Win-Win' Work Schedules - A Balancing Act (a45fef24-0a31-4267-b81e-e0070adc13d0)

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 160 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1996
Abstract
A combination of the needs of business, employee desires and safety and health considerations is stimulating increasing attention to the time spent by people at work and the timing of that work. Particularly we are seeing: - innovative work schedules for 24-hour mining businesses; and - response from industry to accommodate the needs, even the desires, of employees in return for systems which are more productive and more capital efficient. There appears to be an evolutionary trend for business management to become more sophisticated and responsive to the need for achieving close to best cost work schedules to sustain continuous improvement. The underlying motivating forces driving this trend for improved techniques in organising attendance at, and time spent at work, is the seemingly inseparable combination of technological advance and ever-increasing accumulation of capital. The mining industry has not remained untouched by this thrust for ever-increasing need for best use of labour, to adopt advances in technology and to provide attractive opportunities for putting accumulated capital to work. An essential component of this on-going thrust is a substantial effort by the mining industry to improve the performance of labour by providing most-productive work schedules.
Citation
APA: (1996) Win-Win' Work Schedules - A Balancing Act (a45fef24-0a31-4267-b81e-e0070adc13d0)
MLA: Win-Win' Work Schedules - A Balancing Act (a45fef24-0a31-4267-b81e-e0070adc13d0). The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1996.