Popular Articles

US eclipsed by China in 2009 auto sales
New car sales in the United States plunged more than 20 per cent in 2009 to a 27-year low of 10.43 million units, less than the 12.23 million units sold in China during January-November, making the Asian country the world"s largest car market for the first time, data released by a US research firm showed today. http://smallpersonalloans.org.uk

SRK detained at US airport, released after diplomatic intervention
Early Saturday morning, as India woke up to celebrate its 63nd Independence Day, Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan was detained at Newark Airport in the US and questioned for over two hours. Later, the Indian Mission intervened and secured the release of the 43-year-old actor.

News of the day

SpiceJet to be transformed into professional carrier: CEO
Enthused by a 12 per cent growth in traffic in contrast to a decline in the aviation industry, the new CEO of SpiceJet Sanjay Aggarwal has said he would transform the airline from a casual business entity to a professionally-run company within a year.
Online Business

US firms plan pay hike in 2010 on recovery: Mercer

American companies are planning to hike employees" salaries next year to retain talent as the economy is showing signs of recovery, says a report by consulting firm Mercer. - Pharma, telecom, FMCG sectors may hike pay 12% in 2010 - Competitive pay essential for bank"s success: RBS - US nuclear firms pitch for liability regime - Most US firms may not reverse pay cuts in next 6 mnths: Survey - China"s top 500 firms outperform US rivals in 2008: survey - IIT-M faculty begin nine day protest Many US firms had frozen pay hikes as these grappled with cutting costs following the recession. Expecting a turnaround, these companies are now focusing on retaining employees and engaging top talent. While recession drove 30 per cent of employers to freeze salaries across the board in 2009, just 14 per cent are planning across-the-board freezes in 2010, Mercer said. Of those employers granting base pay increases, the average increase is expected to be 2.7 per cent in 2010, down from an actual 3.2 per cent in 2009. "While planned 2010 base increases have dropped a bit from employers" projections in April and are less than 2009 increases, this is still positive news given the fewer firm-wide pay freezes and staff reductions planned now compared to this time last year," a principal with Mercer"s rewards consulting business Loree Griffith said. According to the survey, employers at consumer goods and high-tech industries are expected to have the highest pay increase at 3 per cent, while workers in education, health and medical insurance sectors may take home less than average pay increases in 2010. The education sector may witness a base pay increase of 2.2 per cent along with health and medical insurance at 2.4 per cent. "Employers are still juggling selective hiring with selective cuts in staff as they evaluate specific workforce needs," Griffith said. Griffith further said, "Recognition programmes, career development, training opportunities and creative communication campaigns – efforts that help keep employees engaged and motivated – along with incentive pay strategies will give companies a competitive edge as business begins to improve." Mercer"s 2009-2010 US Compensation Planning Survey was conducted among 350 mid-size and large employers across the US in November.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):