Employee Involvement and Pay at Us and Canadian Auto Suppliers

Using both survey data and field research, we investigate the effects of employee involvement practices on outcomes for blue-collar workers in the auto supply industry. wages by 3-5%. The causal mechanism linking involvement and wages appears most consistent with efficiency wage theories, and least consistent with compensating differences. With respect to employment stability, we find that employee involvement has a knife-edge character. Plants with intensive programs have larger employment gains, but are also slightly more likely to go out of business. These results are consistent with employee involvement raising quality and productivity, but also increasing fixed costs for liquidity-constrained firms.

[1]  Three Case Studies on Skill-Based Pay: An Overview , 1991 .

[2]  R. Drago Workplace Transformation and the Disposable Workplace: Employee Involvement in Australia , 1996 .

[3]  Gregory K. Dow Why Capital Hires Labor: A Bargaining Perspective , 1993 .

[4]  Herbert A. Simon,et al.  Perceiving and managing business risks: differences between entrepreneurs and bankers , 1998 .

[5]  Labor-management council for economic renewal , 2001 .

[6]  E. Groshen Five Reasons Why Wages Vary Among Employers , 1991 .

[7]  T. Caliński,et al.  A dendrite method for cluster analysis , 1974 .

[8]  Daniel T. Jones,et al.  The machine that changed the world : based on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 5-million dollar 5-year study on the future of the automobile , 1990 .

[9]  Dennis J. Snower,et al.  Reorganization of Firms and Labor Market Inequality , 1996 .

[10]  M. C. Jensen,et al.  Science, Specific Knowledge and Total Quality Management , 1994 .

[11]  Hamparsum Bozdogan,et al.  Empirical Econometric Modelling of Food Consumption Using a New Informational Complexity Approach , 1997 .

[12]  Perry Sadorsky,et al.  The Relationship Between Environmental Commitment and Managerial Perceptions of Stakeholder Importance , 1999 .

[13]  S. Arnold A Test for Clusters , 1979 .

[14]  K. Eisenhardt Building theories from case study research , 1989, STUDI ORGANIZZATIVI.

[15]  Casey Ichniowski,et al.  The Effects of Human Resource Management Practices on Productivity , 1995 .

[16]  George A. Akerlof Gift Exchange and Efficiency-Wage Theory: Four Views , 1984 .

[17]  P. Osterman Skill, Training, and Work Organization in American Establishments , 1995 .

[18]  Dennis J. Snower,et al.  Wage Setting, Unemployment, and Insider-Outsider Relations , 1986 .

[19]  M. Kleiner,et al.  Do Unions Make Enterprises Insolvent? , 1994 .

[20]  David I. Levine,et al.  What do wages buy , 1993 .

[21]  John Paul Macduffie,et al.  Creating Lean Suppliers: Diffusing Lean Production through the Supply Chain , 1997 .

[22]  B. Wolf The Machine That Changed the World , 1991 .

[23]  Paul Milgrom,et al.  Complementarities and fit strategy, structure, and organizational change in manufacturing , 1995 .

[24]  D. Snower Causes of Changing Earnings Inequality , 1999, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[25]  Thomas A. Kochan,et al.  What works at work : overview and assessment , 1996 .

[26]  D. Levine Participation, Productivity, and the Firm's Environment , 1990 .

[27]  D. Levine,et al.  Work organization, employment security, and macroeconomic stability , 1994 .

[28]  John Worthington,et al.  Reinventing the Workplace , 1997 .

[29]  Paul R. Milgrom,et al.  Economics, Organization and Management , 1992 .

[30]  Paul R. Milgrom,et al.  Complementarities, Momentum, and the Evolution of Modern Manufacturing , 1991 .

[31]  Mike Parker Inside the Circle: A Union Guide to Qwl , 1985 .

[32]  J. Pfeffer Competitive Advantage Through People , 1994 .

[33]  G. W. Milligan,et al.  An examination of the effect of six types of error perturbation on fifteen clustering algorithms , 1980 .

[34]  Susan Helper,et al.  Complementarity and Cost Reduction: Evidence from the Auto Supply Industry , 1997 .

[35]  Casey Ichniowski,et al.  The Effects of Human Resource Management Practices on Productivity , 1995 .

[36]  Lawrence F. Katz Efficiency Wage Theories: A Partial Evaluation , 1986 .

[37]  E. Lazear Why Is There Mandatory Retirement? , 1979, Journal of Political Economy.

[38]  John Paul MacDuffie,et al.  After Lean Production: Evolving Employment Practices in the World Auto Industry , 1999 .

[39]  D. Wells,et al.  Choosing Sides: Unions and the Team Concept , 1988 .

[40]  S. Athey,et al.  An Empirical Framework for Testing Theories About Complimentarity in Organizational Design , 1998 .

[41]  Sandra E. Black,et al.  How to Compete: The Impact of Workplace Practices and Information Technology on Productivity , 1997, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[42]  James Kohnen,et al.  Creating High Performance Organizations: Practices and Results of Employee Involvement and Total Quality Management in Fortune 1000 Companies , 1996 .

[43]  Susan Albers Mohrman,et al.  Creating high performance organizations : practices and results of employee involvement and Total Quality Management in Fortune 1000 companies , 1995 .

[44]  André Hardy,et al.  An examination of procedures for determining the number of clusters in a data set , 1994 .

[45]  W. Dickens Wages, Employment and the Threat of Collective Action by Workers , 1986 .