Talking about how much money you make is generally seen as taboo.
Yet many younger workers are doing just that, according to a Bankrate.com survey.
Some 42 percent of Gen-Z workers, ages 18-25, and 40 percent of millennial employees, ages 26-41, have shared their salary information with a coworker or other professional contact, the survey found. The poll was conducted by YouGov Plc, Feb. 16-18 among 2,449 adults, and of those 1,416 were either employed or looking for work.
“Younger workers are really rewriting the script here,” said Bankrate.com analyst Sarah Foster.
“The workplace landscape is much different for these younger workers and all this is adding up to reshape the workplace environment.”
Workers who shared salary information with a coworker or other professional contact
Individual conversations, conducted outside the workplace, can help you know where you stand compared to your coworkers, Foster said. So can research on websites like Glassdoor or Payscale.
Yet advocates believe that companies have a role to play and should be open about pay ranges. The hope is that pay transparency will bring about pay equity, which is essentially equal pay for work of equal or comparable value.
“Pay transparency is more about having the structures and frameworks in place that ultimately help to reduce bias, and reducing bias helps you to close pay gaps,” said Ruth Thomas, pay equity analyst at Payscale.
A tool in the war for talent
As millions of Americans walk away from their jobs in this era of the “Great Resignation,” also known as the “Great Reshuffle,” being transparent about compensation may help companies attract and retain talent.
In fact, 63 percent of employees prefer to work at a company that discloses pay information over one that does not, a survey by Glassdoor found. However, only 19 percent of employees said their company discloses salary ranges internally among all employees, according to the survey.
Meanwhile, a separate survey from Payscale found that employees are 50 percent more likely to leave if they think they are being paid below market, even if they aren’t. Some 57 percent of people who are paid at market believe they are underpaid and 42 percent of those who are paid above market think they are underpaid, Payscale’s data shows.








