A productive
labour-management culture seeks to create a system of shared values and beliefs common to a company's management, employees, organizational structures, and control systems in order to produce more productive behavioural norms. This generally means including all key players in decision processes, most notably unions and management. In this way, labour and management relations can be improved. A
labour-management culture of collaboration can be facilitated by training both management and labour to make the cooperative process work. This should lead to substantially improved service delivery and a better work environment.
(adapted from DCwatch,
Mayor Williams Meets with Labor/Management Partnership Council, 1999, visited 2011-08-04)
Increasing Productivity
This management strategy is being used by many large firms globally in order to increase productivity. When the
labour-management culture is one that encourages cooperation, the work environment and attitude of workers improve, which in turn improves the quality of the work produced. Although this concept could also refer to a culture centred on conflict, it is used almost exclusively to refer to an increase in cooperation between management and unions.
For example in Korea, the government has undertaken a project to boost the productivity of medium-sized businesses by providing free consulting, printed resources and seminars in order to increase cooperation among unions and management. Their program identifies several steps to creating an amicable
labour management culture:
- Amicable resolution of labor disputes
- Growing use of "no strike agreements"
- Labour dispute resolution by applying steadfast principles and relevant laws.
(adapted from Korean Ministry of Finance and Economy,
The Progress and Challenge of Labor Sector Reform during the Kim Dae-jung Administration and from International Labour Organization (ILO),
Skills and Employability Department (EMP/SKILLS), visited 2011-08-05)