07/01/2015
1. The 13th cheque or Christmas bonus
This bonus is normally classed as a gratuity - in other words, a payment of gratitude by the employer to the employee in recognition of a job well done, or if you like, going the extra mile.
However, over the years most employees have come to expect the payment of the 13th cheque as a right or entitlement, or as a condition of employment. This is evidenced by the fact that at job application interviews most applicants will ask "do you pay a 13th Cheque?”. In other words, they expect to be paid a 13th cheque irrespective of whether the job is well done or irrespective of whether they go the extra mile. They want the payment of a 13th cheque to be incorporated as a condition of employment.
It is therefore up to the employer to get things back onto a proper footing. Many employers these days have done away with the payment of a 13th cheque and have incorporated the amount into the employee’s basic salary.
In those instances where the bonus has been consistently paid over previous years, whether a contractual condition exists or not, the employee has undoubtedly developed a very strong right of expectation that the bonus will also be paid in the current year. Having been given no indication to the contrary, the employee's right of expectation is even stronger, and when the employee is suddenly informed by means of a letter attached to his pay slip that there will be no bonus this year, or until he discovers it himself by visiting the bank, trouble looms for the employer.
It is definitely unfair of the employer to decide unilaterally not to pay bonuses, and in addition to either not advise the employee at all, or advise the employee at the last possible minute.
Whilst the right of expectation does not actually afford the employee the absolute right to demand and to be paid the bonus, it certainly does afford him the right to be heard before the decision not to pay the bonuses is made by the employer.
This would imply then that the employer should consult with employees if it is found that, for any legitimate reason or sound commercial rationale, the bonuses cannot be paid in a particular year, or if the amount of the bonus is to be to be less than the amount consistently paid in the past, or less than the contractual amount. Remember that Company Policy is invariably construed to form part of the employment contract. Employees are entitled to put their side of the story, and it cannot be denied that this opportunity is a fundamental requirement of "fair procedure."
It cannot be accepted, by any stretch of the imagination, that an employer suddenly discovers only on shut-down day that Company profitability disallows the payment of bonuses for this year, or he suddenly discovers on shut-down day that employees have not been performing and therefore the payment of bonuses this year is not justified and so on.
The message here is that the management of any company must surely be aware by the middle of the year whether or not profitability, staff performance, or whatever other criteria exist, may endanger or even prevent the payment of the relevant bonuses for that year.
It is the duty of management (and it is only fair) to consult with the staff at the earliest possible moment, to warn them of this possibility that bonuses may not be paid or may be reduced this year, or if necessary take the extreme precaution of informing staff categorically that no bonuses will be paid for that year. If it is later possible to pay the bonuses, then it will be a pleasant surprise for all employees.
The reasoning of management that if the non-payment of bonuses is only made known on shut-down day, or if they remain silent and let the employee discover the non-payment for themselves, there is nothing the employees can do until the company re-opens in January, by which time the employees will have “cooled off” anyway, and are unlikely to raise the issue.
That kind of thinking is irresponsible and it does not solve the problem, it only postpones it until next year.
If employers cannot be fair to their employees with regard to the payment of benefits that employees have right to expect, either contractually or otherwise, then the employer cannot expect those employees to be fair to him.
There is no greater impediment to productivity in this country than disgruntled employees.