Rights of representative bodies of employees in the labor productivity management
Автор: Abbasova E.V., Vassiliev V.A.
Журнал: Вестник Южно-Уральского государственного университета. Серия: Право @vestnik-susu-law
Рубрика: Проблемы и вопросы гражданского права
Статья в выпуске: 1 т.17, 2017 года.
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The article is devoted to the study of relationship between the production and the nature of using workforce - a key economy resource, the role of employees in the management of organizations, labor productivity. The Russian market economy, "removing" the labor law blocks regulating representation, protection of interests of workers, forms of labor, put forward new challenges for the representative bodies of workers. Studies have shown that one of the problems of low labor productivity is the focus employees on their individual success. Practice shows that the change in the motivation of employees for the importance of collective result can contribute to the solution of the problem. The States is interested in the creation of collective cooperation in organizations, since it considers it as significant production reserves. It is, in particular, of creating works councils in organizations. The objective of these public bodies must be preparation of proposals on labor productivity, improving production activities, etc. Currently, such Councils are being not actively created. One reason for this is that the powers, membership, order of Council activities are determined by local regulations, as a rule, taken by employers. They can exercise their right to create a production Board, but they are not obliged. The new public body would have more significant powers if it were not an advisory structure for the employer but represented the employees’ interests. It is necessary to use extensively the international and advanced Russian experience in organizing of the work of these public bodies.
Public governance, labor productivity and remuneration, industrial councils, foreign experience
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147150127
IDR: 147150127 | DOI: 10.14529/law170108