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PRINCIPLES OF PARTNERSHIP (Tailby and Winchester, 2005) TUC list 6 principles: ... Tailby ,S. and Winchester,D. (2005) 'Management and Trade Unions: Partnership at ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BMG346J2


1
BMG346J2
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT Week 8 Trade
Unionism HRM Workplace Social Partnerships
2
LEARNING OUTCOMES
  • By the end of the lecture you should
  • understand the background to the partnership
    debate
  • be able to articulate the potential advantages
    and disadvantages for the main parties involved
  • be able to critically evaluate the relationship
    between trade unionism and new forms of work and
    people management in contemporary organisations.

3
Employee relations and management style
  • Fox (1966) made the distinction between two
    contrasting views of the employment relationship
  • Unitary views where trade unions are seen as an
    unwelcome intrusion
  • Pluralist views where trade unions are seen as
    the legitimate representatives of workers

4
Individualism and collectivism
  • Individualism a focus on the feelings and
    sentiments of each employee, with policies based
    on the right of the individual to advancement at
    work
  • Collectivisim recognition of the collective
    interests of employees in decision making

5
The nature of union recognition
  • Present day distinction between
  • Workplaces where unions have maintained a
    presence
  • Workplaces where unions are being edged out
  • Non-union workplaces
  • Source Marchington and Wilkinson (2005)

6
Why would employers choose to work with unions?
  • Management may regard trade union reps as an
    essential part of the communication process
  • Employers may aim for long-term stability
  • Unionisation may be viewed as inevitable
  • Employers may lack the power to reduce the trade
    union role

7
Why do employees join trade unions?
  • Support if I had a problem at work (72)
  • Improved pay and conditions (36)
  • Because I believe in trade unions (16)
  • Free legal advice
    (15)
  • Most people at work are members (14)
  • Source Waddington and Whitson 1997 cited in
    Bacon (2006)

8
Marginalisation edging the unions out
  • Typically associated with
  • Lower priority accorded to collective bargaining
    and upgrading of consultation
  • Greater emphasis on individual and direct
    communication from managers to all employees
  • Other HR practices stressing the individual, such
    as performance related pay

9
Managing without unions
  • the good, the bad and the lucky
  • good large employers offering an attractive
    employment package as an alternative to tarde
    union membership
  • bad focus on cost-cutting with only a minimum
    of workers rights
  • lucky no strategy, but innovative practices
    following HR fashion

10
MOVEMENTS IN MANAGEMENT STYLE IN EMPLOYEE
RELATIONS
Resource
Sophisticated human relations
Sophisticated consultative
Employee Development
Paternalist
Modern paternalist
Individualism
Paternalism
Bargained constitutional
Traditional
Cost Minimalisation
Commodity
Adversarial
Co-operative
None (Unitary)
Collectivism
11
The unitary approach
  • Traditional style
  • Characterised by exploitation of labour
  • Sophisticated human relations
  • Objective is to develop policies and practices so
    that it is unnecessary for staff to join trade
    unions
  • Paternalist style
  • Exercising a benign welfarist employment regime

12
Adversarial and co-operative approaches
  • Adversarial
  • Bargained constitutional
  • Trade unions recognised but viewed as a
    constraint
  • Co-operative
  • Modern paternalist style
  • Paternalist approach, but recognition of the
    value of the relationship with trade unions
  • Sophisticated consultative style
  • Active encouragement of forms of employee
    representations
  • Employees seen as core elements of organisation
    success

13
Partnership and the New Unionism
  • Changed public policy environment following
    election of New Labour in 1997
  • Statutory route for union recognition
  • Extension of rights for individual employees
  • Closer engagement with social policies of the
    European Union
  • European Works Councils
  • Information and Consultation Regulations
  • Replace the notion of conflict with the promotion
    of partnership in the longer tem

14
European Works Council Directive
  • Applies to companies employing 1,000 or more
    workers and with 150 employees in two or more EU
    states
  • Adopted in 1994, revised 1997
  • Implemented in UK 2000
  • Provides for establishment of information and
    consultation arrangements at European level

15
Information and Consultation Regulations
  • Came into effect in Northern Ireland in April
    2005
  • Affecting organisations with 150 employees
    initially
  • Employees can request information on a companys
    economic situation and employment prospects
  • See www.delni.gov.uk

16
DEFINITIONS OF PARTNERSHIP
  • IPD, 1997 Partnership has more to do with an
    approach to the relationship between employers
    and employees, individually and in groups, than
    it has to do with trade unions.
  • TUC, 1997 define partnership as employers and
    trade unions working together to achieve common
    goals such as fairness and competitiveness it
    is a recognition that although they have
    different constituencies and at times different
    interests, they can serve these best by making
    common cause wherever possible.
  • IPA, 1992 define partnership as one where
    managers are required to declare security of
    employment as a key corporate objective
    gainsharing the results of success, and
    recognise the legitimacy of the employees right
    to be informed, consulted and represented. In
    return, TUs are required to renounce rigid job
    demarcations and commit to flexible working give
    sympathetic consideration to the Continental
    model of representation of the whole workforce by
    means of election of representatives to new works
    councils, and recognise and then co-promote
    employee involvement methods. (Redman
    Wilkinson, 2001)

17
Views on partnership
  • IPD (now CIPD) emphasise the relationship between
    employers and employees
  • TUC definition is pluralistic, emphasising
    respect for trade union influence
  • Given the lack of general consensus on the
    meaning of partnerships, it may be surprising
    that the term has acquired such a topical
    currency. A principal reasonIs that it offers an
    industrial relations solution to the low
    competitiveness of much of UK industry (Bacon,
    2006196)

18
PRINCIPLES OF PARTNERSHIP (Tailby and Winchester,
2005)
  • TUC list 6 principles
  • Employment security
  • Commitment to success of the enterprise
  • Openness and transparency
  • Recognizing legitimate interests
  • Focus on the quality of working life
  • Adding value
  • IPA list 4 principles
  • security and flexibility
  • sharing financial success
  • developing good communication and consultation
  • representative and employee voice

19
Example of partnership agreements
  • United Distillers
  • Decentralisation of decision making and
    empowerment
  • Teamworking
  • 3 year job security guarantee
  • 3 year pay deal

20
Example of partnership agreements
  • Welsh Water
  • Single-table, representative council
  • New work patterns
  • Harmonisation of conditions
  • New pay formula
  • Productivity improvements
  • No compulsory redundancy policy

21
PARTNERSHIP IN PRACTICE
  • 8 classes of partnership practice
  • direct participation in decisions about own work
  • direct participation in decisions about personal
    employment issues
  • participation by employee reps in decision about
    employment issues
  • participation by employee reps in decisions about
    broader org. policy issues
  • flexible job design and focus on quality
  • performance management
  • employee share ownership
  • communication, employment security
  • Guest Peccei (2001) study of 54 organisations -
  • 4 principles of partnership
  • good treatment of employees now and in future
  • empowerment
  • employee rights and benefits
  • employee responsibilities

22
WHAT MAIN PARTIES HOPE TO GAIN FROM PARTNERSHIP
(MARCHINGTON, 1998)
  • Management Advantages
  • greater commitment from employees
  • better quality solutions from shop stewards
  • more stable relationships with TUs
  • achievement of change
  • Trade Union Advantages
  • provision of more and timely info
  • influence over mgt decisions
  • closer inter-union relations
  • increased status for shop stewards
  • more trade union members
  • job security
  • Management Reservations
  • slow pace of change
  • direct and indirect cost of convening meetings
  • loss of managerial prerogative
  • doubts about contribution of partnership
  • Trade Union Reservations
  • terms of partnership defined by mgt
  • TUs may become too close to mgt
  • TUs may become implicated in negative
    decision-making
  • blurs logic of traditional trade unionism

23
POTENTIAL BARRIERS TO PARTNERSHIP(Bacon, 2006)
  • Workable partnership agreements require strategic
    long-term commitment by mgt to work closely
    with unions
  • To what extent are mgt and unions able to commit
    to a single strategy of co-operative industrial
    relations?
  • Partnership agreements may form part of a longer
    term strategy to marginalise TUs
  • Will partnership deliver greater returns for
    managers and trade unions?

24
Partnership as union strategy a preliminary
evaluation (Haynes and Allen, 2000)
  • Uses two case studies to illustrate the dynamics
    of workplace partnerships
  • MSF and Legal and General
  • USDAW and Tesco
  • Concludes that three elements are necessary for
    enduring union-management partnerships
  • Mutual legitimation of differing interests
  • Expectations about roles and behaviour must be
    clearly defined
  • Union leaders and members, along with managers,
    must experience co-operative practices as
    mutually beneficial

25
Partnership at work mutuality and the benefit of
advantage Guest and Peccei, 2001)
  • Presents a framework for analysis of partnership
    at work emphasising principles, practices and
    outcomes
  • Investigated links using evidence from 54
    organisations
  • Showed that the balance of advantage is skewed
    towards management and reflects low management
    trust in employee representatives

26
Social partnership strategies in two health
service trusts (Mason, Heaton and Morgan, 2004)
  • Analyses workplace partnership strategies
    developed in two health trusts in Northern
    Ireland
  • Compares a top down strategy with one based on
    incremental change
  • Concludes that the challenge is to spread
    partnership to encompass all employees including
    professional groups

27
Conclusions?
  • Trade unions have made little progress in
    increasing union membership density
  • Relatively few employers have sought partnership
    agreements with unions despite the evidence that
    they often deliver more substantial benefit to
    employers

28
References
  • Bacon, N. (2006) Industrial relations in
    T.Redman and A. Wilkinson (eds) Contemporary
    Human Resource Management, FT/Prentice Hall
  • Guest,D. and Peccei,R. (2001) Partnership at
    work mutuality and the balance of advantage,
    British Journal of Industrial Relations, Vol 39,
    pp207-236
  • Marchington,M. (1998) Partnership in context
    towards a European model? in P.Sparrow and M.
    Marchington (eds) Human Resource Management the
    New Agenda, FT/Pitman
  • Tailby ,S. and Winchester,D. (2005) Management
    and Trade Unions Partnership at Work? in S.
    Bach (ed) Managing Human Resources, Blackwell

29
Suggested further reading
  • Haynes,P. and Allen,M. (2000) Partnership as
    union strategy a preliminary evaluation,
    Employee Relations, Vol 23, No 2, pp164-187
  • Mason,B., Heaton,N. and Morgan,J. (2004) Social
    partnership strategies in two health service
    trusts, Personnel review, Vol 33, No 6, pp648-664
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