The document discusses the changing global context for strategic human resource management. It describes trends like an aging global population, changes in the workforce like longer working lives, and the implications of these trends. Specifically, population growth in some countries and decline in others may result in labor shortages. This could force companies to import labor or relocate jobs. Younger generations also expect more work-life balance, skills development, and social responsibility from their employers. The nature of work is shifting towards more service jobs and non-traditional arrangements like temporary, virtual and emotional labor. HR strategies must adapt to these changing realities of the global labor market.
The document discusses the changing global context for strategic human resource management. It describes trends like an aging global population, changes in the workforce like longer working lives, and the implications of these trends. Specifically, population growth in some countries and decline in others may result in labor shortages. This could force companies to import labor or relocate jobs. Younger generations also expect more work-life balance, skills development, and social responsibility from their employers. The nature of work is shifting towards more service jobs and non-traditional arrangements like temporary, virtual and emotional labor. HR strategies must adapt to these changing realities of the global labor market.
The document discusses the changing global context for strategic human resource management. It describes trends like an aging global population, changes in the workforce like longer working lives, and the implications of these trends. Specifically, population growth in some countries and decline in others may result in labor shortages. This could force companies to import labor or relocate jobs. Younger generations also expect more work-life balance, skills development, and social responsibility from their employers. The nature of work is shifting towards more service jobs and non-traditional arrangements like temporary, virtual and emotional labor. HR strategies must adapt to these changing realities of the global labor market.
The document discusses the changing global context for strategic human resource management. It describes trends like an aging global population, changes in the workforce like longer working lives, and the implications of these trends. Specifically, population growth in some countries and decline in others may result in labor shortages. This could force companies to import labor or relocate jobs. Younger generations also expect more work-life balance, skills development, and social responsibility from their employers. The nature of work is shifting towards more service jobs and non-traditional arrangements like temporary, virtual and emotional labor. HR strategies must adapt to these changing realities of the global labor market.
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Strategic Human Resource
Management
• Chapter 2: The Changing context for SHRM
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Learning objectives
By the end of this session you will be able to:
• Explain recent global labour market trends • Understand changes in the nature of the workforce and critically evaluate the implications for SHRM • Understand the changing nature of work and work relationships and critically evaluate the implications for SHRM • Discuss how HR managers might develop strategies to take account of these changes Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management The global labour market
• A major concern of employing organizations
is to be able to recruit and retain the right number of staff with the appropriate skills and experience • The world’s population is growing (6.9 billion in 2010) • Knowledge of population trends can inform decisions for global organizations about where to locate their production and/or service delivery facilities
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
World populations – top 10 nations 2010 Top 5 list
Source: US Census Bureau, International Data Base
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
World populations – top 10 nations 2010 Countries 6-10
Source: US Census Bureau, International Data Base
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
The changing character of the workforce
There have been a number of social changes
in recent years, which influence the way in which people participate in paid work: – the point at which people join the labour force (education) – and the point at which people leave the labour force (rising retirement ages)
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Average exit from the labour force, 2006
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Life-course structure
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Implications
• Trends suggest that in some countries the
numbers available and willing to work may decline and this may result in labour shortages • Faced with the inability to recruit the right numbers and quality of staff, employers may opt to export jobs or to import labour • Under these circumstances, factors such as average wage costs and employment rates in different countries need to be taken into account
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Average wage costs and levels of employment
• May inform decisions about whether to export
jobs to a particular country • Will help employers establish the likelihood that they will be able to persuade people to migrate from their home country for work elsewhere • Whether or not an organization has the flexibility to export jobs will depend in part on the nature of their activity
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Implications
• As labour migrates from a country there will
be an impact on employment rates, and as a result in the longer term this may reduce the numbers of people who are willing to move country in search of employment • Similarly, as labour becomes scarcer in a country, average wage rates are likely to increase and as a result the country may become a less attractive source of labour
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
European Union
• In the EU there has been significant migration
as countries have opened their boundaries to economic migrants
• 75% of migrants in the EU reside in France,
Germany, Italy, Spain, and the UK
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Changing attitudes
• Generation Y workers (people born between
1978 and 1994) approach work with a different attitude and a different set of expectations (Cates and Rahimi, 2003) • Their attitude and values have been influenced by the environment in which they have grown - one of technological advancement and economic prosperity (and as children experienced ‘being on the move’ and constant stimulation)
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Generation Y workers
• Observers suggest that they are concerned with
issues such as: • Corporate social responsibility (CSR) • work–life balance • what they will gain from employment, such as marketable • skills and rewards (which are based on meritocratic principles) • They are not seen to be loyal to employers and do not expect to stay with one employer (Barr, 2004). • These factors suggest that employers may need to take a different approach to the management of Generation Y Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management The changing nature of work
• The nature of work has been subject to some
changes in recent years and this has had implications for the ways in which HR are managed: • Growth of the service sector • Growth in temporary and part-time jobs • Growth in virtual teams • Increased importance placed on what has been termed ‘emotional’ and ‘aesthetic’ labour, where employees are paid to manage their emotions and to appear in a prescribed way
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
The growth of service work
• Across the EU services account for 70% of
total employment • In the US the figure is 78% • Boxall (2003) argues that the match between competitive strategy and HR strategy is of greater importance than in manufacturing
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
The characteristics of service work
Korczynski (2002) identifies five attributes of
services that distinguish them from other sectors: • Intangibility • Perishability • Variability • Simultaneous production and consumption • Inseparability
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Implications for HR
• Frenkel (2000) has identified a number of
characteristics of service work that have implications for the management of HR: – Service work tends to be labour intensive (higher labour costs) – Symbolic behaviours (attitudes, dress) and the social skills of employees form part of the product and therefore need to be considered in job design – Service work may involve others, typically the customer in work tasks (e.g. internet shopping) and this may present communication and motivation challenges Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management Implications for HR (contd.)
– Service work is often required ‘on demand’ and
may require complex coordination of different specialists to deliver the service – the nature of services may mean that some degree of customization is needed and therefore there may be limits to the extent to which work can be standardized and therefore may require a different form of work and employment relations. – Performance management may be problematic since the experience of the service recipient is central
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Emotional and aesthetic labour
• Emotional labour (EL) describes circumstances
where employees are expected to manage their emotions as part of their paid employment • EL takes place in the context of social interaction in the conduct of work • Employees are expected to manage their emotions in order to engender a state of mind in another person (normally the customer) • Aesthetic labour is where employees are required to look (dress, self presentation) or sound (voice, language used) in a particular way as part of their paid employment, normally in order to match the desired image of the organization Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management Workplace flexibility
• Flexibility in organizations can be viewed in two
main ways—flexibility for organizations and flexibility for individuals • The first of these is where organizations look for flexibility in the way in which they utilize labour so that they can match the supply with their need for labour more closely • Individuals, by contrast, look for flexibility in the way in which they work in order to help them achieve an acceptable relationship between work and non-work activities. Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management The flexible firm (Atkinson, 1985)
There are the following types of flexibility:
• Numerical flexibility (e.g. part-time jobs and temporary jobs) • Temporal flexibility allows the employer to vary the time at which work is done and might take the form of compressed working hours or annual hours contracts • Functional flexibility occurs where the employer is able to redeploy employees across a range of different tasks in line with demand
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Changes to management practices
There has been an increasing trend towards the
individualization of the employment relationship in some parts of the world (Brown et al, 1998; Pollert, 2005): • The decline in trade union membership in a number of countries • Employers wishing to take a more individualized approach to the employment relationship • This individualized approach is in line with a unitary perspective
Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management
Changes to management practices • There has been a growth in the use of and interest in work systems and practices based on: • high performance • high involvement • high commitment • Whilst there are some differences in emphasis in each of these approaches, there is much similarity and the terms have been used interchangeably (Lepak et al, 2006) • In essence they are concerned with approaches to HRM that deliver superior organizational performance (Whitener, 2001; Lepak et al, 2006) Truss et al: Strategic Human Resource Management