If, as has been widely suggested, internal labor markets are declining and a new employment contract with reduced employer-employee commitment is emerging, the criteria by which employees judge layoffs as fair or unfair may be changing. This paper presents findings relevant to that question, based on quasi-experimental surveys in Canada and the United States. Respondents rated layoffs stemming from reduced product demand as more fair than those resulting from employee suggestions. Behind this judgment, apparently, was the normative premise that companies should not punish employees for their efforts; rent-sharing norms appear to have played little or no role, as respondents deemed new technology an acceptable reason for layoffs. Consistent with theories of distributive and procedural equity, layoffs were perceived as more fair if the CEO voluntarily "shared the pain." Respondents in Silicon Valley were not more accepting of layoffs than were those in Canada, on average.
机构:
East China Normal Univ, Ctr Modern Chinese City Studies, 3663 North Zhongshan Rd, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China
East China Normal Univ, Sch Publ Management, 3663 North Zhongshan Rd, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R ChinaEast China Normal Univ, Ctr Modern Chinese City Studies, 3663 North Zhongshan Rd, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China
Ye, Zhipeng
Yang, Sunny L.
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机构:
Sun Yat Sen Univ, Ctr Chinese Publ Adm Res, 135 Xingang Xi Rd, Guangzhou 510275, Peoples R China
Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Govt, 135 Xingang Xi Rd, Guangzhou 510275, Peoples R ChinaEast China Normal Univ, Ctr Modern Chinese City Studies, 3663 North Zhongshan Rd, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China