Is pay transparency going to build trust or break it?

2 min read

Is pay transparency going to build trust or break it?

Introduction

The Oil Tanker that is the EU Pay Transparency Directive is less than a year away! I am hearing murmurings of the UK following a similar but muted trend. As organisations unveil salary ranges, the question arises: will salary transparency build trust, or just add fuel to the office rumour mill?

Pay secrecy creates a vacuum where distrust reigns

When pay details are kept under wraps, employees don’t imagine generosity. They assume unfairness. Cue feelings of being undervalued, disengagement, and the occasional passive-aggressive Slack message. Worse, secrecy has long allowed gender, racial, and disability pay gaps to stay neatly hidden. Transparency might be awkward, but at least it forces the issue into the light.

Why it matters now: the pressing issues

The rules are changing: The EU directive comes into force in 2026, and the UK is already whispering about its own version. Employers can’t say they weren’t warned.

The economic squeeze is real: With inflation biting, employees aren’t just looking at their payslip - they’re comparing it to the cost of their weekly shop. Spoiler: it’s not a flattering comparison.

Generational pressure: Gen Z and Millennials aren’t whispering about pay - they’re posting salaries, raises, and benefits online for all to see. Transparency is happening, whether HR departments like it or not.

Why financial education can bridge the gap

Transparency alone won’t save the day. Salaries without context can lead to resentment faster than you can say “quiet-quitting.” Imagine discovering your colleague earns more without context. It doesn’t matter how many free fruit bowls are in the kitchen; trust has already taken a hit.

  • The ‘why’ matters: Employees need to understand how pay structures are built, not just where they sit in them.
  • Managing expectations: Seeing a range makes many people assume they should be at the top. Without explanation, disappointment is inevitable.
  • Look beyond the payslip: Salary is only part of the package. Pensions, bonuses, healthcare, and all those ‘hidden’ benefits need to be clearly communicated — ideally with some ongoing financial education, so employees can see the bigger picture.

Conclusion

Handled well, pay transparency can build genuine trust. Handled badly, it’s an HR own goal. The secret? Pair openness with education, explain the rationale, and give employees a full picture of their value. Do that, and transparency no longer needs damage control - and becomes a reason to believe in the organisation.

If you want more guidance on pay transparency – access a practical guide to navigating below.

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This article was originally published in LinkedIn.

 

The EU Pay Transparency Directive

Find out how to navigate pay transparency and build trust.