We have heard a lot about ports and negotiations with workers that recently resolved itself in a tentative agreement. The Pacific Maritime Association and the International Longshore and Warehouse Union set upon some key provisions based on wages and benefits but have not yet completed all of the details. Formal announcements are still in the works. The ports offer an opportunity to understand how wages, benefits, skill, and technology should work together to create win-win situations.
This dispute has been bitter and raged on for over 9 months with the White House having to put pressure on both sides to get things done. Arbitrators were accused of bias and workers are accused of slowing down port operations intentionally. Ships waited over a week to unload their cargo that has a negative impact on economic growth.
Increasing trade over the past decade or so creates more product volume throughout the ports and this can have an impact on national commerce. Larger businesses are able to weather the port slowdown but small businesses could be more seriously impacted as they need these supplies to keep their fragile operations going. A short delay could put them in the red.
Wages and Benefits are standard negotiation subjects and generally are set through market need and negotiation tactics. Increases in import and export containers have caused increasing demands on workers and wages are part of that process. The implementation of new technology and better infrastructure development could improve these issues.
Contracts last 5-6 years but set a precedence for future negotiations and create an expectation in the mind of employees. Ensuring that the implementation of new technology is part of the expectation is important to avoid that failure change doesn't result in ports that are less efficient. Wage increases should be based in learning, growth and productivity.
There is no denying that wages in many places of the country have not kept pace with inflation or the profits that many businesses earn. But wage increases should be based in part on the cost of living as well as improvements in skill and ability. Doing so will help ensure that workers market position rises with increases in skill and the better use of technology that ensures ships are unloaded faster and at a lower cost that saves the company money.
Each negotiation should see improvement in worker skill, wages, job security and port efficiency. At least this is the case in theory when an economy is growing. If a middle ground can be found that ensures workers are accepting of training and new technology it lends support to the unions wage case while ensuring the ports are innovative and adaptive. This can be a hard sell when the rhetoric is negative on both sides and finger pointing becomes the predominant logic.
Ports are a fundamental transaction cost for businesses importing and exporting products. Economic growth relies on these ports to ensure products and supplies are making their way to their final destinations. American ports need to stay competitive, reduce costs, and continuously improve. That will require worker populations to grow in productivity, better management of operations and the implementation of new technology to make sure our ports do not slow down the rest of the economy.
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Showing posts with label union negotiations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label union negotiations. Show all posts
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Monday, April 1, 2013
Does Negotiating Pay with Employees Lead to Higher Performance and Profits?
Employers seek to create higher levels of employee
performance as well as high firm profits. Standard employment contracts with
predefined pay may not be offering an appropriate level of motivation for
employees. Research conducted by Kuang and Moser may provide insight into how
such negotiable contracts would work in the marketplace.
Participative decision-making can improve firm
performance in two ways (Zwick 2004) which includes information transference and
employee involvement. In the first case, the transference of information creates
a more efficient organization while employee involvement improves overall
satisfaction with the organization. Both help tie the individual to the
organizations success and mission.
Employees need accurate information in order to make
choices within the workplace. The information disseminates useful data to
employees (Freeman & Lazear 1995) that encourages effective organizational
operations. The more useful information employees have the more efficient their
daily activities and choices become which in turn raises the potential profits
of the firm. Waste can be seen as a byproduct of poor choices.
Such participative management also produces a
psychological effect on employees that raises their satisfaction and morale
(Covaleski et al. 2003). With participative management employees may feel as
though they are part of the organization and will take greater care to ensure
its success. Through such activities, employees change from being the actors to
the authors of their employment status.
Wages are a central factor in
gainful employment and often determine the nature of employee-employer
relationships. Wage negotiation is part of the process of participative
management (Locke & Schweiger, 1979). Employees who have a level of control
over their wages are likely to work smarter and harder in order to raise their
market value.
Research conducted by Kuang and
Moser (2011) studied the psychological effect of a model that offers a
contract, allows the employee to counteroffer and then provides a final offer
the employee can either accept or reject. It is believed that such offers raise
the employee’s aspiration levels which will encourage them to either put forth
more effort or move to another organization. A total of 80 MBAs with
approximately 4.5 years of full-time experience were included.
Results:
-There were differences in firm
profit and employee effort.
-When there is participative
management and adequate employee information there is a reciprocal between employee
effort and firm profit.
-If the firm affords the ability
for employees to negotiate and raise their aspiration levels without adequate
increases in pay once that level has been achieved a negative performance result
may occur.
-Employees prefer no negotiation
if they do not feel the relationship with their employer is equitable.
-Potential negative effects of
mismanaged negotiation processes are more damaging than the positive effects of a
well managed negotiation processes.
Analysis:
Employees, like firms, seek to create higher levels
of pay and resources. Negotiating with employees can raise their level of
performance as they become attracted to and seek higher levels of needs
attainment. However, a poorly designed approach to negotiating with employees
can damage and limit future performance. Successful negotiation provides a
truer economic relationship between employer and employee when compared to
contracts with defined pay as seen in unionized environments. Yet the perceived
equity of those contracts and improved performance by employees relies on
trust, participatory management, and adequate information. Equitable
relationships based on trust result when employees have an incentive to raise
their market value and employers reward employees for their increased value. It is important to note that if the negotiation process is not seen as equitable employee prefer a defined contract without negotiation.
Covaleski, M. . Evans, J. Luft,
J. and Shields, M. (2003). Budgeting research: Three
theoretical perspectives and
criteria for selective integration. Journal
of Management Accounting
Research
15
(1): 3–49.
Freeman, R. & Lazear, E. (1995).
An economic analysis of works councils. In Work councils,
ed. J. Rogers and W. Streeck, 27–52. Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press.
Kuang, X. & Moser, D. (2011). Wage negotiation,
employee effort, and firm profit under output-based versus fixed-wage incentive
contracts. Contemporary Accounting
Research, 28 (2).
Locke, E. and Schweiger, D. (1979)
Participation in decision-making: One more look. In
Research
in organizational behavior, vol. 1, ed. B. M. Staw, 265–339.
Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.
Zwick, T. (2004). Employee participation and productivity.
Labor Economics 11 (6): 715–40.
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