Natural verses artifical keys is a kind of religious debate among the database community - see http://r937.com/natural-or-surrogate-key.html">this this article and others it links to. I'm neither in favour of always having artifical keys, nor of never having them. I would decide on a case-by-case basis, for example:
- US States: I'd go for state_code ('TX' for Texas etc.), rather than state_id=1 for Texas
- Employees: I'd usually create a artifical employee_id, because it's hard to find anything else that works. SSN or equivalent may work, but there could be issues like a new joiner who hasn't supplied his/her SSN yet.
- Employee Salary History: (employee_id, start_date). I would not create an artifical employee_salary_history_id. What point would it serve (other than "foolish consistency")
Wherever artificial keys are used, you should always also declare unique constraints on the natural keys. For example, use state_id if you must, but then you'd better declare a unique constraint on state_code, otherwise you are sure to eventually end up with:
state_id state_code state_name
137 TX Texas
... ... ...
249 TX Texas
