1 / 36

Employee Participation and Performance. A Cross- National Study

Employee Participation and Performance. A Cross- National Study. Erik Poutsma e.poutsma@fm.ru.nl Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, NL Prepared for the Seminar at the Centre for Work, Organization and Wellbeing, Griffith University – August 13, 2009. Topics.

mary
Download Presentation

Employee Participation and Performance. A Cross- National Study

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Employee Participation and Performance. A Cross- National Study Erik Poutsma e.poutsma@fm.ru.nl Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, NL Prepared for the Seminar at the Centre for Work, Organization and Wellbeing, Griffith University – August 13, 2009

  2. Topics • Main objective is to disentangle employee voice, its multiple channels and its influence on performance • Using the concept of local flexicurity • Specific focus on the role of financial Participation (FP) • Embeddedness and Relationship between different forms of participation in different economies • Results of research program WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  3. What do we learn from this? • The different configurations of voice mechanisms in different economies differently related to performance? No. • Unique universal contribution of DP and PS to performance. • Unions not (wanted to be) involved. • Management targets for flexibility wins over security. • It is time to be involved to reach flexicurity! WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  4. Financial participation • Basically two forms; return and control rights • Profit sharing schemes (PS) • Past performance • Incentive – productivity – collective performance • Share related schemes (incl. Stocks Options) (ESO) • Future performance • Ownership – commitment – identification – alignment (voice??) WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  5. The debates (1) • Multiple channels of voice and the possibility of substituting or crowding out; Direct (DP) versus representative participation (RP); what role plays financial participation (FP)? • FP as part of HPWS bundles? including diverse forms of participation (DP and RP) • Social embeddedness of DP,RP and FP within different varieties of capitalism and varieties of industrial relations WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  6. Debates (2) RP • Multiple channels of representative participation (RP) • Different bargaining levels; Trade union; discretion developments • Company level representation; union – non union developments • Works councils – Joint consultation committees; (in)dependence developments WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  7. Debates (3) RP – DP • Representative participation (RP) and direct participation (DP) • Efficiency arguments for DP; ineffective RP • Recent more balanced approach adopting the language of ‘partnership’ Guest & Peccei, 1998; Ackers, Wilkinson et al., 2006 • Added value of both forms of participation; acceptance and quality of decisions; improve employee management relations Gollan & Markey, 2001; Marsden, 2007 • ‘local flexicurity’: collective regulation (RP) safeguarding flexibility (DP) and security Haagen & Trystadt, 2008 WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  8. Local flexicurity • Freedom = Flexibility ; Equity = Security • Multi-levelled model of employment relations in which various interests are mediated at various levels. • Collective agreements and participation at the workplace are complementary. • Direct participation = responsible individual autonomy: positive performance outcomes due to more flexibility. • However, negative outcomes due to a possibility of exploiting individual employees to unhealthy levels. • Individual flexibility in working conditions and labour terms appears rather costly to organise.

  9. Debate (4) FP and DP • Financial participation and DP preventing free rider problem Kruse, Freeman, Blasi, 2004; • Pay off for direct participation Levine & Tyson, 1990 • Return on investment in human and social capital made by employees Kochan & Blair, 2000 WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  10. RP and Financial participation • Bargaining level related to FP; more decentralised more possibility of flexibility in pay and wages • FP considered as tool to circumvent collective bargaining • Unions oppose FP; however mixed results (country dependent) Pendleton 1997; De Varo & Kurtulus, 2006 • Works councils positively related to FP Heywood & Jirjahn, 2006 (for Germany) • Possibility of insider coalition “management – RP” Gregory Jackson, 2004 WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  11. Unions, FP and DP • Negative relationship • Confuses identity of employees • Undermining employee representation • Unions in contradictory position of representing both capital and labour • Use of FP and DP for union avoidance • FP and DP used to decentralise bargaining Consequence: Unions ignore DP and FP Is that the right attitude? WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  12. Broadening the partnership agenda? • Complementarity of FP and DP on performance Bryson & Freeman, 2007 and forthcoming Dube & Freeman, forthcoming • Some research do not support the complementarity of FP and other Participation Robinson and Zhang, 2005 (UK data) Kalmi, Pendleton & Poutsma (2005) (6 countries data) • Suggest an independent role of FP in its impact on performance WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  13. Research 1 FP and Institutional Change in F, G, NL, UK & AUS • Erik Poutsma, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands • Ulke Veersma, The Business School, University of Greenwich, UK • Paul Ligthart, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  14. Research 1 • Comparative research FP and Institutional Change in France, Germany, NL, UK and Australia • Qualitative and Quantitative • Interviews with main actors: governments, trade unions, employer federations • Cranet data analysis WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  15. Theoretical debate • Neo-institutional; path dependency and change • Convergence or persistent divergence • Issue of power in shaping institutions • Role of IR Actors: governments, trade unions, employers • Role of MNCs WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  16. Embeddedness • Policy and Statutory differences between countries may promote co-existence • UK and France as examples • Varieties of capitalism: weaker role of union voice in LME – room to implement FP ? • CME – stronger role employee voice – chance to regulate FP (especially PS) ? WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  17. Different targets; different institutional design; different positions of actors Individual allocation AU UK NL Corporate objectives G USA ESOP Income and wealth redistribution F Collective fund WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  18. Results • Governments differ in positions and attitudes • Employers go for the flexibility • Unions go for the security but are not involved in DP and FP development • FP develops apart from Agreements; seldom loosely coupled • Alignment argument for FP • No insider coalitions “Management – RP” in using FP; seldom take-over defense WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  19. Data and methods • CRANET data • Broad-based Financial Participation (ESO, PS) • Across the five countries; N = 3196 • 1999 and 2004 • Business units with > 100 employees WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  20. WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  21. Research 2 Broadening the partnership agenda? FP in different economies • Paul Ligthart & Erik PoutsmaInstitute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, NL • Chris Brewster, Henley Business School, University of Reading, UK WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  22. Research 2 • Main objective is to disentangle employee voice, its multiple channels and its influence on performance • Specific focus on the role of financial Participation (FP) • Embeddedness and Relationship between different forms of participation WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  23. Database & Methodology • Dataset: CRANET, wave 2004 • HRM-survey since 1989 using LSE (+200 employees) • Using private companies (LSE), • 32 countries from 5 continents, • and 6 industries; N=3766 companies • using multi-level analysis; STATA, Gllamm (Rabe-Hesketh & Skrondal, 2004); model controlled for country (level 2) WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  24. Institutionalised Participation • Market Economies(LME <=> CME) • Representative Participation(JWC / recognition TU) • Collective Bargaining(national, corporate level) • Corporate Characteristics • Industry • Size • MNC • Stocks listing • Unionization degree • Direct Participation in company • Business Strategy briefings • Financial Performance briefings • Organisation of Work briefings • Financial Participation • Employee Share Options(narrowly, broadly based) • Profit Sharing Schemes(narrowly, broadly based) Model & Hypotheses WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  25. Results 1 • FP much more determined by country and type market economy as well as corporate characteristics than DP • CMEs promote PS while LMEs promote ESO WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  26. Results 2 Controlled for country, market economy and other corporate features: • Direct participation and representative participation are not substitutes • Financial participation is linked to DP • No link between (Institutional) voice and financial participation • Financial participation is a phenomenon on its own • However, partnership arrangements do not exclude financial participation WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  27. Research 3 Employee Participation and Performance: a cross-national study • ErikPoutsma, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands • Chris Brewster, Henley Business School, University of Reading, UK • Paul Ligthart, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  28. Theoretical background • Financial participation and DP preventing free rider problem Kruse, Freeman, Blasi, 2004; • Pay off for direct participation Levine & Tyson, 1990 • Return on investment in human and social capital made by employees Kochan & Blair, 2000 WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  29. Theoretical background • Complementarity of FP and DP on performance Bryson & Freeman, 2007 and forthcoming Dube & Freeman, forthcoming • Some research do not support the complementarity of FP and other Participation Robinson and Zhang, 2005 (UK data) Kalmi, Pendleton & Poutsma (2005) (6 countries data) • Suggest an independent role of FP in its impact on performance WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  30. Database & Methodology • Dataset: CRANET, wave 2004 • Using private companies (LSE), • 32 countries from 5 continents, • and 6 industries; N=2986 companies • using multi-level analysis; STATA, Gllamm (Rabe-Hesketh & Skrondal, 2004); model controlled for country (level 2) WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  31. Data and Methods • Perceived performance relative to the average in the sector • 6 indicators: General performance • Operational performance: service, productivity, innovativeness • Financial performance: profitability, stock market, gross revenue WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  32. WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  33. WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  34. WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  35. Results • Country and type of economy makes no differences • DP related to operational performance • Profit sharing related to all performance measures; ESO: no relationships • RP slight negative relationships with performance; Level of bargaining: no effect • Unionization slightly negative related to gross revenue • Interaction effect DP *PS positive while generic effects remain WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

  36. What do we learn from this? • The different configurations of voice mechanisms in different economies differently related to performance? No. • Unique universal contribution of DP and PS to performance. • Unions not (wanted to be) involved. • Management targets for flexibility wins over security. • It is time to be involved to reach flexicurity! WOW, Griffith, August 13 2009

More Related