Learning Objectives Discuss differences in labor unions among countries... Labor Quality and Quantity Quality, quantity, and composition of labor force are of great importance to an
Trang 2Labor Forces
chapter twelve
Trang 3 Discuss the reasons that some countries have guest workers
Explain factors associated with employment policies,
including social roles, gender, race, and minorities.
Trang 4Learning Objectives
Discuss differences in labor unions among
countries
Trang 5Labor Quality and Quantity
Quality, quantity, and composition of labor
force are of great importance to an
Trang 6Worldwide Labor Conditions and
Trang 8Aging Of Population
Source: U.S Census Bureau, International,
“Midyear Population, by Age and Sex,”
http://www.census.gov/ (July 27, 2006).
Trang 9Rural to urban Shift
Source: World Urbanization Prospects: The 2003
Revision (New York: United nations, 2003), pp 3-4.
Trang 10• 192 million overall unemployed
– Middle East and North Africa (13.2%)
– Sub-Saharan Africa (9.7%)
– Central and Eastern Europe (9.7)
– Latin America and Caribbean (7.7)
– Developed economies (6.7%)
– Southeast Asia and the Pacific (6.1%)
– South Asia (4.7%)
– East Asia (3.8%)
Trang 11Labor Mobility
Labor Mobility
or area to area to get jobs
Immigration
country to reside in another country
Trang 12Foreign and Foreign-Born Population
in Selected OECD Countries
Trang 13Labor
• Child Labor
– The labor of children below 16 years of age
who are forced to work in production and
usually receive little or no formal education
• Primarily found in developing nations
• Existent in developed countries
• 70% is in agriculture
• Forced Labor
– Most common in South and East Asia
Trang 14Brain Drain
• Brain Drain
– The loss by a country of its most intelligent and
best-educated people
– Record numbers of immigrants are moving to
OECD countries in search of jobs
– When skilled workers migrate from developing
countries they do so for professional
opportunities and economic reasons
• Reverse Brain Drain
– The growth of outsourcing and the movement of highly educated, technologically skilled
employees and research scientists to other
countries
Trang 15Brain Drain: Countries with the Highest
Percentage of Their College-Educated Citizens
Living in Other Countries
Trang 16Guest Workers
• People who go to a foreign country legally
to perform certain types of jobs
• Guest workers provide the labor host
countries need
economies are growing
needed and problems appear
Trang 17– Caste: the group to which people belong in a system
under which people’s place or level in a multilevel society is established at birth as being the same level as that of their parents
• Sexism
– Acceptability of women as full and equal participants in
the work force ranges widely
Trang 18Women’s Education
• Studies show a direct correlation between
women’s education and
Trang 19Female Illiteracy
Trang 20Ratio of Wages, Woman versus Men,
Selected OECD Countries
Trang 21Racism
• Black and White conflict
– U.S., South Africa, Great Britain and
Trang 22 Traditional Societies
Tribal peoples before they turn to organized
agriculture or industry; traditional customs
may linger after the economy changes
Minorities
A relatively smaller number of people
identified by race, religion, or national origin
who live among a larger majority
Trang 23Employer-Employee Relationships
Labor Market
The pool of available potential employees
with the necessary skills within commuting
distance from an employer
A company must study the labor market when considering whether to invest in a country
Sources include
Foreign Labor Trends
Handbook of Labor Statistics
Yearbook of Labor Statistics
Trang 24Country Strike Rates, Selected OECD
Nations
Source: Rachel Beardsmore, "International Comparisons of Labour Disputes in 2004," in Office for
National Statistics (U.K.), Labor Market Trends, April 2006, p 119, http://www.statistics.gov.uk c Crown
Copyright. Reproduced under the terms of the Click-Use License
Trang 25• United States labor
• The process in which a union represents the
interests of a bargaining unit (which sometimes includes both union members and nonmembers) in negotiations with
management
Trang 26Labor Unions
enterprise-based rather than industry wide
– As a result, unions tend to identify
strongly with company interests
– However, Japanese workers are reported
least satisfied with jobs in developed
world
Trang 27Labor Union Membership Trends
• Employers have made efforts to keep their
businesses union-free
• More woman and teenagers have joined the work
force, low loyalty to unions
• The unions have been successful in raising wages,
which leads to offshoring
• In the knowledge economy, industrial jobs that
have formed the core of union membership are
declining
Trang 28Multinational Labor Activities
• Internationalization of companies creates
opportunities for them to escape the reach of unions
• In response, unions have begun to
companies
conduct
• Multinational unionism is developing
Trang 29Multinational Labor Activities
International Labor Organization (ILO)
Purpose is to promote social justice and
internationally recognize human and labor