Fat and mean - David M. Gordon

the corporate squeeze of working Americans and the myth of managerial "downsizing"

KORTE INHOUD

Since the early 1980s, economic experts have recommended downsizing as the best way for U.S. corporations to remain competitive. Reducing unnecessary staff would lower costs, increase profits, and transform these companies into lean, mean production machines. As many American businesses pursued this strategy often in the wake of mergers and acquisitions that left them with an unwieldy layer of middle management and raised their bottom line, it seemed the experts were right. Yet as David M. Gordon shows in this iconoclastic book, most of them have really only gone halfway. They are mean, but far from lean. Tracing the overall employment patterns of the past decade, Gordon shows that most American companies actually employ more managers and supervisors than ever before. These ever-increasing functionaries control company payrolls and pay themselves generous salaries at the expense of average workers. For despite a steadily growing economy the real wages of the American worker have been falling for the...
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1996Uitgever: Martin Kessler Books320 paginasISBN-10: 0684822881ISBN-13: 9780684822884

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