Compliance & Policy
Legal/Compliance Year In Review
The election cycle and an increasingly empowered federal judiciary have resulted in a fair amount of activity on the regulatory front over the last year.
October 6, 2024

Key Takeaways

  • The election cycle and an increasingly empowered federal judiciary have resulted in a fair amount of activity on the regulatory front over the last year.
  • Major regulatory actions include areas such as accommodation protections for pregnant workers, retirement planning, and banning non-compete agreements.
  • The most impactful decision from the Supreme Court from a business perspective may be Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, which overturned Chevron and may result in a dramatically different regulatory framework than what we’ve seen over the last 40 years.

ARTICLE | Legal/Compliance Year In Review

The 2024/2025 term for the US Supreme begins the first Monday in October. 

In the next installment of this series, we’ll cover some of the major cases that the Court is expected to hear throughout the coming term, as well as how the potential range of decisions may affect some of the issues most relevant to business, labor, insurance, and workforce management. 

In the meantime, however, on the final day of the 2023/2024 term, we thought it might be beneficial to take a look back at some of the legal and regulatory issues that have shaped these topics over the last year - including Supreme Court rulings, agency rules, and beyond -  as preface for the arguments that will be unfolding before the Supreme Court from tomorrow through April with decisions handed down next summer. 

What follows is a collection and summary of some of the most relevant entries over the last year into our Legal/Compliance Roundup blog series, which are posted monthly here

Noteworthy Judicial Cases & Developments

Non-Competes Banned, Then Ban Put On Hold

The FTC banned non-compete agreements last year, but shortly thereafter a federal judge in Texas issued a ruling that currently applies nationwide and overturns the FTC’s rule banning non-compete agreements.

The judge indicated that the ban is too broad and that the FTC is limited to challenging unfair competition on a case-by-case basis but lacks the authority to issue a blanket ban and the evidentiary basis to justify such a ban were it permitted.

The FTC has until the latter part of October to appeal the decision, but the non-compete ban will likely remain unenforceable in the meantime.

That said, other cases addressing the non-compete ban are working their way through other federal districts, and should one of those cases rule differently, these issues may get fast-tracked for resolution by the US Supreme Court.

Federal Tip Credit Rule Is Simplified

On August 23, 2024, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals overruled the Department of Labor’s 80/20/30 rule for tip credits.

As a result, employers no longer need to distinguish between tip-producing and tip-supporting work when calculating tip credits.

It is important to note that this ruling only applies to the federal DOL rule, and does not affect any state or local labor rules regarding minimum wage and/or tip credits.

You can read more about the 80/20/30 rule being vacated here

Supreme Court Sides With Employee In Title VII Discrimination Interpretation

The case at issue involved a male employee replacing a female employee who was transferred to a new department where her pay and title remained the same but her scope of duties, schedule, and some job perks did not.

The Court held that a job transfer did not need to have caused ‘significant’ harm to an employee in order for the employer to have violated Title VII.

Supreme Court Ends Chevron Deference

The Supreme Court parted with precedent and abandoned the Chevron deference doctrine that has guided regulatory rulemaking for the last 40 years. 

When Federal agencies enforce the laws that Congress writes, they often have to make judgment calls in interpreting the statutory language about how to practically go about accomplishing the intentions of the law. 

For the last 40 years, those agencies have relied on Supreme Court precedent requiring courts to defer to the agencies’ judgment calls in interpreting how to enforce federal statutes so long as there was some ambiguity about what the statute intended that the agencies had interpreted in a reasonable manner. 

That deference was especially relied upon when agencies were interpreting federal laws that were written a long time ago, like the Fair Labor Standards Act, which was written in the 1930s when working conditions, and American life for that matter, were very different.

With the Supreme Court’s latest decisions in the cases of Relentless v. Department of Commerce and Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, however, that deference previously afforded to federal regulators in interpreting ambiguous federal laws and filling in the gaps will now be shifted to the federal courts.

While the rulings will not overturn all previous decisions that have been based on the deference previously afforded executive agencies, of which there are thousands, those previous challenges are now ripe to be litigated, only now the government will have to justify their interpretation of the statute and their resulting authority to take a given action with persuasive reasoning, which will likely prove to be a much harder standard for federal regulators to meet.

It may take some time before major effects from this decision start being felt, but the regulatory landscape will likely look very different in the next 5 years than it has for the past 30, and at the very least there is likely to be significant confusion in the meantime.

Noteworthy Executive & Regulatory Developments

Federal Contractor Wage Determination

Back in October of 2023, The US Department of Labor began implementing a rule that updated the Davis-Bacon Act in a comprehensive way for the first time in more than 4 decades.

According to the updated regulation, if a given federal construction contract is meant to include a wage-determination calculation but that calculation is omitted within the contract, contractors are now required to reimburse any employees who may be negatively affected by the omission, and the federal agency responsible for contracting must reimburse the contractor accordingly.

You can read more about the new rule here.

Secure Act 2.0 

The Secure Act 2.0 took effect at the beginning year, ushering in some sweeping changes to retirement planning and savings administration in the US, including: 

  • Mandatory 401k Enrollment: Most companies with more than 10 employees that have been in operation for at least 3 years will be required to automatically enroll employees into their 401k plan with between 3% and 10% automatic contributions. There’s also a tax credit available for many companies to cover the additional administrative burden of automatic enrollment.
  • Starter 401ks With No Employer Match Requirement: The expense of matching employee contributions has deprived many employees over the years of the benefits of having a 401k account even in the absence of matching employer contributions, which should no longer be an issue under the new law. 
  • Increased Catch-up Contributions: The amount of annual contributions that employees can begin putting into their 401ks at age 50 is being increased by 50% from $6,500 to $10,000, and that limit is now indexed to inflation to ensure it keeps up with the cost of living.
  • Increased Emergency Savings Account Flexibility: Despite more than 4 in 10 US workers expressing a desire to be automatically enrolled in an emergency savings account program through their employer, only about 1 in 10 employers offered such an opportunity as of 2022. The Secure Act increases the flexibility and ease with which employers can now offer such accounts via withholding as much as 3% of opting-in employees’ paychecks up to $2,500 to be placed into said emergency savings accounts, from which employees can then withdraw their money untaxed up to four times a year with no penalties whatsoever. 

Defining Employees vs. Independent Contractors

In determining whether a given worker should be classified as an employee or as an independent contractor, as of March 11, 2024, the Department of Labor effectively reverted back to ‘the economic reality’ test.

The economic reality test takes  into account the following 6 factors when evaluating workers' employment status and classification:

  • Whether it is possible for the worker to either profit or lose money as a result of the arrangement;
  • What investments have the employer and worker each made toward completing the work;
  • Is the working relationship a more permanent arrangement or more temporary;
  • How much control does the employer exert over the worker’s process;
  • How crucial is the worker’s output to the employer’s business; and
  • The levels of skill and initiative possessed by the worker.

You can find more information from the DOL on determining employee and contractor status here.

Further, the Internal Revenue Service released an information letter that clarifies the primary factors that determine whether a given worker should be properly classified as an employee or as an independent contractor for tax purposes. 

When making this determination, the main consideration is how much control and autonomy does the worker have in doing the job, which can be analyzed in light of three primary factors: 

  • Behavioral Control: The main question to ask when assessing whether a worker is subject to the behavioral controls of a supervisor and should therefore rightly be classified as an employee is whether or not the recipient of the worker’s services has the right to control or direct how the work is done. Providing the worker with training or instructions on how to complete the required task and/or providing an evaluation of the worker’s performance or an evaluation of the work itself upon completion might all be indicative that the worker should be classified as an employee.
  • Financial Control: Whether the recipient of the worker’s services has control over the financial aspects of the job is another important consideration when assessing employment status. For example, some good questions to ask are how was the method of paying the worker determined, has the worker made a significant investment in order to complete the work (as well as if/how reimbursements were involved), and is there an opportunity for the worker to profit or incur a net loss as a result of their work. 
  • Relationship Between Worker and Work Recipient: The relationship between the parties is not only determined by their agreements and contracts but also by their other actions with respect both to the work and to each other. How each party represents the nature of their relationship to others - including other employees and/or contractors -  can also factor into the determination, in addition to whether or not the worker offers similar services more broadly to the market in general.

The IRS also noted that while it can not make determinations as to whether or not a prospective employee would properly be classified as an employee or independent contractor, the IRS will issue a letter ruling on prior employment status which can then be applied to all other workers engaged under substantially similar circumstances. 

Employers Who Reject Job Applicants Due to Credit Reports Must Provide Credit Rating Agency Info 

On March 20, 2024, the Consumer Protection Bureau began enforcing its rule requiring Employers that reject job applicants due to information obtained through a credit report to provide the rejected applicant with information about the credit reporting agency from which the report was obtained, including name, address, and telephone number.

This rule, which went into effect in April of 2023, is an update to 2018’s Summary of Your Rights Under The Fair Credit Reporting Act.

You can read more about the new rule, its impact, and enforcement here

Pregnant Workers Fairness Act

The final regulations in support of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA) went into effect on June 18, 2024.

Some of the accommodations that the final rule presumes to be reasonable absent an especially significant justification for denying the accommodation, including allowing pregnant employees to: 

  • Take breaks to eat and drink;
  • Keep water nearby;
  • Use the restroom as needed; and
  • Sit or stand as needed

The rule also places a number of limitations on when employers can require supporting documentation in order for employees to request or receive accommodations under the rule, allowing employers to request such documentation only when it is reasonable under the circumstances.

The final rule also requires accommodations for medical appointments and defines certain terms broadly enough to require accommodations for medical care involving fertility, contraception, and situations when pregnancies abruptly end whether willfully or not. 

You can find the final rule here.

OSHA Hazardous Industry Electronic Submission Requirements

In addition to submitting form 300A, firms that have at least 100 employees and operate in industries that have been designated as hazardous must electronically submit data from their injury and illness logs.

You can find additional information about OSHA electronic submission requirements here.

New Notice Requirements For Enrolling and Re-enrolling Certain Policies

A new federal rule addressing short-term limited duration insurance and independent non-coordinated benefits like fixed indemnity and specific-disease or illness policies was published on April 3, 2024. 

The rule is the result of a joint effort between several federal agencies and includes a requirement that the first page of any materials marketing application enrollment and re-enrollment must include notice to potential and current policyholders that the policy does not provide comprehensive benefits. 

This notice requirement takes effect for applicable policies issued or renewed after January 1, 2025. 

You can find that new rule here

New FLSA Minimum Wage Poster

The Department of Labor released a new iteration of its Employee Rights Under Fair Labor And Standards Act Poster, which employers are required to display. 

You can find that FLSA poster here.

Overtime/Minimum Wage Exemption Threshold Increased

The Department of Labor increased the pay thresholds for Executive, Administrative, and Professional employees (EAP) including salaried computer workers, and Highly Compensated Employees (HCEs) to remain exempt from federal minimum wage and overtime laws.

On July 1, 2024, the EAP exemption threshold increased from $35,568 to $43,888. That threshold number is also set to rise again the following year on January 1, 2025, when the EAP exemption minimum annual salary rises to $58,656, after which automatic increases will begin July 1, 2027, and every three years after that. 

The increase in the minimum HEC exemption threshold follows a similar path, with the first increase up to $132,964 beginning today, before increasing again to $151,164 on January 1, 2025, and every three years after beginning on July 1, 2027. 

The overtime and minimum wage exemption threshold for computer workers that are paid hourly remains at $27.63 per hour, while the threshold for computer workers paid on a salaried basis is linked with the EAP minimum. 

Barring any unforeseen changes or court-initiated interventions, the first exemption-threshold increases are set to take effect in one month. 

In preparation, employers and human resources professionals may want to identify all the employees who may be affected and assess whether to increase their pay in accordance with the rate increases or whether it is better to begin paying them overtime (and minimum wage if applicable) instead. 

You can find more about these exemption threshold increases here

HSA & HDHP Inflation Adjustments Announced

The IRS announced the 2025 adjustments to health savings accounts and high deductible health plans:

The self-coverage limit increased by $150 to $4,300 while the family coverage limit increased by $250 to $8,550.

  • There was a $50 dollar increase on the minimum annual HDHP deductible, bringing it up to $1,650, while the family coverage deductible rose by $100 up to $3,300. 
  • The maximum yearly out-of-pocket expenses for single coverage HDHPs, including premiums, deductibles, and other related expenses) rose by $250, up to $8,300, while the family coverage equivalent increased by $500, up to $16,600

You can read more about the adjustments here

ACA Affordability Threshold Increase

Large employers with an average of 50 or more full-time employees or the equivalent are required to either offer employees minimal, affordable health coverage or they must pay a penalty in the event that an employee secures health coverage with a premium tax credit via the exchanges. 

In 2025, the threshold for what qualifies as affordable coverage increases from 8.39% to 9.02%, which means that an employee’s required contribution to the plan can be no more than 9.02% of their salary in order for the plan to be considered affordable, which allows employers to avoid potentially paying the penalty. 

You can read more about the affordability threshold here.

Noteworthy Policy Developments

Universal Paid Sick Leave Is Overdue

A recent piece from the Center for American Progress makes the case that universal paid sick leave leads to better outcomes for employees and employers alike.

The authors argue that a federal policy is necessary to supersede the patchwork set of rules and regulations on state and local levels in order to provide a more equitable competitive landscape among companies doing business all across the country.

Further, the benefits of universal paid sick leave wouldn’t stop with employers and their families, or even with the companies themselves who can expect to see increased productivity and reduced turnover as a result, but even public health and the US economy as a whole would see net gains from the enactment of universal paid sick leave legislation.

You can find the relevant data and analysis here

Workplace Psychological Abuse Regulations

Supporters want to see the Workplace Psychological Safety Act become the new template across the country for how psychological abuse is reported, managed, and prevented at work.

Unlike many current laws addressing workplace harassment, the Workplace Psychological Safety Act has no requirement that ties the bullying behavior to protected status on the part of the victim, thus removing one of the major obstacles to complaint filing and dispute resolution. 

The model legislation requires employers to: 

  • Promptly investigate complaints of workplace psychological abuse;
  • Implement policies aimed at combating abuse; and
  • Submit diversity metrics and abuse reports quarterly, which will then be made available via public search in an effort to increase transparency and incentivize compliance.

The model legislation also enables victims of on-the-job psychological abuse to:

  • Request internal investigations by their employers in order to circumvent some of the red tape that can sometimes bog down investigations conducted by state agencies; and
  • Sue employers for failing to adequately address the abuse in accordance with the law. 

While the Act has yet to be enacted by any state legislature, the momentum seems to be building, with statehouse support in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New York.

Pre-Tax Deduction Primer

Forbes Advisor published a helpful piece that breaks down some of the key aspects involving pre-tax deductions, what is permissible, what isn’t, and how they work.

The core idea behind pre-tax deductions, of course, is that they can benefit employees directly in some way while also reducing their taxable income. 

Some examples of pre-tax deductions include contributions toward health plans, insurance coverage, dependent care, and transportation benefits, all of which can be taken from employees’ gross income prior to calculating any taxes.

It’s important to keep an eye on the compliance issues involved, however, given that many types of pre-tax deductions are capped, including some retirement accounts, FSAs, and HSAs. Also, there are eligibility requirements, specific rules for specific plans, and limitations that apply exclusively to highly-compensated employees that must all be adhered to when administering these types of programs, as well. 

You can read more about the issues involving pre-tax deductions here

Mployer’s Take

For the Executive Agencies, it was business as usual for the most part, but with the greater sense of urgency that comes in the final year of a presidential term when the future of agency leadership and policy prioritization is uncertain.

The implementation of the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act and the Secure Act 2.0 were certainly significant, but perhaps the largest and most ambitious regulatory change was the Federal Trade Commission’s ban on non-compete agreements, which has since been put on hold by a federal judge as the legality of the plan is adjudicated and makes its way through the court system.

That system and the process of regulations getting challenged in federal court is likely to see a lot more activity in the coming years, as well, in the wake of the Supreme Court’s overturning of the Chevron doctrine, which puts significantly more power in the hands of judges in terms of evaluating executive agency action.

While the impacts of the Supreme Court’s decision to abandon Chevron precedent will not be immediate, the next several years may bring with them substantial upheaval of the existing regulatory framework that has been established over the last 40 years. 

And although that kind of subtle, yet ground-shifting impact will be tough to match, in the next installment we’ll highlight some of the cases set to be heard and decided by the Supreme Court in the new term beginning this week, and given the Court’s activity over the last couple of years, some of those cases may be primed to have comparably significant impacts as to how business is conducted in the US, as well.

Recruiting & Hiring
Benefits That Bring In Top Talent
We take a look at what a recruiter for one of the largest tech companies in the world lists as the top employee benefits to attract the attention of reallrecruits.
November 10, 2023

To say that the tech industry is often ahead of the curve when it comes to modernizing American business doesn’t quite capture or express what’s taking place. 

In nearly all aspects of business, the tech industry has been at the forefront of the various sweeping changes that have revolutionized commerce over the past half century, in part because the output that the tech industry produces - both in terms of hardware and software - is the foundational structure around which much of modernity has been built.

In this recent piece from Business Insider, a recruiter for Meta - one of the largest tech companies in the world - lists the top employee benefits that seal the deal with tech recruits, which we have included and expanded upon below.

While all industries and talent pools have characteristics that make them unique, of course, given how frequently current tech industry business practices become future business practices across industries far and wide, some of these listed benefit package components and perks may look familiar already, and some likely will soon.

Top Employee Benefits & Perks For Recruiting In The Tech World

Office Amenities - For Both Remote and On-Site Workers

Given the ascendance of remote and hybrid work in the years following the onset of the pandemic, it’s no surprise that where, when, and how employees work is factoring heavily into the benefits that Meta is emphasizing in the piece.

For example, office amenities - especially those that help employees solve practical problems efficiently - are great for attracting applicant attention for in-office and hybrid positions, but there are comparable and sometimes complementary offerings that can serve a similar function for remote positions, as well.

For in-office and hybrid workers, the prospect of commuting to a central location when required is made more appealing by providing perks like laundry services, a barbershop, free meals, and valet parking, for example. Further, in many cases housing, transportation, and relocation assistance is provided in order to make the process of getting to the office as convenient as possible. 

To appeal to remote workers, on the other hand, the company offers things like stipends to enable employees to set up a home office or gym and make their own place of work as efficiency-enabling, comfortable, and productive as possible.

Time Away From Work

In-office, hybrid, and remote workers alike also need time away from work of course, which is why competitive vacation perks remain a crucial component of strong benefits offerings. 

In Meta’s case, the company offers 4 weeks PTO for all employees, with an additional 30 days of PTO for workers when they hit the 5-year mark of employment. It's also worth noting that the additional 30 days can be used as a single block to enable employees to more thoroughly recharge before returning to work.

Beyond PTO, time away from work is essential for seeing to many of life’s non-work-related responsibilities as well, including caregiving and maternity/paternity leave, for which the company offers 4 months paid time-off to all employees.

Ownership & Rewards

The third category into which the remainder of Meta’s top benefits offerings fall involves the alignment of employee incentives and compensation, which is accomplished through a combination of bonuses and equity packages designed to directly link the financial benefit of both employers and employees. 

Also, the company has developed a system that enables new trainees to choose their own roles from a variety of teams across various divisions within the organization where their skills are currently required, which further entrenches employee feelings of ownership over their work and highlights employee autonomy and agency about how and where to best put their skills to use for everyone’s mutual benefit.

...

While some of the top talent-attracting benefits and perks outlined in the piece may be more common in the tech world than in many other industries, that’s not likely to remain the case for long, and forward-thinking companies would be wise to begin imagining how these trends might be best translated in their own industry.

You can read more about this topic here

Workforce Management
Workers Lack Purpose & Employers Lack Awareness
Only about 1 in 4 employees thinks that management has a sufficient understanding of what leads them to look for a new job or stay put where they are.
November 10, 2023

Some newly released research indicates that workers are not only feeling unfulfilled on the job, but they also overwhelmingly share the belief that the senior leadership at their companies are out-of-touch on these issues. 

The survey - which was a joint effort between creative marketing company Strawberry Frog and data insights leader Dynata - was conducted via a sample that is representative of the country’s population at large.

According to their analysis, about 3 in 4 workers are disengaging from their role as a result of working conditions, which can be problematic and cause employees to 'check out' in cases where the job is over demanding and can cause employees to 'check out' in cases where the job is or under demanding, as well. Further, unmet expectations can introduce a wedge in the employer/employee relationship often regardless of whether those expectations are the employer or the employee’s. 

Of course, at low levels of engagement, climbing turnover costs aren’t the only factor affecting bottom lines nationwide, with lost productivity and efficiency that’s attributable directly to employee disengagement likely amounting in the billions annually.

Beyond the value of talent lost and the expense of replacing it, however, the central tragedy of engagement-related loss is that many times, even when employees do become fed up to the point that they choose to seek employment elsewhere, there is a strong likelihood that their motivations for doing so will be lost entirely on those in positions of power who created the very conditions that have lead to the employee’s ultimate departure. 

In fact, only about 1 in 4 employees thinks that management has a sufficient understanding of what leads them to look for a new job or stay the course in the first place, whereas most managers believe that the opposite is true - that senior leadership has a solid read on what makes employees motivated in their work and/or want to take on all the effort, risk, and uncertainty that comes with finding a new job.

According to an executive with one of the survey partners, the hassle that comes with finding a new place of employment is often the primary root that is holding many workers to their current jobs, while management exist in what he dubbed a “thriving bubble” where they pretend the company mission is clear and employees feel some sort of collective purpose in pursuit of it despite little evidence in support of this perspective.

As the research and analysis made clear, purpose and meaning were two of the factors that were most closely correlated with strengthened employee loyalty - more so even than factors like day-to-day on-the-job experience or total compensation.

While the pandemic caused workers across markets and industries to reassess how work fits in within the larger context of their lives as a whole, the survey seems to show that the biggest barrier preventing workers from finding more of the purpose and desire for meaning they seek within their work is leadership that is tone deaf, preoccupied, and unaware of how their efforts to create common purpose are falling flat.

You can read more about this topic here.

Economy
The Employment Situation for November 2023
The latest economic release from the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the U.S. added 150 thousand new jobs last month, while the unemployment rate rose to 3.9%.
November 3, 2023

Editor's Note: This report is based on survey data from October 2023 that was published in November 2023. This is the most recent data available. (Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics)

US unemployment ticked up by one-tenth of a point to 3.9%, which is the highest the national average has been since February of 2022, and marks 21 months in a row that the US has maintained unemployment levels below 4%.

Over the course of the last month, US employers added 150 thousand new jobs to their payrolls - just under the 157 thousand jobs that economists had been predicting - which is a significant step down from the month before when 297 thousand additional payroll entries were recorded.

That said, given that the initial figures in last month’s report were more than double what economists had forecast, and given that even the revised 297 thousand jobs exceeds projections by more than 75%, some overcorrection might reasonably have been expected this month, in which case the degree of overcorrection seen here is quite small compared to the initial swing.

The labor force participation rate fell by one-tenth of a point to 62.7% - which still remains slightly above the 62.6% figures posted in June and July of this year, and is substantially higher than 12 months ago at 62.2%.

The healthcare industry saw the largest number of new jobs, adding 58 thousand new positions, which is just above the 53 thousand that the healthcare industry has been averaging per month over the last year. 

The government sector added about 50 thousand jobs as well, followed by the construction, leisure and hospitality, and social assistance industries, which added about 20 thousand jobs each. 

That said, although the raw number of new jobs added was similar across these industries, they are not all trending in the same direction, with government showing steady growth, construction trending slightly up, social assistance trending slightly down, and leisure and hospitality way under the more than 50 thousand new jobs that it had been averaging over the past 12 months. 

Employment in transportation and warehousing fell by about 12 thousand jobs while the information sector lost about 9 thousand jobs.

Average pay was up 7 cents last month to $34 per hour, which is up 4.1% on the year, while the average workweek fell by one-tenth of an hour to 34.3 hours per week.

Mployer's Take

With the job figures this month just below forecasts and the previous two months of data being revised downward by 100 thousand jobs collectively, the case gets stronger for the oft-discussed soft economic landing that quells inflation without causing recession.

When the Federal Reserve met a few days ago and chose to keep interest rates where they are for the time being, these are the kinds of jobs figures they were hoping to see and will bolster the likelihood that no further rate increases will be handed down this year. 

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of this jobs report, however, is the 35 thousand jobs that were lost in the manufacturing industry. About 33 thousand of those jobs were attributable to the automotive manufacturing sector, however, and with that strike having now been resolved, expect those manufacturing jobs figures to bounce back in next month’s employment report. 

Eager for more exclusive content? Check out the Mployer blog here.

Recruiting & Hiring
Employee Compensation Set To Climb In 2024
While employers and employees may have differing expectations, forecasts show salaries increasing by an average of 3.8% next year.
November 2, 2023

Through 2023 so far, salaries in the US have increased by an average of 4.4%, which is the fastest growth rate that’s been recorded in more than 20 years.

While projections show that rate slowing somewhat to 3.8% in 2024, it is worth noting that same rate forecast of 3.8% was originally projected for 2023 before the expectation-defying job market remained hotter for longer than had been anticipated and led companies to increase compensation accordingly.

How closely will 2024 mimic 2023 remains to be seen, of course, but it is already becoming clear that employees and employers will likely be going into the year with very different expectations about how negotiations will play out on the compensation front.

How Employees Are Approaching Compensation Adjustments

Not surprisingly given the labor-favoring market dynamics of late, employees are expecting raises, with nearly 2 out of 3 workers planning to ask for a raise at some point during the next year. 

In justifying their pay-bump requests, the most commonly claimed reason was inflation, which was cited by nearly 4 in 10 respondents, while a little less than 1 in 6 respondents simply felt underpaid and a little more than 1 in 4  believed they had earned their to-be-proposed raises as a result of having taken on additional responsibility.

Further raising the stakes of these negotiations, almost 1 out of 3 workers claim that they will pursue employment elsewhere if they do not receive the raise they seek.

How Employers Are Approaching Compensation Adjustments

Employers have a considerably different perspective on the wage negotiation environment, and are viewing 2024 as a potential opportunity to counterbalance some of the abnormally-sized wage growth and bonus levels that employers relied upon through the pandemic and economic dip/rebound in order to attract talent under abnormal circumstances.

From the perspective of many employers, those raises and bonuses represent anomalies that must be accounted for, corrected, and absorbed in subsequent years as they attempt to find the ideal equilibrium between employee satisfaction and profitability, whereas to employees those raises and salaries have formed new baseline expectations.

Ultimately, however, just as the realities of the market led to significantly higher salaries and bonuses than had been forecast for 2023, the forecasts for 2024 will be just as susceptible to market-shifting forces, which will have more influence in the matter than either employer or employee expectations will.

How Can Employers Best Position Themselves To Attract & Retain Talent In 2024?

About half of all US companies intend to introduce new benefits and perks (46%) and increase starting salaries (51%) in the next year, which reflects in part the uncertainty about whether the job market will continue to soften in the coming year or whether the market dynamics will continue to favor employees.

Regardless of what the market does within the expected range, however, some potential strategies to consider in order to improve your company’s attraction and retention prospects in 2024 include:

  • Mental Health Focus: Burnout and stress levels are going up across the country - especially among women - and better access to mental health care is becoming a growing priority among a growing segment of the workforce that can also result in improved employee performance. 

  • Flexible Work Options: Remote/hybrid schedules and other flexible arrangements with regard to when, where, and how employees work are more valued by employees than ever and can not only help attain top talent from among the more traditional workforce but can also enable companies to access entirely different talent pools that were otherwise inaccessible to them when the work options they offered were more rigid.

  • Cultural Compatibility: With younger generations now constituting a majority of the workforce, companies should proactively seek to shape internal culture more in line with evolving sensibilities, including cultivating greater wage and salary transparency, fairness in employee treatment/expectations, and the potential for long-term job stability supported by the appearance of long-term company viability.

  • Employee Benefits Education: And of course, one of the best ways to ensure that employees are both maximizing their benefits packages as well as understanding the value those packages contain is to proactively and regularly educate employees about how to tailor the available offerings in order to best satisfy their individual needs.

You can read more about pay raises and benefit forecasts for 2024 and how to manage them here

Workforce Management
Are Virtual Meetings Too Boring?
New research published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology indicates that some previously widely held understandings about how employees respond to virtual meetings may have been wrong.
October 31, 2023

New research published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology indicates that some previously widely held understandings about how employees respond to virtual meetings may have been wrong.

While many virtual meeting participants can attest to feeling some degree of fatigue during the event, earlier studies on the phenomenon seemed to suggest that mental overload - presumably stress from using new technology and/or performing on camera - was predominantly to blame.

A team from Aalto University, however, conducted both ethnographic and physiological research, including measuring the heart rate variability of participants across more than 400 meetings (both virtual and in-person), and found the opposite to be true - that, in fact, fatigue during virtual meetings was being caused by a lack of mental stimulation, a condition otherwise sometimes known as boredom. 

Aside from turning the traditional understanding of virtual-meeting-fatigue on its head, perhaps the most important insight that this research brings to light is that not everyone actually experiences virtual-meeting fatigue in the same way. 

From survey information collected alongside the aforementioned biometric data, the research team found that whether the meeting was in-person or virtual made little difference to employees who are on the upper ends of the work engagement and enthusiasm spectrums, whereas employees who claim to be less engaged with or enthusiastic about their work have more difficulty maintaining their focus during virtual meetings.

The drop in held attention during virtual meetings can be especially steep for employees with lower baseline work enthusiasm/engagement in part because of the limited sensory input and interaction cues they can intercept through video format. 

As a result, the fatigue effect can be particularly pronounced when video chat is turned off, which exacerbates understimulation and will often lead affected employees to multitask as a means of counterbalancing the stimulation deficit. Although not all multi-tasking activities are equality taxing, of course, and some require very little mental exertion while enabling participants to stay engaged with a virtual meeting at the same time (e.g. walking on a treadmill or playing with a fidget spinner), most attempts at multitasking lead to missed information, brain exhaustion, or both. 

Given that the data collected from this study pushes against the consensus that had been building behind the idea that mental overload was at fault for virtual-meeting fatigue, more research will certainly be required to confirm these findings, but as virtual meetings become increasing ingrained among standard business practices, it’s worth keeping an eye on this space as our understanding continues to evolve.

You can read more about this topic here.

Compliance & Policy
Legal/Compliance Roundup - October 2023
Each month, Mployer collects and presents some of the most relevant and most pressing recent changes in law, compliance, and policy in areas related to employee benefits, health care, and human resources.
October 29, 2023

Each month, Mployer collects and presents some of the most relevant and most pressing recent changes in law, compliance, and policy in areas related to employee benefits, health care, and human resources. 

2022 EEO-1 Submissions Open October 31st, 2023

Beginning on October 31st, data collection will open for 2022 EEO-1 Component 1 filings.

These reports are part of a mandatory annual data collection process which legally requires all employers with at least 100 employees and federal contractors with at least 50 employees to provide certain information about their employees to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, including employee demographics and job categories. 

When data collection opens, the Filer Support Message Center, which is a help desk that provides support and assistance to help people submit filings online, will open as well.

The deadline for 2022 EEO-1 Component 1 filings is December 5th, 2023.

Updated versions of the 2022 EEO-1 Component 1 Data File Upload Specifications are available here. You can find an updated version of the 2022 Component 1 Instruction Booklet here, as well.

You can visit the EEO-1 data collection website here

Federal Contractor Wage Determination

As of October 23, 2023, The US Department of Labor is now implementing a recently finalized rule that updates the Davis-Bacon Act in a comprehensive way for the first time in more than 4 decades.

According to the updated regulation, if a given federal construction contract is meant to include a wage-determination calculation but that calculation is omitted within the contract, contractors are now required to reimburse any employees who may be negatively affected by the omission, and the federal agency responsible for contracting must reimburse the contractor accordingly.

You can read more about the new updates here.   

Massachusetts PFML Updates

Beginning November 1st, 2023, applicants for Paid Family and Medical Leave benefits in Massachusetts will be able to supplement those benefits with certain types of employer paid leave that were previously prohibited.

Under the old regulation, the only types of paid employer leave that applicants were permitted to receive on top of PFML benefits from the state were disability benefits and any employer-provided PFML benefits that may have been available. 

Under the updated regulation, new applicants for PMFL benefits can supplement their state-provided benefits with any paid leave that has accrued under their employer’s policies. Such leave may include vacation as well as sick leave or personal days, for example. 

The only stipulation is that the total amount of state-benefits and employer-provided benefits cannot exceed the applicant’s average weekly wage. 

You can read more about this new PFML policy here.