What's New > Study shows compensation levels for arts managers and administrators have decreased since 2008
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April 19, 2018
The Canada Council for the Arts and the Department of Canadian Heritage today released the 2017 National Compensation Study - For Managerial and Administrative Positions in Not-for-Profit Arts Organizations, an update to a similar study in 2008 and before that, in 2003. The full report is available on both the Canada Council website and at www.culturalhrc.ca/research The findings show there have been only minimal compensation improvements, particularly for the small and mid-sized organizations which make up the majority of the arts organizations in the sector - and in fact over the nine-year period since 2008, real wages actually decreased. Trends identified by the study include:
The study also confirmed that arts organizations continue to lag behind the general not-for-profit and private sectors in many areas of compensation and benefits. Richard Hornsby, Chair of CHRC, commented that: "Not-for-profit arts organizations will likely continue to struggle with attracting and retaining senior management and executive talent because of a limited ability to offer competitive salaries and benefits. This further highlights a real ongoing challenge for recruitment and retention." In November and December of 2017, 436 organizations within the not-for-profit cultural sector participated in this comprehensive compensation study. The study focused on 21 benchmark management and administrative positions, and gathered data on base salary, employee benefits and perquisites, as well as a number of other HR trends. The study was undertaken by CHRC and Mercer (Canada) Limited with financial support from the Canada Council for the Arts and the Department of Canadian Heritage. |
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