Human Capital

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quid pro quo

"something for something in exchange"; two people in unequal bargaining positions; sexual blackmail

compensatory damages in intentional discrimination

$ to make you whole, put you in place you would have been had there been no discrimination

fair labor standards act

1938; set minimum wage (currently $7.25/hour); set work hours-overtime for hours over 40 in a week; est. child labor provisions; later amended to include equal pay

age discrimination in employment act (ADEA)

1967; prohibits discrimination against those 40 and over; allows employers to favor older workers; covers employers with 20 or more employees

family and medical leave act

1993; requires employers to provide employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave; only business with 50 or more employees in 75 mile radius; top 10% highly paid employees are exempt; must have worked for over a year

what is involved with human capital?

HR planning, recruitment and retention, staffing, job design, training/development, performance appraisal, communications, compensation, benefits, labor relations

legal defense of discrimination

business necessity; bona fide occupational qualification; formal seniority systems are permitted

hostile work environment

can be between equals in the workplace; no "welcome or unwelcome" issues -porn mags, vulgar comments, offensive touching, stories about your sex life, sexually oriented pictures, dirty jokes

proactive change

change initiated to take advantage of targeted opportunities

reactive change

change that occurs after external forces have already affected performance

labor demand curve is shifted by

changes in demand for firm's product; changes in productivity of labor; expectations about the economy

human resource information system (HRIS)

computerized system that provides current and accurate data for purposes of control and decision making

exceptions to employment at will

congressional acts, contracts, sate court rulings

executive order 11246

issued by executive branch; applies title VII to all federal contractors; requires affirmative action plans of all federal contractors (issued by LBJ); company should keep track of makeup of labor force and labor participation force to see where they are off % employee wise; come to U of A sometimes

child labor provisions

limited work for those below 18 yrs old

non-economic costs

loss of income, scarring effect, psychological and emotional costs

economic cost

lost output, okun's law, non-economic costs

labor force participation rate

percentage of the potential labor force who are actually in the labor force

4 types of unemployment

seasonal, frictional, structural, cyclical

hidden costs of layoff

severance/rehiring costs; accrued vacation and sick day payouts; pension and benefit payoffs; potential lawsuits from aggrieved workers; loss of institutional memory and trust in mgmt; lack of staffers when economy rebounds; survivors who are risk-averse, paranoid, and political

characteristics of structural unemployment

tends to be concentrated among certain groups of workers; tends to be long lasting

downsizing

the planned elimination of jobs

evidence of disparate treatment

vary case by case, must establish event occurred (usually involves individuals and often intentional discrimination)

effects of society and culture on the labor market (changes)

women in workforce, attitudes toward education; population growth, globalization; discrimination; overall opportunities and expectations

affirmative action plans

work force analysis, availability analysis, underutitlization/concentration, goals and timetables, in-house programs, auditing

knowledge workers

workers whose responsibilities extend beyond the physical execution of work to include planning, decision making, and problem solving

work force analysis

what is make up of workforce in different categories-gender and racial makeup?

availability analysis

what is relevant labor makeup for that job?

why do governments intervene

when the market provides an inefficient outcome when left to its own devices; when market solution offends our values (ex: anti-discrimination laws)

establishing a "prima facie case"

-evidence of disparate treatment -evidence of disparate or adverse impact

business necessity in legal defense of discrimination

-necessary for the safe and efficient operation of the organization -job relatedness (validity)

bona fide occupational qualification in legal defense of discrimination

-only for sex, religion, national origin, and age -NEVER for race or color -"reasonably necessary to the normal operation of that particular business or enterprise" -ex: Hooters; only hiring women waitresses is a part of their business strategy

sexual harassment

-prohibited by Title VII of CRA -unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature -quid pro quo -hostile work environment

affirmative action

-started by executive order 11246 (LBJ) -to remedy past wrongs -required of federal contractors -voluntary, court ordered and consent decree -affirmative action plans **never tells us to hire a less qualified person**

EEOC procedures

1. charge is filed with EEOC within 180 days 2. EEOC investigates and makes a determination of "reasonable cause" 3. if no reasonable cause, issues right-to-sue letter 4. if reasonable cause, attempts to resolve matter through negotiations then litigation

criteria to be considered unemployed

1. he or she is without a job 2. he or she would be able to take a job if it were offered 3. he or she has looked for work in the preceding 4 months

civil rights act of 1991

George H W Bush signed it in; clarified the burden of proof issue; allowed for jury trial; allowed for compensatory and punitive damages in cases of intentional discrimination; talking about $ not putting people in jail

plaintiff has initial "burden of proof" to establish

a "prima facie case" of discrimination

psychological contract

a person's perceptions about what each party owes the other in a relationship; transactional and relational

characteristics of frictional unemployment

affects a relatively large number of people across all groups of the labor force; usually temporary; often voluntary; tends to be relatively short in duration; is unavoidable; may be beneficial

frictional unemployment

arises because of the constant flow of people between jobs and into and out of jobs

#1 hiring decision

as long as the value of the marginal product is greater than the wage rate

negative outcomes of breeching contracts

attitudinal, behavioral

why does marginal product get smaller

because a company is limited by its capital

outsourcing

contracting outside the organization to have work done that formerly was done by internal employees

what does it mean to be employeed?

contractual relationship between employer and employee; independent contractors; temporary employees

attitudinal negative outcomes

decreased commitment, job satisfaction, trust, justice perceptions, and increased cynicism

at-will employee

default in US; employer can fire you at any time for any reason; you can quit at any time for any reason

derived demand

demand for an input derived from consumers' demand for the good or service produced with that input

labor demand is a

derived demand

in-house programs

details programs to support the plan-how will you get back in sync

adjustments/issues caused by globalization

different geographies, cultures, laws, and business practices; identifying capable expatriate managers; developing foreign culture and work practice training programs; adjusting compensation plans for overseas work

market demand curve

downward-sloping, indicating a lower wage results in an increase in quantity of labor demanded

temporary employees

employed by staffing agency (ex: staffmark); secretaries at U of A

"unwelcome" issues

employee did no solicit; employee communicated "unwelcomeness"

behavioral negative outcomes

enhanced likelihood of turnover and deviant behavior, decreased job performance

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)

enoforces most civil rights legislation-investigates charges of discrimination, attempts to settle charges, can file lawsuit in federal court; develops guidelines-uniform guidelines on employee selection procedures; est. by civil rights act of 1964

potential labor force

entire non-institutionalized population over the age of 16

federal legislation/regulation related to employment

equal pay act of 1963; civil rights acts of 1964 and 1991; executive order 11246; age discrimination in employment act of 1967; americans with disabilities act of 1990; fair labor standards act of 1938; family and medical leave act of 1993; occupational safety and health act of 1973

evidence of disparate or adverse impact

evidence of disparate or adverse impact, stock statistics- comparisons to relevant labor market, flow statistics-4/5 rule (look at people who "flow" through

contracts (exceptions to EAW)

explicit or implied; could be an oral contract (ex: employee handbook)

benefits of no-layoff policy

fiercely loyal, more productive workforce; higher customer satisfaction; readiness to snap back with the economy; recruiting edge

independent contractors

usually hired for specific duty for specific time; not an employee of company (ex: custodians)

Okun's law

for every 1% unemployment exceeds the natural rate; a rate 2.5% GDP gap occurs

overtime

for hours over 40 in a week, each hour is paid 1.5 times regular pay

state court rulings m(exceptions to EAW)

identifying tort exceptions-violation of public policy (firing a whistleblower-can't be fired for reporting a company for illegal things, etc.), violation of implied contract, violation of good faith and fair dealing

stock statistics

if labor market is 50/50 M/F, and your company is 30/70 M/F there is an issue (also can't just mirror labor market with quota system-50/50-because that is illegal)

labor supply curve is shifted by

immigration and population growth; migration; wages in other professions; number of hours people are willing to work; non-wage income; amentities (ex: fringe benefits)

trend: opening up foreign markets to int'l trade/investment

impact: partnerships with foreign firms, "anything, anywhere, anytime" markets, lower trade and tarriff barriers

disparate or adverse impact

individuals are treated identically, but the outcome of the treatment has a different impact; measuring height of men and women but only giving job to ppl over 5'5" (men are on avg taller)

stakeholders

individuals or groups that have interests, rights, or ownership in an organization (owners and investors, customers, society, etc)

punitive damages in intentional discrimination

intended to punish; capped for sex, religious, and disability discrimination; NOT for race or national origin

Equal Employee Opportunity Commission

interprets laws and tells employers how to abide

government regulations of labor market

minimum wage; overtime laws; discriminative/affirmative action; OSHA; immigration; taxes and subsidies; governmental spending (government employees, government infrastructure)

flow statistics

minority=100 applicants, 30 hired, 30% non-minority=200 applicants, 100 hired, 50% less percent of minority was hired and it is not within 4/5 of majorty percentage (40%) -this shows disparate impact has occured, DOES NOT mean it was illegal

disability

must limit major daily life activities; complicated to define this

lost output

potential GDP is not realized; potential GDP-actual GDP=GDP Gap

psychological disbilites

probably protected under ADA

employee leasing

process of dismissing employees who are then hired by a leasing company (which handles all HR-related activities) and contracting with that company to lease back the employees

human resource management

process of managing human capital to achieve organization's objectives; involves many different processes/funcitons

civil rights act of 1964

prohibit discrimination based on sex, race, color, religion, national origin; title VII applies to employment; signed in by LBJ; act established Equal Employment Opportunity Commission; applies to employers with 15 or more employees

congressional acts (exceptions to EAW)

prohibiting discrimination, etc

americans with disabilities act 1990

prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities who are able to perform the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable accommodation; signed by George HW

equal pay act of 1963

prohibits gender discrimination in pay for "substantially equal" jobs; jobs are equivalent if they require the similar levels of skill, effort, and responsibility, and are performed under similar working conditions; differences in pay are legal if based on seniority. job-performance, non-gender factors

employer response to sexual harassment

promptly investigate and stop harassment, confidentiality should be maintained, no retaliation against involved employees allowed, take disciplinary actions as warranted, application of policy should be consistent

unemployment rate

proportion of the labor force that is unemployed; likely understates the true extent of unemployment

2 types of change

reactive and proactive

seasonal unemployment

result of a decrease in the demand for labor due to the changing of the season (ex: many agricultural and construction jobs; resort/holiday jobs)

structural unemployment

result of major industrial or technological changes; mismatch of skills to labor needs (ex: when a major industry is in decline and lays off many of its workers)

cyclical unemployment

result of movement through the business cycle; during expansions, unemployment is low; during recessions, unemployment is high

marginal product of labor

the additional output from hiring each worker (unit of labor)

offshoring

the business practice of sending jobs to other countries

value of marginal product of labor

the dollar value of a worker's contribution margin

human capital

the knowledge, skills, and capabilities of individuals that have economic value to an organization

discouraged workers

those not seeking employment are not unemployed

disparate treatment

treating individuals differently because of a protected characteristic; ex: women were asked about children in an interview but men were not

employment discrimination

treatment followed by impact

transactional contract

type of psychological contract in which the parties have a brief and narrowly defined relationship that is primarily economic in focus

relational contract

type of psychological contract in which the parties have a long-term and widely defined relationship with a vast focus

market supply curve

upward-sloping, indicating that higher wages cause the quantity of labor supplied to increase


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