From United Nations University
------------------------------------------------------------------------
23. TNCs and Employment
24. TNCSs and Wages and Training
------------------------------------------------------------------------
23.1 Employment objectives
a) government objectives
i) full and productive employment
ii) an up-grading in the quality of the work force
through training and learning of new skills
iii) minimise the costs of manpower adjustment brought
about by structural et al change
b) TNC direct effects:
i) job creation, structure of employment, training, work
systems, redeployment
ii) on the capital/labour ratio
These effects will vary according to country, industry
and firm specific characteristics; and whether the entry
of the TNC takes the form of an acquisition or is a green
field venture. They will also vary according to the
assumptions made about what will have occurred in the
absence of TNC activity i.e. what are its opportunity
costs
c) TNC indirect effects
i) vertical, horizontal and lateral linkages (do TNC
affiliates buy more or less inputs from local sources
than do indigeneous firms?) (see also 25)
ii) government tax revenue
iii) income distribution
iv) possible brain drain
v) entrepreneurial capacity
vi) employment displacement by TNCs
d) the determinants of the effects of TNCs on employment
objectives of host governments e.g. which kinds of TNCs are
likely to have the most/least beneficial impact on
employment? What are likely to be the main country and
industry specific variables?
23.2 government policy options
a) alter the price-ratio of inputs to encourage foreign
affiliates to make more use of labour and less of capital
b) steer affiliates towards the production of labour intensive
products or to produce in regions of above average
unemployment
c) encourage affiliates to be more fully integrated in the
local economy (see also 25)
d) encourage affiliates to engage in activities requiring more
highly skilled labour
e) improve bargaining power to increase share of the economic
rents from TNCs affiliate activity
f) address existing unequal income distribution and the effects
this may have on product and technology selection
g) support organised labour to negotiate more effectively
with TNCs
h) improve educational and vocational training infrastructure;
and foster in-house training in TNCs and local firms (see 24)
i) reduce protectionism
j) target production to job creating industries
Note that some of these options conflict with each other; and may
have some kind of cost (e.g. to efficiency, or balance of payment
goals) attached to them
23.3 a home country perspective
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
24. TNCSs and Wages and Training
24.1 Wages and working conditions
a) objectives of unionized labour
i) maximize earnings
ii) optimise working conditions
iii) secure stable employment
iv) participate in and/or influence management decision
making
b) a review of the evidence of the extent to which TNCs promote
or inhibit these goals
c) the labour aristocracy thesis (Arrighi 1970)
24.2 TNCs and organised labour
a) expressed concerns about TNCs
i) foreign influence
ii) company size
iii) global strategy
iv) lack of full information (nb especially the Vdredling
proposals Van Den Bulke(1984) and Haworth and Ramsey(1986))
v) ability of TNCs to relocate activities in areas where unions
are non existent or weak
b) transnational union experience
24.3 multilateral policies: different themes
a) evolving guidelines and codes of behaviour in the field of
industrial relations by TNCs in host countries
b) considering using TNCs as a beach-head for the introduction
of improved working conditions in host countries
c) establishing an international social fund out of which the
adjustment assistance necessary to offset the adverse
employment affects of TNCs might be financed
d) persuading governments, where labour is not organised, to
allow protective action by labour
e) seeking ways and means of encouraging TNCs to provide more
information about their activities; the Vredling Directive
f) the effectiveness of OECD guidelines in influencing TNC
labour practices in Europe (Blanpain(1983))
24.4 TNCs and training
a) to what extent and under what circumstances are TNCs likely
to train or upgrade their employees?
b) how does the record of TNCs compare with non-TNCs
c) what are the constraints to a)?
d) what should the host governments contribution and policy be
towards the education and training programmes of TNCs,
and/or of the programmes of indigeneous firms in the light
of (or in place of) the presence of TNCs?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vaitsos(1980) Meller and Mizala(1982) Goncalves(1986)
Possas et al(1987) Bailey, Parissoto and Renshaw eds.(1993)
See Bibliography
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--RRojas Research Unit/1996
|