Title: Labour trends and human resource management
1Unit 4
- Labour trends and human resource management
2Introduction (I)
- Asia-Pacific region at 2 distinct levels
- Aggregate or macro-level
- Demographic determinants of population and labour
force growth - Economies are not isolated, the labour migration
between countries and how this affects labour
market dynamics - Organizational or micro-level
- How human resources are managed within the
organization - The relationship between external and internal
labour markets is associated with features of
firms HRM system
3Introduction (II)
- The degree of bureaucratization and
professionalization of HRM - Characteristics of HRM systems
- Supply and demand for labour and dynamism of
external labour markets - Labour organization
- Culture
- Those are associated with the complexity,
formalization and centralization of labour
markets within medium/large organizations
4The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (I)
- Labour demographics
- The demographic transition from high high to low
birth and death rates began in Europe and North
American with the Industrial Revolution - During the period 1965-80, the world experienced
a marked decline in crude death rates - The rate of population growth declined in all the
East Asian economies quite sharply - Important implications for a countrys labour
force - Changes in urbanization, the age structure of the
population and international migration
5The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (II)
- Urbanization
- Compared with the historical experience of
developed nations, recent urbanization in
developing countries - Since 1970 the level of urbanization has been
rising quickly among three ASEAN countries - Indonesia, the Philippines and Malaysia
- Positive relationship between the level of
economic development and level of urbanization - High but the corresponding absolute increase have
also been quite sizable due to the large
population base - Age structural change
- Pronounced fertility declines and significant
mortality improvements among a number of
countries in the Asia-Pacific regions
6The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (III)
- The declining dependency ratios are likely to
facilitate their developmental process - Low dependency ratios are expected to undergo a
substantial increase, due to rapid rise in the
proportion of the elderly - Diversity and change
- The Asia-Pacific region has experienced rapid
growth since Japans economic take-off in the
1950s - Export to world markets of labour-intensive
manufactured products - Textiles
- Garments
- Toys
- footwear
7The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (IV)
- Cheap labour was a significant national resources
and export-oriented industrialization was a
create full employment - Declines in population and labour force growth
led quickly to labour shortages - Some export industries heavily dependent on
unskilled labour - Singapore and Hong Kong
- Labour shortages and rapidly rising wages forced
manufacturing industries to make further
adjustments to changing comparative advantage - Some high-skilled labour also began to be
imported into Indonesia and China was inadequate
to meet the demand generated by rapid growth
8The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (V)
- Structural change in national labour markets in
the East Asia region has largely the product of
rapid economic growth - NIEs and the ASEAN countries has encouraged firms
to economize on the use of unskilled labour by
moving up the industrial-technology ladder - Producing workers suitably qualified by
education, training and experience for high-skill
jobs - The Asian financial crisis of 1997 also brought a
significant social impact - Steadily improving employment prospects
- Deterioration in labour market conditions
- Substantial retrenchments in financial services
and manufacturing sectors
9The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (VI)
- Reduced the employment prospects of the new
entrants and re-employment prospects of displaced
workers - Rise in underemployment occurred under the
displaced workers and unsuccessful new job
seekers into the rural and urban informal sectors - 2 features of economic systems amplify their
effects in the 3 economies - Absence of a meaningful social safety net
- Social assistance are also rudimentary and are
limited to those who are incapable of work - Social expectations in these countries have been
shaped by a long period of increasing employment
opportunities
10The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (VII)
- Government responded to rising unemployment in 3
main ways - Send home foreign workers
- Migrant workers were working illegally
- Such as Thailand and Malaysia
- Repatriation may not reduce unemployment
- Governments are trying to mitigate the
unemployment problem is by encouraging those with
farming roots to go back to them - Indonesians government cut train fares for those
making the annual trip to their home village - Introduce job-creation programmes and plan social
safety nets - Coverage in return for trade unions agreeing to a
change in the law to allow lay-offs
11The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (VIII)
- Labour migration
- The Asia-Pacific regions has experienced
considerable change in the post-war period - Transformation has been the increasing spatial
mobility of people across national borders - Migration to Southeast Asia occurred as Chinese
trading posts were established countries - Asia in the mid-1990s supplied around 40 per cent
of the annual intake of immigrants - With low fertility affecting the populations of
the settler societies - Asia seek out new opportunities and
labour-deficit areas within Asia supply
12The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (IX)
- Asian migration patterns
- Great range of migration and development
experience across the region - China and Indonesia are geographically and
demographically huge, with an enormous range of
internal diversity - The Philippines
- Emigration is the continued rapid growth rate of
the labour force - The composition of emigrant flows
- Unskilled laborer through the skilled technician
to the white-collar service employee - Balance between the sexes with women of all skill
levels involved in migration
13The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (X)
- Indonesia
- Primarily made up of workers entering menial
occupations in the Middle East and Malaysia - More skilled in Indonesia are not so competitive
as few are proficient in the English language - No migrants from Indonesia with professional
expertise or technical qualifications - Hiring foreign workers
- Thailand
- Seek employment abroad to earn higher income
- The major destinations of Thai contract workers
are the Middle East, Africa, ASEAN and other
Asian countries
14The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (XI)
- Malaysia
- Explain its high and two-way labour mobility
include - Advanced stage of development and high wage
levels compared with immediate neighbors - Plantation and modern industrial sectors which
accentuates the disparities of opportunity and
income - Vulnerability to global economic fluctuations and
consequent labour surpluses and shortages - Typical Malaysian migrant has tertiary education
with a young family in a middle or senior
management position - Semi-skilled and unskilled workers, in the 1960s
emigration from Malaysia was confined to the
region, mainly Singapore
15The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (XII)
- Hong Kong
- The migration to Hong Kong of capital,
entrepreneurial talent and labour from China was
critical in the transformation from an entrepot
to the industrial centre - Labour came from 3 main sources
- Local
- The original source might have been China
- Direct migration from China
- Between 1976 and 1981 400,000 net additions to HK
- Skilled migration controlled either by the
colonial administration to fill positions in the
public service - Or mainly British firms bringing in managerial
staff - HKs booming economy also attracts a large number
of illegal migrants
16The labour force in Asia-Pacific Borderless
frontiers (XIII)
- Increasing numbers of overstayers from other
parts of Asia - Triggered regional migration as a process
complementing the transfer of trade and capital
and reinforcing the processes of regional
integration - Short-term workers who do not settle down
permanently in their adopted countries - Effect of market forces cause labour market
increase internationalized on a global regional
basis - Policy liberalizations
- Information flows
- Technological developments
17Management of labour in Asia-Pacific (I)
- Responding to trends in the labour supply
- Education and training maybe necessary conditions
for sustained economic growth - 2 conditions must be fulfilled for a growing
supply of educated labour to be utilized in
high-return activities - Rapid growth of labour demand relative to supply
and skilled labour - Labour market must perform efficiently
- Efficient, flexible and responsive to changing
conditions - East Asias rate of increase in wages is the
result of slower growth of supply and more rapid
growth of demand for labour
18Management of labour in Asia-Pacific (II)
- The early demographic transition also reduced,
the rate growth of new entrants into the labour
force - The growth rapidly, labour demand in Asia has
become increasingly skill-intensive - Wage management with white collar and technical
employment increased steadily during the 1970s
and the 1980s - The occupational composition of labour demand in
the Asian economies reflected increase in the
abundance of education labour - Rising wages of unskilled labour eroded
international competitiveness in labour-intensive
manufactured goods
19Management of labour in Asia-Pacific (III)
- Reluctance of Asian governments to intervene
heavily in the operation of labour markets - East Asian economies avoided the creation of a
high-wage labour elite - Workers accept flexibility of wages rather than
decline in real earnings - Retained earnings accounted for higher proportion
of investment finance, reducing reliance on
underdeveloped capital markets - Greater competitiveness in international markets,
the faster rates of growth of output, employment
and earnings
20Management of labour in Asia-Pacific (IV)
- Labour-management relations
- Employment relationship cannot be regarded as
simply an exchange of labour for pay - Goes beyond money to include a number of
secondary issues - Working conditions
- The length of the workings day
- Vacation time
- Measures of participation
- Union (mixture of movement and organization)
- Meet workers individual needs, protecting them
from exploitation and negotiating improved wages
and conditions
21Management of labour in Asia-Pacific (V)
- Collective purpose that extends to a political
role - Alternative focus for employee commitment
- Power base that can clash with the prerogatives
of management - Collective bargaining increase employee
bargaining power and counter employers attempts
to create competition between workers - Obtain standardized wages and conditions at the
best possible level - Deal with employees on an individual basis
- Anglo and European nations take place through
- Personal contacts
- Allowing employers to offer pay increase to staff
willing to accept such contracts
22Management of labour in Asia-Pacific (VI)
- Organizational change method
- Team briefings
- series of meeting and collect ideas and
criticisms t be funneled upwards - Quality circles
- Emphasizing direct dialogue between staff and
line management on the subject of improving
procedures - Resisted the introduction of change methods
- Main source of union power as the filter of
information and innovation - Reduced to the primary subjects of pay, holidays
and discipline, removing the unions form the
discussion of procedures
23Human resource management (HRM) (I)
- HRM is a distinctive approach to manage people
- Uniquely important to sustained business success
- Recruiting capable, flexible and committed
people, managing and rewarding their performance
and developing key competencies - The stress is on people as human resources
- The Harvard approach
- Element of mutually in all businesses
- Significant stakeholders in an organization
- Needs and concern, along with other groups such
as shareholders and customers
24Human resource management (HRM) (II)
Beer or Harvard model of HRM
Stakeholder interests Shareholders Management Empl
oyee groups Government Community Unions
HRM policy choices Employee influence Human
resources flow Reward systems Work systems
HR outcomes Commitment Competence Cost
effectiveness congruence
Long-term consequences Individual
well-being Organizational effectiveness Societal
well-being
Situational factors Workforce characteristics Busi
ness strategy conditions Management
philosophy Labour market Unions Task
technology Laws and societal values
25Human resource management (HRM) (III)
- The Harvard model address 4 strategic policy
areas - Human resources flows, managing the movement and
performance of people - Effective recruitment programmes and selection
techniques - Placing them in the most appropriate jobs,
appraising their performance and promoting the
better employees - Terminating the employment of those no longer
required, deemed unsuitable or achieving
retirement age - Must ensure the right mix and number of staff in
the organization
26Human resource management (HRM) (IV)
- Reward system
- Pay and benefits designed to attract
- Motivate and keep employment
- Employee influence
- Controlling levels of authority
- Power
- Decision-making
- Work systems, defining and designing jobs
- Arrangement of people
- Information and technology provides the most
productive and efficient results
27Human resource management (HRM) (V)
- Policies result in the Four C
- Commitment of employees to the organizations
mission and values - Congruence
- Linking human resource objectives with the
organizations goal - Competence
- Developing an appropriate mixture of skills
- Abilities and knowledge
- Cost-effectiveness
- Delivering performance in a competitive manner
- Strongly influenced by behavioral research and
theory and stands in the tradition of human
relations
28Human resource management (HRM) (VI)
- Not demonstrate enthusiasm and commitment comply
- Decision-making is channeled through top managers
- Emphasis on participation throughout the
organization - The principal functions of HRM
- Planning
- Anticipates and maps out the consequences of
business strategy on an organizations human
resource requirements - Ensure that the enterprises has the necessary
people to follow the strategic plan - Jobs which come into being, be ceased, or be
changed - Possibilities for redeployment and retraining
- Changes in management and supervision
- Training requirement
29Human resource management (HRM) (VII)
- Programmes for requirements
- Implications for employee relations
- Feedback mechanism for company objectives
- Methods for dealing with HR problems
- Inability to obtain sufficient technically
skilled workers - Information need to gathered through some form of
human resource audit which linked to a
conventional of organizations human capital - Strengths
- Existing skills, individual expertise and unused
talent - Weaknesses
- Inadequate skills, talent which are missing in
the workforce because they are too expensive and
inflexible people
30Human resource management (HRM) (VIII)
- Opportunities
- Developed in existing staff and talent which can
be bought from the external job market - Threats
- The risk of talent being lost to competitors
- Such as Chwee-Huat (Singapore)
- Dependency on foreign workers
- Ageing workforce
- Impact of companies relocating their
labour-intensive industries to other countries - Problems related to privatization of
government-linked companies
31Human resource management (HRM) (IX)
- Recruitment and selection
- Recruiting is the process of attracting job
candidates who have the abilities and attitude to
help the organization achieve its objectives - Natural follow-up to human resource planning
- The ways for recruitment
- Advertisement
- Opening through company publications and bulletin
boards - Encourage present employees to tell their friends
and relatives about job openings - Exploring longer-term solutions to the dearth of
management talent - Education and recurrent training
- Example of Vietnam
32Human resource management (HRM) (X)
- The selection process begins
- Enterprise chooses the applications who best meet
the criteria for the available positions - Ensure the best available candidates are
selected, an organization must compare the
applicants against the criteria established for
job - Having 5 basic categories
- Education
- Experience
- Physical characteristics
- Personal characteristics
- Personality types
- The organization must use selection instruments
that are both valid and reliable
33Human resource management (HRM) (XI)
- Retention and development
- The problem of retention is linked to 2 major
factors - Scarcity
- Volatile short-term political situation of some
environments - Undermines incentives that stress loyalty to the
firm - Process which managers obtain the skills,
experience and attitudes that they need to become
or remain successful leaders - The reasons for employee training
- Reducing or preventing managerial obsolescence by
keeping the individual up-to-date in the field - Increasing the managers overall effectiveness
- Increasing the managers overall satisfaction
with the job
34Human resource management (HRM) (XII)
- 3 main causes of obsolescence
- Inability to keep up with technological changes
in the field - Individuals to positions for which they are
unqualified - Managers get older they find it difficult to keep
up with the latest developments in their field - The ways to retain staff
- Establish the perception that personnel policies
are fair - Western egalitarianism
- Reward people within their cultural norms
- Generate a sense of belonging to the group
- Consistent long-term human resources policy
- Personnel prefer to be rewarded on the basis of
behavior (Loyalty and honesty) rather than on
quantifiable performance criteria
35Human resource management (HRM) (XIII)
- Growing competitive pressure many companies face
is causing new pressures for the HRM function - South Koreas Samsung Group announced a human
resource scheme called the New Management
Programme - Recruit more women and devolve greater
decision-making powers to local level managers - However, employees are feeling more stressed with
greater dissatisfaction about the ability to
balance work and family life - Employee development has become a concern to a
number of government in the Asia-Pacific region - Stepped in to facilitate market transitions
- HK as a example
- Employee Retraining Board was set up to provide
employees retraining programmes (ERP) for
unemployed manual workers
36Human resource management (HRM) (XIV)
- Training
- Process of altering employee behavior and
attitudes in a way that increase the probability
of goal attainment - Learning is the acquisition of skills, knowledge
and abilities that result in a relatively
permanent change in behaviour - Devote considerable resources to training and
developing employees - Cooperating with their host governments to
develop school curricula that produce skilled
workers - Some secondary education emphasized qualities
need to excel in a factory environment which
discipline and memorization
37Human resource management (HRM) (XV)
- Management must be prepared to
- Make it clear that training has a high priority
- Reward those who train their people
- Actively participate in training programmes to
keep abreast of the latest developments in their
own areas of expertise - Some ways for organization anticipates and plans
for the types of training that will keep the
workforce up-to-date - Human resources management in the strategic
planning process - Affect what management expects of the employees
- Technological, social/psychological, economic,
political and intellectual trends - Resist the tendency to use training just to
handle immediate, short-term problems - Set a regular, criterion-based planning and
review process - Build a pool of potentially promotable individuals
38Human resource management (HRM) (XIX)
- Encourage input from those who will be trained,
in designing and implementing training programmes - Conduct human resource audits to measure the
organizational climate - Rely on periodic assessments for discovering who
needs training - Given subordinates the most effective on-the-job
training - Conducting needs analysis surveys
- Analysis questionnaires or procedures
- Termination
- Managers in charge of redundancy programmes
typically focus on target numbers - Retention strategies for key staff are even more
during periods of redundancy - Globalization is affecting the likely basis for
termination - Emphasized group harmony and age norms, the new
HR policy emphasizes a performance-based system
39Implications of HRM and labour for organizational
development strategies (I)
- Sophistication and importance of people
management is greater in larger organization - Owners and employees may work closely on a
personal level - Larger organizations employ highly trained human
resources practitioners using advanced selection,
assessment and reward techniques - Build up the formal structure
- Clearer division between specialist functions
- Focus on matching human resources to strategic
objectives - Larger organizations display some degree of
specialization, centralization and hierarchy
40Implications of HRM and labour for organizational
development strategies (II)
- Diffusion of HRM ideas has led to a move away
from the centralized HRM departments - Division of work between various aspects of
people management - Senior management take responsibility for human
resources strategy - Line managers assume operational responsibility
for their people - Human resource specialists provide specific
services ranging from administration to selection
programmes and counseling
41Implications of HRM and labour for organizational
development strategies (III)
- Organizational structures can be regarded as
people management systems - Simple hierarchies along traditional lines to
complex networks - Based on informal working relationships
- Constrain or facilitate the freedom of employees
to act and make decisions - Classified into a number of types
- Functional, divisional, matrix, federations and
networks - Flexibility is required from employees and
managers to meet increasingly competitive
circumstances
42Outlook for the future (I)
- Labour factor continue to be central to economic
growth and development in the region - Low-cost, labour-intensive activities
- Data capture and entry
- Higher-skilled, knowledge-intensive activities,
skilled labour continues to be the key resource - Such as Asia-Pacific
- China, suppliers of labour for manufacturing
activities - India, demanding low cost clerical labour
- Japan, HK, Singapore and Taiwan pursued a
strategy of upskilling and more into higher
value-adding activities
43Outlook for the future (II)
- Demographic trends within the region
- Continue to rely on imported labour
- Maintain attractive working and living
environments for globally mobile personnel - NIEs strive to ensure the continuing movement of
labour within the region - Changing age structure of their populations
- Sizeable growth of the number of aged within
their populations by the year 2025 - Declining birth rates and improved health mean
- Growth of long-term unemployed
- Limited the skills
- Shanghai (China, most intractable ageing problem
anywhere in the world
44Outlook for the future (III)
- Integration of labour markets within the
Asia-Pacific region - Foreign direct investment and technology transfer
within the region has been mirrored by labour
migration - Recipients of migrant workers who have moved
from the rest of developing Asia - Governments face a difficult task balancing
political/social sensitivities with the
commerical realities of labour needs as Asia
45Outlook for the future (IV)
- Convergence in HRM practices
- Trend away from collective towards personal
contracts - More Western organizations are adopting
Japanese-style quality circles and team working - Transplantation of practices and structures
- Maintain the three pillars of employment
- Applied to small core of regular employees
- Japanese companies have dismissed employees in
the past - Honda, Fujitsu and Sony move to a wage system of
annual salary - More organizations around the world begin to
implement so-called best practices
46Unit 4