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Changes in work organisations and required skills as related to global value chain restructuring. Competence development in work organisations and relation to HRM and knowledge management. 6FP – Citizens and Governance in the KBS. 2.1.3 Changes in work in the knowledge society 2005-2009.
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Changes in work organisations and required skills as related to global value chain restructuring Competence development in work organisations and relation to HRM and knowledge management Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
6FP – Citizens and Governance in the KBS 2.1.3 Changes in work in the knowledge society 2005-2009 HIVA-K.U.LEUVEN – Belgium: co-ordination FORBA – Austria LONDONMET- UK FTU –Belgium UPSPS – Greece UT – Netherlands UESSEX - UK ISB –Hungary ISF MUNCHEN - Germany FZK – Germany IET –Portugal IRES - Italy SINTEF - Norway ATK– Sweden CEE-CNRS – France IS - Bulgaria AMI - Denmark IT Logistics Austria Belgium Bulgaria Denmark France Germany Greece Hungary Italy Netherlands Norway Portugal Sweden UK Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Re-search and develop-ment engeneering Adminis-trative services PRO-DUCTION ICT Distribution/ lo-gistics custo-merservice Relocation Outsourcing Offshoring Global value chain restructuring Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
WORKS: changes in work • Business functions investigated: • Production • R&D, ICT services • Logistics, customer services • Sectors investigated: • Food, Clothing, IT • Services of general interest (post, railways) • Public sector administration Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
WORKS - Empirical data • 58 organisational case studies: • Selected out of matrix combining: (5)business functionsX(5) sectorsX(13)countries • Restructuring event past 5 years (2002+) • Workplace level interviews • 30 occupational case studies • Occupational groups in the business functions • Analysis of EU databases from establishment and employee surveys: • CLFS, EWCS, CHP • EU and national establishment surveys Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Corporate strategies and changes in work • 1. Are work organisations adapting as a response to: • ...changed knowledge requirements related to restructuring implying the externalisation of codified work • ...increased competitiviness and the need for more innovation capabilities • ...increased speed and shorter business cycles which are reported in all businesses and sectors • ► These (contradictory) requirements puts high demands on acquisition, development and use of knowledge and skills Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Corporate strategies and changes in work • 2. New organisational responses and practices facilitating a learning organisation • Changing work organisations • Eg.:‘reconversion’ of sewing machine operators to prototype and design • Teamwork across company boundaries • Moving up the value chain • Eg.: the learning organisation in high-end IT • Training and access to training: GVR may give access to new internal labour markets Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Corporate strategies and changes in work? • 3. New organisational responses and practices threathening this • Loss of knowledge because of fragmentation and VC lengthening: eg. food • Restructuring is preceeded by codification & standardisation • General trends of standardisation and formalisation eg. Software development • Formalisation related to work over distance and M&A • Internal tendering >< collaboration: eg. IT Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Innovating companies and competent employees? • Indications of upskilling • Lowskilled work ‘disappears’: new task composition for the remaining workforce • Shift of core business in restructuring companies eg. clothing • Access to new knowledge and learning opportunities in the chain eg. IT Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Innovating companies and competent employees? • 2. New skill needs emerging • Related to organisational and technological changes accompanying the restructuring eg. clothing • Growing importance of non-professional skills, not necessarily strengthening these eg. Clothing, software development, R&D • “Skill-intensification” related to required combination and integration of (conflicting) competences and speeding-up of business Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Innovating companies and competent employees? • 2. BUT upskilling seems: • Highly determined by the position of the firm in the value chain • Closely related to work intensification, not necessarily beneficial for QoW • Growing importance of non-professional skills may jeopardise development eg. Clothing, software development, R&D • “Organisational flexibility” is shifted to workers’ skills and informal capabilities to compensate for dysfunctional rigidities • These capabilities are under pressure due to overall work intensification and speeded-up businesses Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Innovating companies and competent employees? • Survey data show (Comparative analysis EWCS data, EU15 in 1995, 2000, 2005) • Jobs offer less learning opportunities • Significant DECREASE in work complexity between 1995 and 2000, and between 2000 and 2005 even after controlling for micro and macro characteristics • Work intensification all over Europe • Significant INCREASE in intensity of technical/bureaucratic constraints Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Innovating companies and competent employees? “Do you feel that you have skills or qualifications to do a more demanding job than the one you now have?” (ECHP) Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
Percentage overqualified Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
The role of labour markets in skill development: erosion or new paths? • New internal labour markets may emerge • Increased knowledge-intensity requires training • This may be at the level of the VC • Changes depend on the situation in the ‘destination’ company • Others may erode • Directly related to the relocation of jobs • Or related to fragmentation of employment conditions • esp. the lower-skilled seem at risk • Still others develop ‘paradoxically’ • increased skill requirements combined with insecurity and more flexibility • Or with ‘outsourcing’ of the training responsibilities Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
The role of labour markets in skill development: erosion or new paths? • Existing VETsystems at regional or company level under pressure and in deep transition • Both the company... • ...and the individual become the prime actors • Growing job insecurity/flexibility may threathen individual employability • This may be bad in the longer run • For bottom up innovation strategies • Related to ‘marketisation’ and growing competition • Some new ‘germs’ of coordination are observed too Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
The role of labour markets in skill development: erosion or new paths? Will ‘chain’-coordination replace firm- or industry- coordination? => There are no simple causalities between economic rationalities, production strategies, welfare regimes and VET systems. Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009
The WORKS project www.worksproject.be Monique Ramioul DECOWE Ljubljana,24-25/9/2009