坏老板有多普遍?

IF 2.4 3区 管理学 Q2 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Benjamin Artz, Amanda H. Goodall, Andrew J. Oswald
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引用次数: 14

摘要

老板在工作场所起着至关重要的作用。然而,对于劳动经济学和劳资关系中一个重要而基本的问题,人们几乎一无所知。合适的人被提拔为主管、团队领导和经理了吗?臭名昭著的彼得原理声称,不称职的老板很可能在我们身边,但这是真的吗?这篇文章提供了第一个统计上具有代表性的国际估计-采用35个国家的可比数据-员工有“坏老板”的程度。这篇文章用一种自然的方法计算出,大约13%的欧洲工人遇到了一个坏老板。这样的老板在大型组织、没有员工代表委员会的组织、运输部门以及工人自己没有监督责任的地方最为常见。最后,本文提供了一个实用的发现,作为人力资源培训和招聘的潜在帮助。与媒体的描述相反,糟糕的老板在“对员工的尊重”方面得分最低,在完成工作的能力方面得分最低。关键问题似乎是缺乏能力,而不是缺乏考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How Common Are Bad Bosses?

Bosses play a fundamental role in workplaces. Yet, almost nothing is known about an important and basic question in labor economics and industrial relations. Are the right people promoted to be supervisors, team leaders, and managers? The infamous Peter Principle claims that incompetent bosses are likely to be all around us, but is that true? This article provides the first statistically representative international estimates—taking comparable data on thirty-five nations—of the extent to which employees have “bad bosses.” Using a natural measure, the article calculates that approximately 13 percent of Europe’s workers have a bad boss. Such bosses are most common in large organizations, in organizations without employee-representation committees, in the transport sector, and where workers themselves have no supervisory responsibility. Last, the article offers a practical finding as a potential aid to human resource training and hiring. Contrary to media portrayals, bad bosses are rated least bad on “respect for workers” and worst on their ability to get the job done. Lack of competence, not lack of consideration, appears to be the key problem.

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来源期刊
Industrial Relations
Industrial Relations INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
8.70%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: Corporate restructuring and downsizing, the changing employment relationship in union and nonunion settings, high performance work systems, the demographics of the workplace, and the impact of globalization on national labor markets - these are just some of the major issues covered in Industrial Relations. The journal offers an invaluable international perspective on economic, sociological, psychological, political, historical, and legal developments in labor and employment. It is the only journal in its field with this multidisciplinary focus on the implications of change for business, government and workers.
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