The Manila Times

Labor productivi­ty: What’s the best style, American or Japanese?

- BEYOND BUZZWORDS REY ELBO

THE CEO of one medium-sized enterprise woke up one morning to a serious management issue. Without taking his breakfast and convened a meeting with his department heads. His number one concern: labor productivi­ty — a basic issue often ignored by corporatio­ns that are earning a lot of money.

“Why bother when our gross revenue is at its highest? Our customers can’t resist buying our products, even in cash,” the managers nervously chorused with a wink. But the CEO is not convinced. Yes, the organizati­on is earning tons of money, but at the end of the day, the expenses come close to choking the net revenue, leaving the organizati­on

The CEO is bent on improving their labor productivi­ty, which to his mind is the easiest to tackle. With no choice, the managers countered with an innocent ques productivi­ty?”

- nition. Let me offer a simple idea – productivi­ty is doing more, with less company resources. And when we talk about labor productivi­ty, it means producing more products or rendering efficient service, with the least number of workers. Labor productivi­ty is different from Total Factor Productivi­ty, which covers all areas of production, such as manpower, machine, material and method, among others.

Many organizati­ons cheat by hiring “endo” workers and would consider only regular workers as the basic component when they compute labor productivi­ty. The cheat sheet in most companies includes having a ratio of temps and regular workers at around 90 percent to 10 percent. But with the current administra­tion’s thrust against “contractua­lization,” how do you propose to perpetuate this so-called “improved” labor productivi­ty with “endo” workers?

Not many people know there are two basic approaches, classi or Japanese style of management. Imagine doing the American style of labor productivi­ty, which is very common not only in Western countries, but in the Philippine­s as well. Suppose the CEO in our story directs his managers to increase the labor productivi­ty of the company by at least 20 percent? Then how are they going to do it, given this simple and easy to understand scenario: Let’s say with a company producing 100 electric fans a month with the help of 10 regular workers.

If that company opts to use the American approach of improving labor productivi­ty, its management would simply dismiss two workers and require the surviving eight to make the same amount of 100 units a month. Easy does it! The result is 20 percent productivi­ty improvemen­t. Indeed, it’s a no-brainer.

How about the Japanese style of improving labor productivi­ty? The solution is a socially accepted approach. First of all, management should commit to a no-firing policy. Instead, the 10 workers will be required to produce 120 units of electric fans a month, or even top that. That’s also a 20 percent labor productivi­ty improvemen­t.

The Japanese style is the better strategy. Knowing that management would not resort to in would be more than cooperativ­e to comply with the management directive, making them more productive and loyal to the organizati­on in the long term.

of management, and if it can’t be helped, there’s no other way but to reduce the number of temps. For the regulars, they must be transferre­d to other areas within the same company, where they are best needed, if not trained in other tasks. In extreme cases, they are assigned temporaril­y (or seconded) to the suppliers, subcontrac­tors, even their customers who are requested to pay for the workers’ pay and perks, because they will benefit from the expertise.

The basic principle in common-sense management is this: the fewer employees on the line, the higher labor productivi­ty. More than this, it minimizes quality issues, “since fewer hands present fewer opportunit­ies to make mistakes” or defects according to

my former boss, Masaaki Imai – the Kaizen guru, who advocates - sult of any continual improvemen­t activities in any organizati­on.

“Productivi­ty is never an accident. It is always the result of a commitment to excellence, intelligen­t planning, and focused effort,” says Paul Meyer in launchyour­genius.com. To do this, you have to measure labor productivi­ty. If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it. Without labor productivi­ty measures in particular, you will never know if management efforts actually contribute to increased productivi­ty.

And that’s where one should use the following formula: total number of working hours divided by the total output, equals the total labor productivi­ty. For example, if a worker has 40 hours a week with total output valued at P30,000, then his productivi­ty is P750 per hour in a week. But what if that worker is earning P1,000 per hour? Then, you’ll readily know where the problem lies, and management can quickly understand what to focus on.

If management doesn’t know how to compute this, at best, it may only be rocking the chair without any foreseeabl­e result, other than a good afternoon siesta for granny.

Now, what’s the Filipino style of improving labor productivi­ty?

on human resources and total quality management as a fused interest.Sendfeedba­cktoelbono­mics@gmail.com or follow him on Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter for his random thoughts on Elbonomics.

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