contacts
business

Research reveals 44% of European employees have been paid late

- 79% of employees who were paid incorrectly identified the issue themselves
- Around half (44%) of all respondents would consider leaving their job after being paid late

Today SD Worx, the global HR and payroll service provider, revealed that out of 4, 000 employees surveyed, 44% had been paid late by their employers and 48% of those that had been paid late had also been paid incorrectly. The survey also revealed that 79% of employees that had been paid incorrectly identified the issue themselves and, on average, 44% respondents would consider leaving their jobs (41% in the UK) after being paid incorrectly, with 55% of German respondents considering leaving, and only 30% of French.

SD Worx conducted an independent online survey amongst employees in six different European countries, the UK, France, Austria, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Germany, to measure their opinions and experiences of receiving delayed and incorrect payment. The survey targeted employees working in organisations sized between 10 to 10, 000 employees who had experienced a delay in payment from their employer, finding that employees in the Netherlands were most likely to be paid late (55%), followed by Germany (46%).

The delay in payment caused a predominately negative perception of employers from the employees that SD Worx surveyed. The majority (varying from 80% in Netherlands to 93% in Switzerland) of employees who experienced payment delays felt their perception of their employer had a ‘slight negative’ to ‘highly negative’ impact. In addition, surveyed employees thought that the reason for their late payment was predominately down to poor management (61% of UK respondents) or financially unstable employers (on average 33% in all countries).

Jan Van Mol, Head of Global Alliance at SD Worx, commented: “The results of this survey are shocking in regards to the impact that payroll error has on employee engagement. An increasing number of employees are becoming actively disengaged in their workplace due to late or incorrect payments, something that employers need to fix to ensure that their employees have high morale and trust in the workplace”.

Alongside whether employees were paid late, SD Worx also asked whether employees had been paid incorrectly. The survey found that of the 44% that had been paid late, a total of 48% had also been paid incorrectly. Among those respondents, the UK is most likely to be paid incorrectly at 61%, with the Netherlands in second at 55%. Of the respondents that were paid late, over 80% of all employees (other than Austria) found the issue and notified their employer themselves.

The reasons for delayed payment varied for each country, with the main two reasons being “Late third-party payments impacting cash-flow” and “System error or outage”, combining for around three-in-five (57%) employees in all countries. In Austria, late third party payment was the cause of delayed payment for 50% of employees.

On average, employees experiencing a delay in payment were delayed between one-and-a-half and two weeks in all countries, except in Austria where the average delay was around three weeks. Payroll and HR is often overlooked as an essential aspect of an organisation, but SD Worx’s survey results emphasise the importance of ensuring that employers are paying their employees correctly.

 
press contacts

Leah Jones, The CommsCo, e-mail 07876117760

illustration

image for web
original [jpg 486 K]
911x5766 px
business

© 2007