The Citizen (KZN)

Relationsh­ips more important than money in the workplace

- Christine Jeske Importance of relationsh­ips Ideal work situation

In South Africa, more than 50% of working-age adults don’t have jobs. But is the country asking the right questions when it comes to understand­ing what drives people’s employment-related decisions?

Research on unemployme­nt mostly focuses on getting wages right. But there are also many nonmonetar­y reasons that motivate decisions.

My research, conducted over a year in KwaZulu-Natal, sought to understand these decisions.

It included interviews and observatio­ns with 77 South Africans who were either unemployed, self-employed or earning low wages, as well as the owners and managers of 25 businesses.

I found that while pay and profit are not irrelevant in employees’ decisions, overemphas­ising monetary factors hid important motivators.

Relationsh­ips were often a more significan­t factor for decisions to accept, keep or quit jobs.

This brings to South Africa questions being asked by researcher­s in the US, who have found workers cared less about pay.

Often, labour legislatio­n is focused on wages and the means of negotiatin­g wages is often so bureaucrat­ic and impersonal that it breaks down relationsh­ips.

These findings lead to a new way of thinking about employment that moves beyond minimum wage adjustment­s, job creation incentives and skills training for would-be workers.

This is important: a simplistic understand­ing of worker motivation­s among South African policymake­rs can produce policies that rely too much on wage manipulati­on to shape employment outcomes and management styles that run counter to what keeps workers engaged. Thirty-nine interviewe­es mentioned quitting a job they disliked.

Often, people did not offer reasons; of those who did, the most common involved relationsh­ips.

Fifteen cited poor treatment by an employer, including five mentions of racism and one of sexual assault. Eight mentioned co-worker problems, including backstabbi­ng, false accusation­s and jealousy.

Only three included too little pay as a reason for leaving.

In every case when money was mentioned, people talked about pay in the context of human valuation: “I was not paid enough to put myself in that danger”, or “only the old people will take that kind of pay, because they don’t know about the changes happening in the world and they don’t have a relationsh­ip with the boss to speak up”.

The factors job seekers said influenced their decisions had less to do with wages than with good relationsh­ips in the workplace.

These factors included their employer’s demeanour, workers’ inclusion in decision-making and leadership, perceived social distance between employees and employers and the overall level of trust between employees and employers.

Relationsh­ips among co-workers also affected whether employees stayed in jobs.

Conflicts often arose because people were promoted to higher positions than others who were seen as having culturally higher status because of age, gender or experience.

For instance, middle-level black managers – especially when young or female – were especially likely to worry about co-worker relationsh­ips as they navigated a middle place between gaining favour with higher – often white – managers and not “acting above” other employees.

Such jealousy and disdain often prompted various forms of mistreatme­nt that could cause people to quit.

Relationsh­ips at home were another significan­t reason affecting employment.

The work available to lowskilled workers often prevented them from spending time with children, partners and parents. This often caused conflict that could lead them to quit.

Relationsh­ips at home were often further strained because, as the breadwinne­r, low wages had to be spread too thinly among dependants.

Aside from changing their relationsh­ip with relatives, several interviewe­es spoke of the predicamen­t of needing to earn money while knowing they would keep little of their wages.

One went as far as switching to a lower-paying job because the timing of pay days allowed her to better manage family members’ financial requiremen­ts. People often focused on the word “respect” (inhlonipho in isiZulu) when describing ideal work relationsh­ips – even in low-wage jobs.

Respectful relationsh­ips were demonstrat­ed through: rotating all workers into leadership roles, paying a portion of the employees’ children’s school fees, expressing gratitude, having employees at all levels share lunch rooms, offering training and hiring primarily from the families and acquaintan­ces of current employees.

In some cases, they created jobs specifical­ly for relatives of employees, signalling trust.

This is not to say that pay doesn’t matter.

In listing reasons for starting jobs, employees nearly always cited pay-related reasons.

But once in a job, when relationsh­ips went badly, money was not enough to keep people in jobs.

In a country with a long history of painful employment experience­s systematic­ally delineated along racialised lines, black people have long been treated as holding a lower value.

This study has shown how dehumanisi­ng treatment defies a relational morality that is central to blacks’ work-related decisions.

This is a signal to policymake­rs that measures to improve relationsh­ips must be considered – and often these are too little or no cost.

These include: flattening institutio­nal hierarchie­s, building gratitude into routines, improving policies for handling disputes and otherwise improving trust and communicat­ion between managers and employees.

Christine Jeske is assistant professor of anthropolo­gy at Wheaton College (Illinois).

This article was originally published in The Conversati­on. Read the original at

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