Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare

There has been a sharp divergence in the literature about the benefits of the growth of teamwork, with some claiming that it is solely in the interests of management, others that it is beneficial for employees and yet others that it makes little difference to either productivity or well-being. A fea...

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Main Authors: Gallie, D, Zhou, Y, Felstead, A, Green, F
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: ESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE) 2009
Subjects:
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author Gallie, D
Zhou, Y
Felstead, A
Green, F
author_facet Gallie, D
Zhou, Y
Felstead, A
Green, F
author_sort Gallie, D
collection OXFORD
description There has been a sharp divergence in the literature about the benefits of the growth of teamwork, with some claiming that it is solely in the interests of management, others that it is beneficial for employees and yet others that it makes little difference to either productivity or well-being. A feature of this debate is the lack of high quality representative data on employee experiences. This paper draws upon the British Skills Survey Series which provides a particularly rich source of evidence. It shows that, while teamwork did expand between the early 1990s and 2006, this was due primarily to the growth of the type of teamwork that allowed employees little in the way of decision-making power. Indeed there was a decrease in the prevalence of self-directive teamwork. At the same time our evidence shows that the benefits of teamwork, in terms of both productive potential and employee welfare, are confined to self-directive teams, while non-self directive teams suppress the use of personal initiative and discretion at work.
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spelling oxford-uuid:8fa4cc2c-96d6-4e69-bc2d-4eafa1875df22022-03-26T23:05:50ZTeamwork, productive potential and employee welfareWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:8fa4cc2c-96d6-4e69-bc2d-4eafa1875df2EmploymentSociologyEducationEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetESRC Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE)2009Gallie, DZhou, YFelstead, AGreen, FThere has been a sharp divergence in the literature about the benefits of the growth of teamwork, with some claiming that it is solely in the interests of management, others that it is beneficial for employees and yet others that it makes little difference to either productivity or well-being. A feature of this debate is the lack of high quality representative data on employee experiences. This paper draws upon the British Skills Survey Series which provides a particularly rich source of evidence. It shows that, while teamwork did expand between the early 1990s and 2006, this was due primarily to the growth of the type of teamwork that allowed employees little in the way of decision-making power. Indeed there was a decrease in the prevalence of self-directive teamwork. At the same time our evidence shows that the benefits of teamwork, in terms of both productive potential and employee welfare, are confined to self-directive teams, while non-self directive teams suppress the use of personal initiative and discretion at work.
spellingShingle Employment
Sociology
Education
Gallie, D
Zhou, Y
Felstead, A
Green, F
Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare
title Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare
title_full Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare
title_fullStr Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare
title_full_unstemmed Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare
title_short Teamwork, productive potential and employee welfare
title_sort teamwork productive potential and employee welfare
topic Employment
Sociology
Education
work_keys_str_mv AT gallied teamworkproductivepotentialandemployeewelfare
AT zhouy teamworkproductivepotentialandemployeewelfare
AT felsteada teamworkproductivepotentialandemployeewelfare
AT greenf teamworkproductivepotentialandemployeewelfare