W2 S2 Law and Government
W2 S2 Law and Government
W2 S2 Law and Government
Week 2 Section 2
Law and government
Organisation and management
ROLE OF LAW AND GOVERNMENT
Common law is made of the rules and principles and law we extract from the
decisions of judges and courts.
Statute law. Act of Parliament and the orders and regulations made under
those statutes.
New Zealand laws are mostly copied from the laws of England.
Why do you think that happened?
Employment legislation
Employment relations, labour relations and industrial relations – these terms
are used interchangeably to refer to all aspects of the relations between
employers and employees or unions.
Regulation of wages
There are many aspects of work and employment which the community has
decided should be subject to standards or requirements set by statue.
The inherent causes and the solutions may be addressed by the industrial relations
system, but both the causes and the solutions for extraneous problems lie outside
industrial relations and thus outside the control of the industrial relations parties.
Total social system
Political
system
Economic Industrial
system relations
system
The wider society or total social system influences the three sub-systems
of the individual relations system itself: in other words, it provides an
external context and influence for the political, economic and industrial
relations sub-systems which are themselves interrelated.
An the industrial relations system at any one time in its development is
regarded as comprised of certain actors, certain contexts, an ideology
which binds the industrial relations system together, and a body of
rules created to govern the actors at the workplace and work
community.
However the actors are not free agents. They are subject to the
influencesand limitations of their environment.
The contexts are:
-The technological characteristics of the workplace and the work
community;
-The market or budget constraints which affect the actors;
-The location and distribution of power in the wider society.
Ideology:
-Defines the rights, responsibilities and relationships of the actors;
-Control the actors’ responses to conflict;
-Establishes the substantive and procedural rules by which the actors
manage their relationships and resolved their conflicts.
Impact of HRM
Neither a pluralist not a unitary frame is a sufficient basis for examining
and understanding industrial relations and industrial relations systems.
It is clear that the role of any one party or organisation is conditioned by what each of the
others carriers through as its role. If the non-government parties handle industrial
relations well there may be little need for government to take a hand.
The most obvious role of the state in individual relations is its power to legislate.
Employer organisations
Business New Zealand
-The production of high value-added goods and services;
-Global excellence for all knowledge and learning benchmarks;
-Balanced employment, economic and environment legislation;
-Low compliance costs;
-Reduced taxation.
UNIONS
Workers’ unions became legal and legally recognised in New Zealand under the Trade
Union Act 1878. The Employment Act 1001 left unions without the special status in the
industrial relations system that they had previously enjoed from its earliest days. But the
special legal status of unions is restored by the Employment Relations Act, which also
gives them a monopoly over the negotiation of collective agreements.
Unions use the collective strength of their members in pursuit of four main objectives:
- To protect individual workers from victimisation, intimidation and exploitation;
- To continually improve workers’ terms and conditions of employment;
- To protect the conditions and standards already achieved;
- To ensure that workers share in the benefits of technological and social advance.
Organisation and management
Job design and work organisation, along with the management of people are
keys to individuals’ job satisfaction and productivity.
Job
Organisaion
Management
An organisation is the rational coordination of the activities of a number of people for the
achievement of some common explicit purpose or goal, through division of labout and
function, and through a hierarchy of authority and responsibility.
So, in order to achieve goals the organisation exercise such things as:
Division of labour and Hierarchy.
Development of organisation theory
General Manager
Chief Executive
Manager Manager
Supervisors Supervisors
workers workers workers workers
The McKinsey 7-S model
Structure
Strategy Systems
Shared
values
Skills Style
Staff
The Modern Organisation
Today’s organisations are not structured in accordance with rigid theories, but to meet the
needs of their particular strategies and environments. Situational* and contingency*
approaches to organisation become more relevant. Henry Mintzberg describes six basic
elements of organisation, and they provide us with a useful analytical tool:
-Operate core – the base of the organisation, made up of the people who produce
products and provide services.
-Strategic apex – which oversees the whole system (even the simplest organisation has
to be managed).
-Middle line – the hierarchy of authority, in traditional terms, which links the p[erating
core to the strategic apex.
-Technostructure – which is involved in the formal planning and control of the work of
other people, and is made up of analysis – often called ‘staff’ (to distinguish them from ‘
the line’) who are outside the hierarchy of line authority.
-Support staff – of a different kind to the analysis, who provide various internal services,
like cafeteria, mailroom, legal advice and public relations.
-Ideology – which encompasses those traditions and beliefs which distinguish one
organisation from others and infuse life into the skeleton of its structure.
Entrepreneurial organisation. Simple, informal and flexible, with little
staff or middle-line hierarchy. Revolves around chief executive who
controls personally and supervises directly, and provides vision and
leadership.
Warnings:
-strong team norms can stifle individual creativity and initiative, putting team members in
an ‘iron cage’ of team working;
-not everyone responds positively to the ‘empowerment’ agenda, contrary to team
working’s assumptions about people’s self-actualising impulses;
-the introduction of team working can upset established norms and interests, and it may
be difficult to deal with the resulting difficulties;
-team design is crucial to success, but is not always dealt with carefully;
-implementation can be compromised by poorly defined objectives, poor boundary
management, and a lack of attention to other organisational systems (e.g. rewards and
control).
A New Zealand survey (KPMG, 1995) shows that most organisations are positive about
teamwork. As a result of introducing teams,
84% had increased quality;
75% had improved productivity;
61% had improved financial performance;
35% had decreased costs.
Downsizing
Effects of downsizing:
Decreased job satisfaction;
Decreased staff motivation;
Decreased promotion opportunities;
Decreased staff commitment to organisation
Decreased morale among staff
Increased concern about job security.
Rightsizing
When ‘downsizing’ is used as a strategic tool, it can be called
‘rightsizing’, and has the objective of building an organisational system
that is flexible and responsive to its market place.
These organisations need two kind of workers: a core of permanent
staff who have reasonable job security, and a periphery or outer ring of
temporary workers that expands or contractors as needs change.