Downsizing Issues

Downsizing Issues
Author: Bonita J. Manson
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 187
Release: 2014-01-14
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 113569706X

This book examines the impact of downsizing on employee morale and productivity. Downsizing, due to economic changes, has played an integral part in business, the public sector, and schools. No longer are companies inclined to maintain the status quo for the sake of employee loyalty. Downsizing has have resulted in the lives and careers of employees being destroyed. The purpose of this study was to provide insight on the perception of the work environment in light of downsizing in the states of California and Illinois Cooperative Extension. The primary role of Extension is to plan pertinent programs that are effective in meeting the educational needs of the community in agriculture, family and consumer studies, and youth development. This study focuses on how to maintain professional competencies with less staff. Data was provided by the Manson's Workplace Environment Analysis Inventory, and original instrument, to secure reactions of employees in a downsized environment, specifically on morale, survivor job security, and trust. The findings suggested that even though there were discrepancies between the employees' and management's perceptions of morale and survivors job security, they did share similar perceptions on trust in the workplace. The results of this study can be used in designing leadership training programs for community based organizations and others faced with downsizing.

Downsizing the Federal Government

Downsizing the Federal Government
Author: Vernon Dale Jones
Publisher: M.E. Sharpe
Total Pages: 306
Release: 1998
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780765601186

This text explores the effects of the corporate downsizing of the 1970s and 1980s which still reverberate in American society in the 1990s. It focuses on the implementation of the Clinton administration's "reinventing government" initiative across three federal agencies.

Pay Cuts Vs. Downsizing

Pay Cuts Vs. Downsizing
Author: Yeong Joon Yoon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

Despite the increase in payroll cost reduction activities, studies comparing the effects of payroll cost reduction methods (i.e. cutting pay and downsizing) on work attitudes (e.g. affective commitment and job satisfaction) have been limited. This three-paper dissertation compares the effects of cutting pay and downsizing on work attitudes of remaining employees. The studies in Paper 1 of this dissertation compare the main effects in this comparison. The results demonstrate that employees whose pay is cut, compared to survivors of downsizing, exhibit less positive pay-related perceptions and work attitudes while they exhibit more positive job security-related perceptions. The studies in Paper 2 identify trust in management as a moderator in this comparison. When the level of trust in management is low, employees who had their pay cut exhibit lower levels of work attitudes than employees who survived downsizing. When the level of trust in management is high, on the other hand, employees who had their pay cut did not exhibit lower levels of work attitudes than employees who survived downsizing. Moreover, when the level of trust in management is high, employees whose pay is cut experience stronger perceptions of job security than those employees who survive downsizing. Lastly, the studies in Paper 3 identify sector as a moderator in this comparison. In the private sector, survivors of downsizing exhibited higher levels of work attitudes relative to employees whose pay was cut. In the public sector, on the other hand, there was no significant difference in the levels of work attitudes between employees whose pay was cut and employees who survived downsizing. The papers in this dissertation first demonstrate that cutting pay, compared to downsizing, better maintains perceptions of job security but does not as well maintain pay-related perceptions. When work attitudes are examined, the papers overall demonstrate that downsizing better maintains work attitudes than cutting pay. Lastly, the papers also demonstrate that pay cuts can be a more feasible alternative to downsizing in terms of maintaining work attitudes of remaining employees in the public sector and when the level of trust in management is high.

Downsizing

Downsizing
Author: Cary L. Cooper
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 457
Release: 2012-04-19
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1107378028

Downsizing is one of the most frequently used business strategies for reducing costs, returning firms to profit or for restructuring businesses following takeovers, mergers and acquisitions. Downsizing measures are also set to become much more prevalent in the public sector as governments seek to restrict levels of public spending. This book is one of the first to provide a thorough study of downsizing from a global perspective. It examines the phenomenon in its entirety, exploring how it is initiated and what the process of downsizing looks like. It also looks at the effects of downsizing at a number of different levels, from the individual (e.g., motivational effects, effects on health and stress levels) to the organizational (e.g., financial outcomes, reputational and productivity outcomes). Written by an international team of experts, the book provides a comprehensive overview of downsizing that examines both the strategic and human implications of this process.

Downsizing the Federal Government

Downsizing the Federal Government
Author: Vernon D Jones
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 293
Release: 2016-07-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1315503271

The main focus of downsizing has shifted from the private to the public sector. The cutbacks began in the Department of Defense. Now the goal is a federal civilian workforce reduction of 12 percent by the year 2000. This pioneering study looks at the management of workforce reductions in the public sector both in theory and in practice. Three case studies -- of the Defense Logistics Agency, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the Food and Drug Administration -- illustrate the organizational, managerial, and human dimensions of attempting to improve performance with reduced resources. The author draws on extensive interviews with senior executives and middle managers in the three agencies; at the General Accounting Office, the Office of Personnel Management, and the National Performance Review; the Senior Executives Association and the Federal Managers Association; and scholars and researchers. In a larger sense, this work pushes the boundaries of knowledge concerning organizational change and makes a significant contribution to organization theory. It offers important new insights not only for public sector managers but for organization theorists and management specialists whose work on downsizing has been presumed but not shown to be applicable to the public sector.

Current Topics in Management

Current Topics in Management
Author: Robert Golembiewski
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2018-02-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1351523988

This annual series presents research on the theory and practice of management. Its goal is to be truly comparative--in terms of the broad scope of management perspectives, in the broad-ranging locations of its research as well as its application, and in its comparisons of findings, methodologies, and operational definitions.Part I, "Organization Theory, Change, and Effectiveness," presents a model of organizational congruency, discusses managing interdependence to enhance organizational effectiveness, outlines a theoretical framework that clarifies the means by which IT can affect organizations' economic activities, and suggests how organization development approach can help find more satisfying equilibria of forces and stakeholders in today's organizational cultures. Part II, "Behavior and Attitudes in Organizations," considers values and leadership roles, discusses the role played by trust in interfirm collaboration, and explores the relationship between organizational climate and ethical decisions. Part III, "International and Cross-cultural Management," looks at various issues of management including power bases of supervisors and subordinates' conflict management strategies and commitment, organizational commitment of the U.S. and Korean workers; superior-subordinate communication in a multicultural workforce in Macao, and cynicism toward change in the public sector in Australia. Part IV, "Human Resource Management," deals with consequences of removing performance appraisal and merit pay; the entrepreneurial role to bring disconnected parties together for economic, social and/or political benefits; and relationships of downsizing to career perceptions and psychological contract. Part V, "Inference and Data in Management Research," urges greater use of strong inference and discusses the strength of data and the interaction between data and inference in a procedure called strong inference.

Fear and Ferment : Public Sector Management Today

Fear and Ferment : Public Sector Management Today
Author: John W. Langford
Publisher: Institute of Public Administration of Canada
Total Pages: 190
Release: 1986
Genre: Administrative agencies
ISBN: 9780919696747

From the Prefatory Note: ...some 250 public service sector managers came together from April 23 to 23 1986, to reflect on the impact that contemporary changes in their environment were having on their work as managers. They were joined by a small number of academics, consultants and private sector managers. The conference consisted of plenary sessions on restraint, contracting out, information technology, public access to information, conflict of interest, risk taking, employment equity and political rights....The ninth and final plenary session was a panel discussion on the question of whether or not a new model was emerging for the public sector manager. What follows is a summary of the discussion at the conference and a collection of plenary and workshop papers around the nine themes.