Carr of Massey University, New Zealand, and Professor Malcolm MacLachlan of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, the study tested the impact of 'dual salaries' on local workers' motivation in the health, education and business sectors in Malawi, Uganda, India, China, the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea in instances when they have been working with expatriate aid workers.

Professor Carr explains: "Such disparity can have repercussions beyond just employee dissatisfaction. Our findings show a keen sense of injustice on the part of locally-salaried workers, coupled with demotivation and low levels of job satisfaction raises the desire to work abroad. This, in turn, contributes to local 'brain drain' - the mass departure of technically skilled people from one country to another."

The researchers also found that wage gaps can prevent 'capacity development', the overall objective of the aid organisations, from occurring. These development activities often include supporting local training, provision of equipment and staff expertise.

Professor MacLachlan says: "Organisations can play a key role in workers' sense of identity and worth by making pay and benefits fairer and thus improving human services, productivity and poverty reduction itself. Above all, we must avoid international aid working against itself that is becoming 'capacity stripping'. Options for addressing this wage inequality include creating career plans, performance appraisals and job evaluations - for example through workplace goal-setting, structured feedback and job-sizing. This would help put to work the remaining Paris Declaration principles of ownership, results and mutual accountability."

By demonstrating that salary discrepancies result from expatriates who originate from higher income economies rather than different levels of experience or skills the researchers were instrumental in setting up the Task Force - which recently made its first full submission to the United Nations. The Global Task Force for Humanitarian Work Psychology aims to pursue a new mission which calls for greater attention to organisations and their dealings with their people - as part of the Millennium Development Goals from the UN's 'Keeping the Promise'. And they plan to work through bodies such as the United Nations and the International Labour Organisation, as well as policy think-tanks such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Professor Carr continues: "We have argued that the role and impact of organisations and organisational cultures should be given much more attention, as the project findings showed that organisations can be key to enabling a fair day's work for a fair day's pay and to promoting the perception of greater work justice and equity."

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT:

Professor Stuart C Carr (Tel: +64 9 414 0800 Ext. 41228, email: S.C.Carr@Massey.ac.nz)
Professor Malcolm MacLachlan (Tel +353 86 606 2124, e-mail: Malcolm.maclachlan@tcd.ie)

ESRC Press Office:

Danielle Moore (Tel: 01793 413122, email: danielle.moore@esrc.ac.uk)
Jeanine Woolley (Tel: 01793 413119, email: jeanine.woolley@esrc.ac.uk)

NOTES FOR EDITORS

This release is based on the findings from 'Aid Salary Discrepancies and Development Workers' Performance', funded ESRC-DFID (Department for International Development) joint scheme for research on international development (poverty alleviation) . The study was led by Professor Stuart C. Carr of Massey University's Poverty Research Group and School of Psychology, New Zealand, and Professor Malcolm MacLachlan of Trinity College Dublin's Centre for Global Health and School of Psychology, Ireland, in collaboration with an interdisciplinary consortium of colleagues from eight other countries.

'The study' involved an on-paper survey of 1,290 local and internationally-remunerated professional workers from 202 aid, government educational and business organisations. Samples were taken from land-locked (Malawi, Uganda), Oceanic (Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea) and emerging economies (India, China).

The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) is the UK's largest organisation for funding research on economic and social issues. It supports independent, high quality research which has an impact on business, the public sector and the third sector. The ESRC's total budget for 2010/11 is £218 million. At any one time the ESRC supports over 4,000 researchers and postgraduate students in academic institutions and independent research institutes. More at www.esrc.ac.uk

In 2005 the Department for International Development (DFID) and the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) formed a strategic partnership to provide a joint funding scheme with a total budget of £13 million The aim of the scheme is to enhance the quality and impact of social science research addressing the key international development goal of reducing poverty amongst the poorest countries and peoples of the world. More information at the ESRC-DFID joint scheme

Findings from the project have also inspired a new book - 'The Aid Triangle: Recognizing the Human Dynamics of Dominance, Justice and Identity' (MacLachlan, Carr & McAuliffe; Zed Books, London).

The ESRC confirms the quality of its funded research by evaluating research projects through a process of peer review. This research has been graded as outstanding.

Kind Regards

Jeanine Woolley
ESRC
Communications Manager
Communications Team
Polaris House, North Star Avenue
Swindon, SN2 1UJ

01793 413119

    Tags:

Disclaimer: Press releases published on this page are from key opinion formers who promote their organisation's activities by subscribing to a campaign site within politics.co.uk. politics.co.uk does not endorse, edit, or attempt to balance the opinions expressed on this page. The content of press releases are wholly the responsibility of the originating company or organisation.

Related stories

UN condemns violence against aid workers

UN condemns violence against aid workers

UN condemns violence against aid workers

Rover workers get £150 million aid package

Politics.co.uk

Tony Blair has said there will be a £150 million aid package to help the workers made redundant by the collapse of MG Rover.

UN aid workers resume role in Iraq

UN aid workers resume role in Iraq

UN aid workers resume role in Iraq

MPs' call for £100,000 salaries condemned

Reports suggest MPs are calling for salaries of £100,000

A trade union leader has condemned reports suggesting MPs are pushing for a 66 per cent pay rise to take their salaries to £100,000 a year.

The largest salaries paid by you

Public sector salaries larger than the prime minister's revealed

One hundred and seventy two civil servants earn more than the prime minister, the government has revealed.

Trafficked children lost behind 'wall of silence'

Trafficked children lost behind 'wall of silence'

Trafficked children are suffering from abuse as professionals struggle to identify them, according to a new report published today by the NSPCC and the University of Bedfordshire.

UK stops for European three-minute silence

UK stopped

A three-minute silence has been observed across Europe to remember the victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami disaster.

MI5 breaks its silence

Jonathan Evan's Telegraph article is almost unprecedented for the boss of MI5

The head of MI5 has been pushed into an unprecedented intervention in the continuing row over British collusion in torture.

Pickles exposes £100k council salaries

Eric Pickles wants councillors to debate top pay

Council staff earning over £100,000 will have their salaries publicly approved by councillors, Eric Pickles has announced.

First employer fined for breaking minimum pay laws

First prosecution over minimum wage

The first employer has been found guilty of underpaying their staff.

Press Releases

How teenagers cope with inner-city risks

ESRC: How family conflict affects children

ESRC: Depression: why life can feel out of control

ESRC: Primary pupils miss out on the outdoors

ESRC: How can we prepare better for emergencies?

ESRC: New team to navigate local government

ESRC: Myths of man-hating feminists make feminism unpopular

ESRC: Help in reading foreign languages

ESRC: UK Human Geography no.1 in the world

ESRC: A picture of health in schools

More Articles ...

Twitter

Join the conversation at #opinion_formers

Related Opinion Former Press Releases

Culture workers' strikes start with focus on Propaganda

A series of strikes in the culture and heritage sector opens with walkouts by British Library workers on Thursday (16) and Friday (17), the Public and Commercial Services union announces.

ESRC: How family conflict affects children

New research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) reveals why some children are badly affected by negative family conflicts while other children survive without significant problems.

Bakers Food & Allied Workers Union Welfare Statement

The ideology of cuts affecting the most vulnerable people in our society is totally out of character for a nation that traditionally prides itself on bringing support to those in crisis. Over the years, the UK has led the way in terms of people and organisations who have gone way beyond the call of duty in terms of supporting others and treating them with the dignity and respect they deserve. This is a country that after years of struggle, made health, education and general wellbeing a basic human right. READ ON.

Special event coverage

ESRC logo

Festival of Social Sciences: Celebrating the Social Sciences

Evidence-based policy should not be a radical concept. It needs to be celebrated.

ESRC logo

Festival of Social Sciences: 2 languages: 2 brains, 2 minds, 2 cultures?

As part of the ESRC Festival of Social Sciences, the Deafness Cognition And Language Research Centre (DCAL) hosted an event exploring the powerful benefits of bilingualism in spoken and sign languages, for hearing and deaf people alike - benefits that reach hearing and deaf people alike.

Opinion Former Events

BSIA: Information Destruction Exhibition & Conference 2013

Following the great success of the BSIA's Information Destruction Conference and Exhibition in May 2012, we are pleased to annouce that the event is returning again in June 2013. This one-day conference and exhibition is aimed at key decision makers in organisations that carry out the secure destruction of confidential material.