Bilateral (Hong Kong): Innovative management practices and firm performance: A Quasi-natural experiment within a private manufacturing firm in China

Siebert, Stan (2017). Bilateral (Hong Kong): Innovative management practices and firm performance: A Quasi-natural experiment within a private manufacturing firm in China. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: Economic and Social Research Council. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-850809

Data description (abstract)

The project will study "high performance work systems" and company performance in the plants of a large Chinese food/noodle manufacturing firm. The principal investigators are Stan Siebert and Xiangdong Wei (Lingnan University, Hong Kong), with John Heywood of Wisconsin-Milwaukee as co-investigator.
The aim is to find the root of China's world-beating productivity, and in particular to assess how the company has adapted to China's relatively high levels of labour regulation. (as measured, for example, by the World Bank's current Ease of Doing Business Report). The company is experimenting with various innovative labour practices such as team-working and incentive pay schemes, and the results will be tracked. A further aspect of the research is assessing the consequences of these practices for workers, by conducting periodic job satisfaction surveys.
The project addresses central concerns of personnel economics and strategic human resource researchers. The evidence on the high performance paradigm tends to be distorted by omission of the management ability factor which our quasi-experimental approach avoids. In fact, our results may well not support the paradigm, or support a "contingency" view whereby high performance practices improve outcomes when applied to some worker groups (eg full-timers), but not when applied to others.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Siebert Stan University of Birmingham
Contributors:
Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Heywood John
Wei Xiangdong
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council
Grant reference: RES-000-22-3653
Topic classification: Trade, industry and markets
Labour and employment
Date published: 24 Mar 2013 06:56
Last modified: 12 Jul 2017 10:05

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