Manufacturing Advantage: Why High Performance Work Systems Pay Off
Eileen Appelbaum, Arne L. Kalleberg, Peter BergBooks.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.
Overview
Much of the hoopla surrounding quality circles, teams, and high-performance work systems has been based on anecdotes and very thin evidence. It has not been established that those employee involvement strategies amount to anything more than another series of management fads or ruses designed to get more out of workers without giving them anything in return. This revelatory book, written by some of the skeptics, lays some of the suspicion to rest.Based on their visits to 44 plants and surveys of more than 4,000 employees, Eileen Appelbaum, Thomas Bailey, Peter Berg, and Arne L. Kalleberg concluded that companies are indeed more successful when managers share knowledge and power with workers and when workers assume increased responsibility and discretion.The study of steel, apparel, and medical electronics and imaging plants revealed much. In self-directed teams, workers were able to eliminate bottlenecks and coordinate the work process. In task forces created to improve quality, they communicated with individuals outside their own work groups and were able to solve problems. Expensive equipment in steel mills operated with fewer interruptions, turnaround and labor costs were cut in apparel factories, and costly inventories of components and medical equipment were reduced.And what did the employees think? The worker survey showed that jobs in participatory work systems often provide more challenging tasks and more opportunities for creativity. Employees in apparel had higher hourly earnings; those in steel had both higher hourly earnings and higher job satisfaction. Workers in more participatory settings were no more likely than others to report heavy workloads or excessive demands on their time. They were, however, less likely to report involuntary overtime or conflict with co-workers, and were more likely to be satisfied with their surroundings. Manufacturing Advantage provides the best assessment available of the effectiveness of high-performance work systems. Freestanding chapters near the end of the book provide full documentation of research data without interrupting the narrative flow.Synopsis
Much of the hoopla surrounding quality circles, teams, and high-performance work systems has been based on anecdotes and very thin evidence. It has not been established that those employee involvement strategies amount to anything more than another series of management fads or ruses designed to get more out of workers without giving them anything in return. This revelatory book, written by some of the skeptics, lays some of the suspicion to rest.
Based on their visits to 44 plants and surveys of more than 4,000 employees, Eileen Appelbaum, Thomas Bailey, Peter Berg, and Arne L. Kalleberg concluded that companies are indeed more successful when managers share knowledge and power with workers and when workers assume increased responsibility and discretion.
The study of steel, apparel, and medical electronics and imaging plants revealed much. In self-directed teams, workers were able to eliminate bottlenecks and coordinate the work process. In task forces created to improve quality, they communicated with individuals outside their own work groups and were able to solve problems. Expensive equipment in steel mills operated with fewer interruptions, turnaround and labor costs were cut in apparel factories, and costly inventories of components and medical equipment were reduced.
And what did the employees think? The worker survey showed that jobs in participatory work systems often provide more challenging tasks and more opportunities for creativity. Employees in apparel had higher hourly earnings; those in steel had both higher hourly earnings and higher job satisfaction. Workers in more participatory settings were no more likely than others to report heavy workloads or excessive demands on their time. They were, however, less likely to report involuntary overtime or conflict with co-workers, and were more likely to be satisfied with their surroundings.
Manufacturing Advantage provides the best assessment available of the effectiveness of high-performance work systems. Freestanding chapters near the end of the book provide full documentation of research data without interrupting the narrative flow.
About the Authors:
Eileen Appelbaum is Research Director at the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C. Formerly Professor of Economics at Temple University, she is author or coauthor of several books including The New American Workplace: Transforming Work Systems in the United States, also from Cornell.
An expert on the apparel industry, Thomas Bailey is Professor of Economics of Education and Director of the Institute on Education and the Economy at Columbia University. He is author or coauthor of three books, most recently Learning to Work.
Peter Berg, formerly a labor economist at the Economic Policy Institute, is Assistant Professor in the School of Labor and Industrial Relations at Michigan State University.
Arne L. Kalleberg is Kenan Professor of Sociology and Chair of the department at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He has coauthored or edited four books, the most recent of which (coauthored with David Knoke, Peter Marsden, and Joe Spaeth) is Organizations in America: A Portrait of Their Structures and Human Resource Practices.
(Financial Times) - Robert Taylor
[Manufacturing Advantage] seeks to focus on what may sound an unfashionable topic nowadaysthe future of US manufacturing in a competitive global economy...What this impressive book demonstrates is that manufacturing and information technology, far from being separate sectors, are in fact firmly interrelated.
Editorials
From the Publisher
"The book. . . is well structured and written. . . Undoubtedly, one of the great virtues of this book is that, although firmly based in research evidence, the material is presented in such a way as to make it accessible to a wide range of audiences."-Sue Hutchinson, Bath University School of Management. Industrial Relations Journal, Vol. 32, No. 1, March 2001Choice
In high performance work teams, managers provide opportunities for substantive participation in decisions, incorporate appropriate incentives, and establish training and development policies that ensure an appropriately skilled workforce. The authors investigate how successful these work teams are in the steel, apparel, and medical electronics industries in the U.S.David Rouse
[This] study analyzes productivity improvement and the effects fo workplace practices within high-performance work systems (HPWS) on trust, intrinsic rewards, stress, job satisfaction, and organizational commitment among workers in the steel, apparel, and medical electronics industries. . . . EPI's conclusion here that HPWS will help U.S. manufacturing companies meet competitive challenges should stimulate discussions between labor and management.β(Booklist)
Robert Taylor
[Manufacturing Advantage] seeks to focus on what may sound an unfashionable topic nowadaysβthe future of US manufacturing in a competitive global economy...What this impressive book demonstrates is that manufacturing and information technology, far from being separate sectors, are in fact firmly interrelated.β(Financial Times)