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Workers' experiences of skill, training and participation in lean and high performance workplaces in Britain and Italy

Paul Stewart (Department of Human Resource Management, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK)
Andy Danford (Bristol Business School, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK)
Mike Richardson (Bristol Business School, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK)
Valeria Pulignano (Faculty of Social Science, Centre for Sociological Research, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium)

Employee Relations

ISSN: 0142-5455

Article publication date: 5 October 2010

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Abstract

Purpose

The article aims to report on research into managerial practices at the workplace level in Britain and Italy in the automobile and aerospace industries. These are examined with regard to their impact on employees' perceptions of skill, training and their relationship to participation. Are advocates of high performance work (HPW) accurate in arguing that it can satisfy aspirations for greater employee influence in contrast to lean working?

Design/methodology/approach

The methodology included questionnaires and interviews with employees and union officials in four companies – two in aerospace (one in Britain and one in Italy) and two in automotive final assembly (one in Britain and one in Italy).

Findings

One of the recurrent themes to emerge from the worker interviews was that the experience of increased effort was not an inevitable outcome of the shifts in the composition of skills and tasks, but rather, a function of the workers' loss of any semblance of control over their work routines and range of responsibilities. What is distinctive about this case study analysis is that despite obvious material differences between the labour processes and working conditions of highly qualified aerospace engineers employed in HPW environments and semi‐skilled car workers employed on lean assembly lines, in two different countries, similar patterns of degradation of work were obtained. That is, technological change, such as the computerisation of design and production processes, along with various manifestations of lean staffing policies were together generating task enlargement. In micro‐political environments marked by a skewed balance of power between labour and the employer in favour of the latter, workers' autonomy had declined as had their ability to maintain some control over the pace and intensity of work. This does not sit favourably with the assumptions of those who advocate the use of “high performance work systems”.

Originality/value

The paper offers an in‐depth cross national sectoral analysis of claims that so‐called HPW significantly enhances workers' experiences of the workplace in contrast to workers' experiences of lean working environments.

Keywords

Citation

Stewart, P., Danford, A., Richardson, M. and Pulignano, V. (2010), "Workers' experiences of skill, training and participation in lean and high performance workplaces in Britain and Italy", Employee Relations, Vol. 32 No. 6, pp. 606-624. https://doi.org/10.1108/01425451011083654

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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