Gainsharing and Power: Lessons from Six Scanlon Plans

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Cornell University Press, 1998 - 277 pages

Denis Collins believes that participatory management systems are inevitable in democratic societies because they are ethically superior to authoritarian management systems. Managers must begin to share decision making and economic outcomes with their employees if they want to obtain long-term efficiency and effectiveness in a competitive business environment. Changes in power relationships are bound to occur in the transitional period, Collins reports, and will challenge the flexibility of management.

Scanlon Plans were developed in the 1930s as a way to link improvements in productivity to employee wages. Popular because of the large amount of employee involvement in their design, Scanlon Plans are in place at 260 Fortune 1000 companies, as well as many smaller firms. To understand the considerable variation in the success of gainsharing plans and participatory management more generally, Collins studied six companies that used Scanlon Programs, explaining the nuts and bolts of each plan. He addresses the concerns of workers, managers, and unions when they were present, highlighting political games employees must address to enhance success. Collins then offers a new theory of gainsharing based on conflicts of interest at work.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Gainsharing Plans
7
At Work and in Political Systems
23
Research Methods and Facility Profiles
44
A Privately Owned Nonunion
57
A Publicly Owned Nonunion
80
A Publicly Owned Nonunion
105
A Publicly Owned Nonunion Facility
128
A Publicly Owned
153
A Unionized ESOP
177
Power Games Outcomes and Lessons Learned
201
The Ethical Superiority of Participatory
233
REFERENCES
261
SUBJECT INDEX
273
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About the author (1998)

Denis Collins is Professor in the Business Department at Edgewood College. He is the coauthor of Ethical Dilemmas in Business, and coeditor of Sustaining the Natural Environment.

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