Pay Competitiveness and Quality of Department of Defense Scientists and Engineers

Product Description
This report presents an analysis of the pay competitiveness, and quality of employees recruited and retained, for civilian scientific and engineering positions in Department of Defense (DoD) laboratories. This study uses pay, promotion, performance, and demographic data drawn from personnel records on scientists and engineers (S/Es) employed in DoD labs from 1982 through 1996. This report examines whether “returns to skills” (increases in pay due to investments in worker skills, such as higher education or on-the-job training that increases productivity) rose in the DoD labs during 1982 through 1996 as they did in the private sector. The report also analyzes whether there were changes in the quality of S/E lab employees the DoD was able to attract and retain during that period. For DoD lab scientists and engineers, the report finds little evidence of changes in returns to skills or the quality of the workforce. Similarly, little evidence exists that the quality of S/Es hired or retained declined during the defense drawdown in the 1990s. The report also analyzes whether personnel outcomes differed among three pay systems: the General Schedule (GS), the Performance Management Recognition System (PMRS), and the experimental China Lake system. The study finds little evidence that the additional flexibility in personnel management provided by the PMRS or China Lake pay systems led to substantially different personnel outcomes for the S/E segment of the DoD labor force.
From the Publisher
RAND is conducting a series of studies of civilian personnel management issues for the Department of Defense (DOD). This study constitutes one task in that series. It examines the competitiveness of pay, and ensuing personnel outcomes, for highly skilled civilian scientists and engineers (S/Es) employed in laboratories in DOD agencies. The study uses personnel data from DOD records, from 1982 through 1996, to examine these issues. It should be of interest to policy makers and researchers interested in compensation, personnel management, and federal personnel systems.This research was conducted for the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Civilian Personnel Policy, within the Forces and Resources Policy Center of RAND’s National Defense Research Institute (NDRI). NDRI is a federally funded research and development center sponsored by the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the Joint Staff, the unified commands, and the defense agencies.
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