Showing posts with label Commitment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Commitment. Show all posts

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Downsizing Human Resources - A study by Artur Victoria

Critics of downsizing argue that not only are the effects on the bottom line seldom as rosy as management expects, but that job loss has profound negative consequences for the displaced employees and their families, consequences that add to the social costs of downsizing. They cite research showing that unemployment and job loss are related empirically not only to long-term wage loss and employment insecurity, but also to a wide range of other outcomes, including criminality, drug and alcohol abuse, domestic violence (of spouses and children), separation and divorce, declines in objective and subjective health, depression, suicide, and children's well-being (e.g., self-esteem, mental health, and school performance). There obviously are also quite massive potential economic effects on communities and the public at large.

Those who defend downsizing argue that the social impacts are primarily positive, at least in the long run. For instance, layoffs promote superior matching of workers to jobs and increased dynamism and risk taking in the economy, thereby fueling economic growth. Moreover, defenders of downsizing argue that new job creation has more than compensated for the jobs lost through layoffs and outsourcing. And they argue that in the competitive global environment, if domestic firms (be they in the United States, Western Europe, Southeast Asia or wherever) don't "wake up and smell the coffee," those firms will not remain competitive. The government will then have to choose between protection-an economic and social disaster in the long run-or letting the firms sink, causing even more massive layoffs and dislocations. leia todo o artigo

Commitment In Human Resources - A study by Artur Victoria

One manifestation of the processes of attribution and self-perception concerns the formation of commitment. The balance between effort and reward has powerful effects on the attributions people make about why they engage in certain behaviors. For instance, it possible to induce commitment by persuading individuals to expend considerable effort on an activity in the absence of a clear external reward for doing so. Psychologists call this insufficient justification; unable to identify a clear external rationale for exerting effort on a task, the person can either believe that the effort was wasted or, alternatively, that there was some higher purpose served by the effort. Because we generally dislike perceiving ourselves as having done things that are foolish or that lack efficacy, there is a tendency to take the other cognitive route and divine a higher purpose in our behavior, thereby psychologically inducing commitment to that course of conduct.

The process of commitment has a strong self-reinforcing quality. The more we invest in a specific course of conduct, the more difficult it is psychologically to abandon that path, and therefore the stronger the inclination is to reaffirm our commitment to the activity. This process of escalating commitment is strongest when the person got involved in the activity voluntarily (rather than through coercion), has exerted considerable effort, has done so Visibly and publicly, and when the course of conduct is difficult or impossible to undo. Intrinsic Versus Extrinsic Motivation leia todo o artigo