3.2 Internal enterprise transitions
Growing awareness of the need for improvements in certain
aspects of job quality can be seen within small enterprises, for example in
worker participation and health and safety. The increasing importance of
innovation, quality control, flexibility and the need to adapt to continual
change has resulted in a new emphasis on shop floor practices such as team
working, cooperation and worker participation. Thus, for example, there is a
rapid spread of organisational innovations such as self-directed work teams, job
rotation, problem solving groups or quality circles, and total quality
management (TQM). Such practices are reported to have spread rapidly in
industrialised countries, and now seem to be becoming prevalent in developing
regions, perhaps especially in those areas connected to global markets and
requirements (See Box 1).
Box 1
Spreading Practices
In the USA, a recent review of the use of new organisational
practices such as Self-directed Work Teams, Job
Rotation, Problem Solving Groups or Quality Circles, and Total
Quality Management was found to be widespread and apparently increasing
(Osterman and Lowe, 1998). For Europe, surveys seem to be suggesting that
practices similar to the ones above, as well as other new organisational forms
such as just-in-time logistics systems, may be less extensive but still
substantial, and again seemingly growing (Cooke et al., 1998; Osterman and Lowe,
1998).
In respect of developing and other countries, there is evidence
that new practices are also spreading. For example, in Pakistan, Nadvi and
Schmitz (1997) refer to both large and small manufacturers in the Sialkot
medical instruments cluster coming under pressure to raise quality levels. In
Malaysia, the 1997 World Bank survey indicated that amongst manufacturing firms
quality issues and the introduction of new practices such as statistical process
control, quality circles, and ISO9000 certification were becoming very
important. The extensive 1998 review by the ILO of export processing
zones1, found that intensified international competition is
forcing zone enterprises to improve their speed and quality of production, and
many plants are introducing new technology and organisation of work to raise
productivity (ILO, 1998). |
As a part of the new principles being introduced, labour is seen
as an active input in the change process rather than a static cost of
production. As a consequence, the conditions under which workers might be
expected to cooperate and give of their best is rising to the fore as an issue.
Thus commentators such as Pfeffer (1995; 1998), are noting that under current
economic conditions successful companies in the USA and elsewhere are those
which pay close attention to the needs of their workforces, providing security,
good wages, training and other aspects9. Recently Levine (1998)
called for the reinvention of workplace regulation to promote
greater employee involvement, encourage the development of problem solving
skills and help stimulate improvements in quality to meet customer needs (Levine
1998).
9 In Germany, a recent study of over 100 companies
in ten industrial sectors in Germany compared firms over a seven year period
(1987-94) on aspects such as training expenditure, lay-offs and assistance with
relocating redundant workers, promotion opportunities, and the extent to which
employees have the freedom to take decisions and maximise individual initiative.
It was found that those companies who scored most highly on such criteria also
performed best in terms of stock market success (share prices and dividends),
and also created the most jobs (Bilmes et al., 1997)
In the recent ILO review of conditions in export processing
zones in countries such as Bangladesh, China, Costa Rica, Dominican Republic,
Honduras, and others, the better enterprises were found to be pursuing
initiatives to involve workers more fully in the challenge to meet new
competitive requirements. This included initiatives to promote a better quality
of production and service, lower costs, greater flexibility and speed. Typical
measures by such enterprises, says the report, include: the introduction
of teams, gradual empowerment, increased sharing of information, joint problem
solving and target setting, and the encouragement of worker innovation.
Teamwork is growing in zone enterprises. (ILO, 1998).
New participatory approaches appear to be growing in Europe
also10. Cooke et al., (1998) have suggested that factors such as
trustful labour relations, shopfloor cooperation, and
a worker welfare orientation are more likely to be associated with
an innovative firm. In respect of Baden-Wurttemberg, for example, they suggest
that the strong innovatory potential exhibited there is associated with factors
such as an associative, cooperative and civic culture (which results
in) high social partnership, low antagonism in labour relations and,
through substantial initial vocational, then further training, strong mentoring
in the workplace. However, concerns have been raised that attempts to
introduce greater flexibility, especially those using new forms of precarious
employment contracts, may undermine worker security. This in turn might
undermine commitment and a readiness to cooperate, and indirectly the goals of
increased innovation, quality, modernisation and change. In response, some
larger enterprises seem to have recognised that change can be implemented more
satisfactorily within a framework of trust and security. One aspect appears to
have been an increase in longer term collectively agreed pay deals, which
balance flexibility and cooperation for increased job security for the
workforce11.
10 In fact within Europe, the promotion of active
cooperation within the workplace to introduce new working practices is reported
to be an important part of EU policy. The aim is to improve competitiveness and
employment through changes in work organisation based on high skill, high
trust and high quality. Some progress has been made. For example, in
Denmark, Cooperation Committees have been formed to encourage flexible
organisations; in the Netherlands, works councils have been used to encourage
trust and innovation in companies; and in Finland the government has launched a
workplace development programme with employers and trade unions (Taylor, 1998a).
11 For example, in 1997, Bayer, the German chemicals and
pharmaceutical company, signed a deal with 46,000 German workers which runs
until 2001, whereby the company gained increased flexibility and cost cutting
measures in the context of guarantees on job security (Bowley, 1997). In the UK,
a Scottish whisky company, United Distillers, employing 4,500 workers, has made
an agreement with the GMB union whereby a management guarantee of job security
has been tied to a commitment to flexibility and retraining, and the pegging of
pay increases to just above inflation. This agreement is said to have promoted
an atmosphere of cooperation towards introducing modernisation, flexibility and
increased productivity.
Doubts have been raised as to whether such agreements, valuable
as they might be, are adequate for small enterprises and for the increasing
numbers of mobile and unstable workers employed on flexible employment
contracts. It has been suggested that attention be given to establishing systems
for social and welfare protection at the community level for those employees for
whom employment is unstable, seasonal and otherwise erratic. (Pyke, 1997b).
Health and safety is another area to receive particular
attention in the future because of the increasing implications for modern
competitive practices. The detrimental effect on enterprise productivity, morale
and absenteeism of poor health, work related stress and inadequate social
protection schemes is well understood. For example, a clear relationship between
working conditions and productivity was found to exist amongst the
self-employed, micro-enterprises employing less than ten people, and people
involved in other informal sector activities in the Philippines (Joshi, 1997).
In particular, poor working conditions were seen as having an economic effect in
terms of wasted time, as well as imposing long term harm on workers.
Other Filipino research projects have been reported as coming to
similar conclusions. For example, a study carried out by the Philippines
Institute for Labour Studies noted that productivity is often diminished by
accidents and illness resulting from poor working conditions (ILS, 1990, cited
in Joshi, 1997). Other studies, such as ones connected to the ILO WISE and IWEB
programmes have also demonstrated a link in developing countries between working
conditions in small and micro enterprises and productivity in those enterprises.
In Europe, the economic cost of poor health has also been
recognised. For example, the British Health and Safety Executive calculates that
33 million days are lost at work in the UK annually because of workplace
accidents and a further 20 million due to occupational health problems (Taylor,
1998b). It has been suggested that the effect of work related illnesses such as
stress undermines the capability to provide the quality products and services
now so much in demand, and has an important cost consequence for business
Buckby, 1998b; Harris and Arendt (1998).
Further, health and safety are becoming a significant issue in
the context of supply chain effectiveness. Recent evidence from the UK indicates
that as larger enterprises have restructured their supply chains and pursued new
competitive strategies (such as just-in-time deliveries, high quality service,
constant costs reductions, rapid product change, and minimum product defect) the
reliability of small enterprises further down the chain has risen in importance.
This leads many lead firms to take active steps to minimise disruption
potentially caused by health and safety hazards. Thus health and safety aspects
are becoming discriminating factors when lead firms choose their preferred
suppliers (See Box 2). Consequently, more attention should be paid in the future
to how small enterprises might be able to achieve adequate health and safety
levels.
Box 2
Supply Chain Health and Safety Initiatives
Shell Exploration and Production, which operates production
platforms and exploration rigs on behalf of Shell and Esso is reported to tackle
health and safety within a Fully Integrated Quality System. This system sets
procedure for contractors, which range from big operators carrying out long term
contracts, to small companies employed for one-off assignments. Costs and
quality are not the only criteria when selecting suppliers. Tenders are now
evaluated partly on the bidders health and safety record, with more
emphasis placed than previously on the importance of health and safety as a
selection criteria. If contractors fail to measure up to required standards they
are not put on the tender list.
In the UK, Adtranz manufactures and repairs railway rolling
stock and signalling equipment. Health and Safety issues are reported to be an
important component of the contractual relationship that Adtranz UK strikes with
its 2,000 suppliers. The company is highly dependent on just-in-time
supply and any disruption in supply can have serious financial consequences for
Adtranz. Consequently, strategic suppliers must be able to demonstrate good
management of health and safety. Once chosen, a supplier has to continue
demonstrating that its equipment is reliable and safe.
British Steel has 39,000 permanent employees and is reported to
take accident prevention and occupational health issues very seriously. The
company has also turned its attention to its suppliers and contractors, which
account for an additional 10,000 employees in businesses ranging from computing,
industrial and domestic cleaning, catering and security to slag removal. For the
past three years the company has pursued a policy of reducing the number on its
supplier approved list for which selection is based on performance indicators
that include health and safety records. The current policy is to decentralise
workplace safety responsibility, handing it down to the companys
individual businesses, and ultimately to work teams. The approach is said to be
linked to total quality and the desire to see greater workforce involvement in
problem solving. The aim is to integrate health and safety into all aspects of
the business as part of the total quality approach.
Sources: Simkins, 1998; Kibazo, 1998; Wood, 1998.
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