More than three-quarters of organisations use compromise agreements to avoid potential employment tribunals, according to a survey by IRS Employment Review.
The study of 94 UK organisations found that almost 70% had used compromise agreements, defined by IRS as ‘formal contracts settling any dispute between employer and employee at the point at which employment ends, and almost always involving a payment on the employer’s part’.
Agreements were used an average of twice a year, but one respondent reported using them routinely with all leavers.
The most common reason was the belief that the cost of contesting a tribunal hearing would outweigh the cost of reaching a settlement. But just under half used them to avoid potential damage to their reputation with customers and employees or because they knew they were in the wrong.
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Compromise agreements were also found to be used most often after a merger so that senior employees facing redundancy would be deterred from making a claim. Performance issues also played a significant part with agreements being used on occasions where a senior manager was failing to cope with the demands of the job. Some respondents also reported using them to end the employment of staff on long-term sick leave or with poor absence records.
And many employers routinely operate a range of notice periods for different employee groups, usually based on seniority.