Preview Extract
Student name:__________
TRUE/FALSE – Write ‘T’ if the statement is true and ‘F’ if the statement is false.
1)
The media generally report employment issues from the perspective of a typical worker,
as opposed to the consumer or business leader’s perspective.
โ
โ
true
false
2)
The number of strikes in the U.S. is actually much higher than typically portrayed by the
media.
โ
โ
true
false
3)
Media portrayals of unions refute stereotypes that unions are corrupt, motivated by greed,
and protect mostly unproductive and poor employees.
โ
โ
true
false
4)
The labor problem can be defined as undesirable outcomes created out of an employment
relationship which is inequitable, contentious, and exploitive.
โ
โ
true
false
5)
The labor problem is characterized by long hours, low wages, unsafe working conditions
and job insecurity stemming from management’s ability to exploit and oppress workers.
โ
โ
true
false
6)
Despite the poor working conditions and low wages, one safeguard that employees had in
the early part of the 20th century, was stability in employment because employers needed a legal
reason to fire someone.
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โ
โ
true
false
7)
Mass manufacturing can be blamed for some of the labor problems that existed in the
early 20th century U.S. labor markets.
โ
โ
true
false
8)
The intellectual foundations of the U.S. system of labor relations come from the human
resource management school of thought.
โ
โ
true
false
9)
The neoliberal perspective holds that efficiency, equity and voice in the employment
relationship are maintained through competitive markets which lead to a fair price where labor is
paid equal to the value of its contribution.
โ
โ
true
false
10)
As long as competition exists in a market, the neoliberal school of thought would suggest
that there is no labor problem even if wages are low, work hours are long, etc.
โ
โ
true
false
11)
According to the neoliberal school of thought, unions are able to manipulate and control
the supply of labor to a market just like monopolies control the supply of products to a market.
โ
โ
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true
false
2
12)
According to the neoliberal school of thought, the role of the government is to protect
individual worker rights through legislation such as minimum wage laws, safety and health laws,
and income protection benefits (e.g., unemployment compensation).
โ
โ
true
false
13)
It is easy to understand U.S. labor law from the perspectives of the neoliberal, human
resource management, and critical industrial relations schools of thought.
โ
โ
true
false
14)
Proponents of the human resource management school would argue that scientific
management and mass production were representative of poor management practices that
contributed to the labor problem.
โ
โ
true
false
15)
The solution to the labor problem, according to the human resource management school,
is to align worker interests with those of the employer.
โ
โ
true
false
16)
An independent union is one that has the power to elect its own leaders, and make all
financial and strategic decisions regarding its operations.
โ
โ
true
false
17)
The saying, “You get the union you deserve” best fits the human resources school of
thought.
โ
โ
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true
false
3
18)
According to the industrial relations school, unequal bargaining power is the primary
cause of the labor problem.
โ
โ
true
false
19)
According to the industrial relations school, market imperfections create a significant
imbalance of power to the point that employers can exercise a vast degree of control and
influence over their employees.
โ
โ
true
false
20)
Proponents of the industrial relations school of thought, are concerned with finding ways
to increase workers’ bargaining power through collective bargaining.
โ
โ
true
false
21)
The underlying theme of the critical industrial relations school of thought is that the class
that holds the greatest power in society can dictate the rules and control institutions in ways that
serve their own interests, hence keeping others from improving their lot in life.
โ
โ
true
false
22)
According to the critical industrial relations school, the cause of the labor problem is that
the capitalistic class has control over both society’s institutions and the means of production.
โ
โ
true
false
23)
From the perspective of the critical industrial relations school of thought, U.S. unions
offer a model that should be imitated by other unions because it holds long term potential for
eliminating class divisions.
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โ
โ
true
false
24)
According to the critical industrial relations school, the most successful labor unions are
those that take a very pragmatic, business-like approach to bargaining for better wages, hours
and working conditions.
โ
โ
true
false
25)
The term “socialist” has been used widely in the mainstream press lately. Socialism
describes a movement that would encourage and utilize revolution as a way to replace capitalism
with worker control.
โ
โ
true
false
26)
If you believe that labor cannot be treated like other commodities but that there is no
inherent conflict of interest between capital owners and laborers, your beliefs are most consistent
with the human resources school of thought.
โ
โ
true
false
27)
The mainstream economics perspective is the only school of thought that believes that
labor and management truly have equal bargaining power in the labor market.
โ
โ
true
false
28)
The notion that management and labor have common goals and that there is no inherent
conflict of interest between them is consistent with a unitarist view of the employment
relationship.
โ
โ
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true
false
5
29)
The pluralist view of conflict in the workplace says that there are no shared interests
between employers and employees in the employment relationship.
โ
โ
true
false
30)
According to the industrial relations school of thought, employers’ drive for higher profits
conflicts with labor’s desire for higher wages.
โ
โ
true
false
31)
The critical industrial relations school of thought presents one underlying cause of the
labor problem: poor management. According to this school, the resulting solution to the labor
problem is simple: better management.
โ
โ
true
false
32)
According to the critical industrial relations school, conflict between employers and
employees is primarily a conflict over how to distribute the profits generated by business.
โ
โ
true
false
33)
In 1904, the Nernst Lamp Co., located in Pittsburgh, PA, established a committee of
employees who were assigned the task of representing other employees’ concerns to
management. This type of committee is an example of what is meant by the term labor union.
โ
โ
true
false
34)
The key distinguishing feature separating an employee representation committee from a
labor union is the fact that labor unions are elected and run completely independent of the
employer and its management team.
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โ
โ
true
false
35)
The term “workplace rules” is meant to include rules of behavior and performance as well
as rules governing compensation and benefits within a particular workplace.
โ
โ
36)
true
false
Workplace governance refers to the method of ruling a particular workplace.
โ
โ
true
false
37)
Workplace governance issues are generally very important to workers but have little
effect on their spouses, dependents, and community.
โ
โ
true
false
38)
Individual evaluations of unions as “good” or “bad” are heavily influenced by the
underlying assumptions one makes about the nature of markets and employment.
โ
โ
true
false
39)
In an economic system of laissez faire, workplace rules will favor management when
labor demand is high and labor supply is low.
โ
โ
true
false
40)
In the human resource management school, workplace governance is believed to belong
exclusively to management. Worker input is only important to the extent that an employer
chooses to allow it.
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โ
โ
true
false
41)
Employee stock ownership plans are an example of worker control as envisioned by a
socialist perspective.
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โ
42)
true
false
Collective bargaining is an example of a worker control governance system.
โ
โ
true
false
43)
U.S. labor laws governing workplace governance systems reflect the central belief that
competitive markets will produce efficient outcomes for both employers and employees.
โ
โ
true
false
44)
According to the human resource management school of thought, unions are helpful
because they facilitate communication between management and the workers.
โ
โ
true
false
45)
According to the critical industrial relations school of thought, unions can be used as a
way to suppress workers.
โ
โ
true
false
46)
The neoliberal school of thought is the only one that believes that labor is just a
commodity.
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โ
โ
true
false
47)
According to research, union workers make, on average, 15 percent more than nonunion
workers.
โ
โ
true
false
48)
Research suggests that unionized firms are generally less profitable than nonunionized
firms, unions reduce employment growth, and unionized workers are generally less satisfied than
nonunion workers. Together, these facts provide strong evidence that unions are bad for workers.
โ
โ
49)
true
false
The presence of unions is usually found to decrease company profits.
โ
โ
true
false
50)
Union workers tend to be less satisfied with their jobs and therefore have higher turnover
rates than nonunion workers.
โ
โ
true
false
MULTIPLE CHOICE – Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or
answers the question.
51)
News and other media portrayals of unions and union workers tend to
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A) reinforce stereotypes of unions made up of greedy and lazy workers that engage in
frequent and violent strikes.
B) portray union workers as hard-working, self-sacrificing employees.
C) provide a balanced view of workers and the organizations they work for.
D) reinforce stereotypes of unions as champions of “the little guy,” looking for social
justice and workplace representation.
52)
Which of the following is not typically considered characteristic of the labor problem of
the early 1900s?
A)
B)
C)
D)
Long work hours of 72 hours per week and more
Unsafe and unsanitary working conditions
Job insecurity and the constant fear of unemployment
Pressure to compete in an information-rich economy
53)
The conditions associated with the labor problem were made possible in part due to a
prevailing management attitude that labor was
A)
B)
C)
D)
a valued resource that should be carefully managed.
an interchangeable and expendable factor of production.
fully capable of speaking out for itself.
well-protected by existing labor laws.
54)
From a business perspective, the poor working conditions endured by workers in the
early part of U.S. industrialization were most problematic because
A)
B)
too low.
C)
D)
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workers should have better lives than that.
workers were willing to put up with anything to keep a job, thus turnover rates were
workers lived below the poverty line and lacked purchasing power.
the government threatened to impose minimum wage and working conditions laws.
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55)
In a perfectly competitive labor market
A) employees can never be paid below a subsistence level (i.e., they will always be able
to make enough money to survive).
B) no one can be made better off without making someone else worse off.
C) employers can never make so little profit that they go out of business.
D) both employer and workers will make enough money to survive.
56)
According to the mainstream economics school of thought, market competition results in
wages equal to
A)
B)
C)
D)
the value of their work.
product revenues.
the value of a product.
the price of a product.
57)
In a perfectly competitive labor market, the best protection an employee has against
exploitation by his or her employer is
A)
B)
C)
D)
58)
other employees.
the government.
other employers.
labor unions.
In the neoliberal school of thought, unions are
A)
B)
C)
D)
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necessary to correct market imperfections.
acceptable as a way to correct market imperfections.
irrelevant in that they have little effect on the competitiveness of the market.
monopolies that restrict market competition.
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59)
In the neoliberal school of thought, labor unions are
A) necessary to facilitate movement of supply and demand to the optimal market wage.
B) monopolies that try to restrict the supply of labor and benefit only a few at the
expense of others.
C) create unproductive conflict.
D) important tools for eliminating capitalism.
60)
In the neoliberalism perspective, the role of the government is to
A)
B)
C)
D)
61)
pass laws that protect worker rights and income.
pass laws that protect employer interests.
pass laws that promote competition.
pass laws that promote good management policies.
In the neoliberalism perspective, the role of the law is to
A) protect worker income security (e.g., minimum wage, unemployment
compensation).
B) protect employers from individual employee pressure.
C) prohibit abuse of labor by management.
D) protect individual freedoms that are necessary for competition (e.g., property rights).
62)
According to the human resources school of thought, the labor problem stems from
A)
B)
C)
D)
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market failures.
an imbalance of bargaining power between employers and employees.
poor management.
class divisions.
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63)
The basis for the drive system that characterized management in the early 1900s was the
core belief that
A) labor was like any other factor of production and should be driven to attain
maximum production for the least cost.
B) labor was driven by its own desires and needs and therefore should have a voice in
how it was managed.
C) the drive to succeed was so high that workers would be willing to do anything to get
ahead.
D) automation and replacement of human labor with machinery was paramount to
organizational success.
64)
According to the human resource management school, equity will be achieved only
A)
B)
C)
D)
if employer actions are regulated by employment laws.
when workers produce to their maximum capabilities.
if employers become responsive to employee needs.
when market supply and demand are in balance.
65)
According to the human resources school of thought, the solution to the labor problem is
better management that emphasizes
A)
B)
C)
D)
unions as a mechanism for employees to express their voice.
alignment of the interests of workers and their employers.
scientific management principles that improve efficiency.
paying at the high end of the market wage scale.
66)
Labor unions are considered the quintessential form of independent employee
representation because
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A)
B)
C)
D)
67)
Referring to management, the saying “You get the union you deserve” best fits
A)
B)
C)
D)
68)
they are most likely to take management’s perspective into consideration.
they are partly influenced and operated by management.
they are independent of managerial authority.
they are independent of both employer and employee influence.
the industrial relations perspective.
the mainstream model of economics.
the human resources perspective.
the critical industrial relations perspective.
According to the human resources school of thought, labor unions are
A) necessary to correct market imperfections.
B) a sign of unhealthy HR practices and problematic because they promote adversarial
management-labor relationships.
C) irrelevant in that they have little effect on the competitiveness of the labor market
and are ineffective in improving HR practices.
D) monopolies that restrict market competition.
69)
In the 1920’s many employers who followed the human resources school of thought
believed that nonunion representation plans were
A)
B)
C)
D)
unnecessary if management was exercising good human resources.
a threat to management’s decision-making authority.
helpful in promoting mutual respect, cooperation and loyalty.
vital to protecting worker rights and interests.
70)
The key distinguishing feature between the neoliberal school and the industrial relations
school is that the industrial relations school believes that labor markets
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A)
B)
C)
D)
are not perfectly efficient.
operate similar to other types of markets.
have too few suppliers of labor (workers) but many purchasers of labor (employers).
work only when there is a “working class” that is excluded from the “ownership
class.”
71)
According to the industrial relations school, the role of the government and legislation
should be to
A)
B)
C)
D)
ensure that labor markets are competitive.
stay out of labor markets completely.
ensure that labor and management’s relative power is balanced.
regulate wages, hours and working conditions to ensure that they are fair to workers.
72)
The industrial relations school of thought rests on the assumption that labor market
outcomes are determined by
A)
B)
C)
D)
the laws of supply and demand.
the relative bargaining strength of parties to the employment relationship.
government intervention and determination of outcomes.
worker protests and militant actions.
73)
According to the industrial relations school, the best method to increase bargaining power
of workers in their relationships with management is to
A)
B)
C)
D)
74)
regulate markets to ensure that they are competitive.
support the formation of individual labor unions and collective bargaining.
support the formation of employer and worker cooperatives.
prosecute and fine employers who mistreat workers.
The saying, “the union makes us strong” best describes which school of thought?
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A) Industrial Relations
B) Human Resource Management
C) Mainstream economics
D) Critical industrial relations
75)
According to the critical industrial relations school, wealth and capital in society are
created through
A)
market.
B)
services.
C)
services.
D)
behavior.
76)
producer and consumer decisions to sell and purchase goods and services in a free
free will of individuals that make decisions about buying and selling goods and
powerful governments that control market prices and available supply of goods and
laws that govern market transactions and social norms that govern acceptable
In the critical industrial relations school, the primary aim of labor unions should be to
A) bargain better wages, hours, and working conditions.
B) improve human resource management practices.
C) replace capitalism with socialism.
D) aid workers’ struggles with capitalism by mobilizing and raising the consciousness
of the working class.
77)
The Occupy movement is most closely aligned with which school of thought?
A) Industrial relations school
B) Human resource management school
C) Neoliberal school
D) Critical industrial relations school
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78)
Viewed through the critical industrial relations lens, an employer’s goal to be “an
employer of choice” is designed primarily to
A) provide better working conditions for its workers.
B) show compliance with current laws and regulations in the workplace.
C) prevent workers from exercising their independent, collective voice in the
workplace.
D) turn workplace control over to the workers.
79)
is
According to the critical industrial relations perspective, the answer to the labor problem
A)
B)
C)
D)
new management methods.
union representation.
free market supply and demand.
significant restructuring of the nature of capitalism.
80)
Which of the four schools of thought views work as “unpleasant” and lacking in rewards
other than making enough money to purchase the goods and services one desires?
A)
B)
C)
D)
Neoliberalism
Human resource management
Industrial relations
Critical industrial relations
81)
Which of the four schools of thought is the only one that conforms to the belief that
workers and employers are equals in the labor market?
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A)
B)
C)
D)
Neoliberalism
Human resource management
Industrial relations
Critical industrial relations
82)
Which of the four schools of thought believes that workers and employers have common
interests that can be aligned for the benefit of all?
A)
B)
C)
D)
Mainstream economics
Human resource management
Industrial relations
Critical industrial relations
83)
Which of the four schools of thought believes that workers and employers have multiple,
competing interests that center primarily around the division of profits between them?
A)
B)
C)
D)
Mainstream economics
Human resource management
Industrial relations
Critical industrial relations
84)
Workers are not commodities, employee voice is important, there is an inherent conflict
of interest between management and employees over economic issues describes the assumptions
of
A)
B)
C)
D)
85)
the industrial relations perspective.
the mainstream model of economics.
the human resources perspective.
the critical industrial relations perspective.
The key distinguishing feature of the critical industrial relations school of thought is that
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A) workers cannot be treated as any other commodity to be bought and sold in a
marketplace.
B) labor markets are essentially competitive markets that need a small amount of
guidance from governments.
C) there is an inherent conflict of interest between labor and management that extends
to the very social order of society whereby some classes of individuals are better off than others.
D) there is a unity of interests between employers and workers.
86)
Which of the following is true of the estimated effect of U.S. unions on the employment
relationship?
A) Increased satisfaction among union workers
B) Increased turnover
C) Reduced productivity
D) Reduced profitability
87)
According to the critical industrial relations school, balancing power between labor and
management is
A) not possible within a capitalistic system because management domination is built
into the very political, legal, and economic structure of society.
B) not possible within a capitalistic system because workers far outnumber employers
and will therefore always be at an advantage.
C) possible within a capitalistic system with the proper structure of laws and
regulations.
D) inherently present within a capitalistic system due to the invisible hand of Adam
Smith (i.e., free market competition).
88)
Which of the following best describes the pluralist view of conflict in the workplace?
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A) The employment relationship conflict features mixed motives; some issues are
conflictual and some involve mutual interests.
B) The fact that there are multiple parties to the employment relationship doesn’t mean
that there are also competing interests between them.
C) Not all workplace issues can be thought of and resolved through a focus on shared
interests between employers and employees.
D) No government involvement. Very few issues that arise in the workplace are
characterized by conflict between interests of employers and employees.
89)
Workplace governance
A)
B)
C)
D)
has little effect on employee equity and voice.
determines the balance between efficiency, equity, and voice.
has little effect on the community outside the workplace.
inherently favors efficiency over equity and voice.
90)
Which of the following is a critical issue in today’s human resources and industrial
relations?
A) The foreman’s empire system of complete management control and arbitrary
dismissal
B) Widespread unemployment
C) 72-hour workweeks in dangerous or unsanitary conditions
D) The need to educate individuals as lifelong learners because of ever-changing
technologies.
91)
Identify a correct estimate of the effect of U.S. unions on the employment relationship.
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A)
B)
C)
D)
contracts
Nearly universal absence of formal grievance procedures in union contracts
Universal increase in productivity across industry type
The decreased importance of seniority provisions in personnel changes
The universal presence of just cause discipline and discharge clauses in union
92)
Which of the following methods to establish workplace governance is suggested by the
critical industrial relations perspective?
A)
B)
C)
D)
Human resource management with voice (i.e., employee participation)
Labor unions
Laws of supply and demand
Worker control of organization
93)
If one believes that labor is not a commodity and labor markets are not always efficient,
employee voice is important, and there is an inherent conflict of interest over who gets what
share of the profits, they are most closely aligned with the
A)
B)
C)
D)
mainstream economics school of thought.
human resources management school of thought.
industrial relations school of thought.
critical industrial relations school of thought.
94)
If one believes the employment relationship is characterized by equal bargaining power
in a self-regulating market, then the appropriate workplace governance should be
A)
B)
C)
D)
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human resource management
government regulation
collective bargaining
competitive markets
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95)
If employee voice is considered important, workplace governance under the industrial
relations model should include
A) government intervention that establishes laws regarding good workplace practices.
B) government intervention in the form of laws and rules that protect the rights of
individuals to enter contracts.
C) government intervention in the form of laws and rules that protect worker rights to
bargain collectively and establish labor standards.
D) no government involvement.
96)
that
Before the early 1900s, the prevailing opinion regarding the employment relationship was
A) the government should never interfere with the ability of an individual to freely
enter into an economic relationship with another individual.
B) the government should monitor economic relationships to ensure they were fair to
both parties.
C) individuals should only enter into an economic relationships if there were laws
ensuring minimum standards of protection.
D) employers should be allowed to unilaterally set terms and conditions of
employment.
97)
If employee voice is considered unimportant, the Human Resource Management school
of thought believes that workplace governance
A) should include tripartite system of employer, government, and employees finding
workplace solutions.
B) should be the sole purview of management which retains unilateral control over the
workplace.
C) should be the result of bilateral negotiations with a representative of the employees.
D) will be largely dictated by the laws of supply and demand in the labor market.
98)
Taken as a whole, U.S. labor law is most closely aligned with which one of the four
schools of thought on the labor problem?
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A)
B)
C)
D)
Mainstream economics
Human Resource management
Industrial relations
Critical Industrial relations
99)
The British labor relations system of voluntarism provides little protection for
unionization and instead relies on the relative economic strength of employees to push for their
demands and employers to resist their demands. This system is most closely aligned with
A)
B)
C)
D)
100)
mainstream economic model.
human resource management model.
industrial relations model.
critical industrial relations model.
According to the neoliberal view, unions are
A)
B)
C)
D)
tools of management that are used to suppress workers.
monopolies that interfere with economic efficiency.
a symptom of poor management.
effective at balancing the power between management and labor.
101) Which of the following is not true with respect to the impact of unions on terms and
conditions of employment?
A) Unionized workers earn more, on average, than nonunionized workers
B) Unionized workers are more satisfied, on average, than nonunionized workers
C) Unionized workers are more likely to have health benefits than nonunionized
workers
D) Unionized workers are less likely to be denied unemployment and workers’
compensation
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102)
The shock effect refers to the tendency for
A) nonunion members to join unions because of the extreme wage differential.
B) nonunion firms to become unionized.
C) managers in unionized firms to become better managers in response to unionization.
D) managers in nonunion firms to become better managers so they can avoid
unionization.
103)
Which of the following statements is most accurate?
A) Unionization almost always results in improvements to workplace productivity.
B) Unionization almost never results in improvements to workplace productivity.
C) Unionization generally has no effect on workplace productivity.
D) The effects of unionization on productivity are mixed; sometimes it results in an
increase and sometimes it results in a decrease.
104)
The union wage premium is
A) approximately 15% such that union workers make, on average, 15% more than
comparable nonunion workers.
B) approximately 15% such that nonunion workers make, on average, 15% more than
comparable union workers.
C) no longer prevalent in the U.S.
D) approximately 5% such that union workers make, on average, 5% more than
comparable nonunion workers.
105) Unionized workers tend to have lower job satisfaction than nonunionized workers
primarily because
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A)
B)
desirable.
C)
insurance.
D)
they are dissatisfied with their union representation.
they are working under harsher conditions and their workplace climate is less
they are receiving fewer benefits such as workers compensation and unemployment
they are more likely to be victims of discrimination than nonunionized workers.
106) Aside from their role in workplace governance, unions are important to the effective
functioning of a democratic society because they
A) increase the competitiveness of labor markets.
B) create additional employment for people who do not want to work for corporations.
C) provide a counter to excessive political power of employers and employer
associations.
D) take on some of the roles and responsibilities of government.
FILL IN THE BLANK. Write the word or phrase that best completes each statement or
answers the question.
107) Undesirable outcomes that stem from an inequitable, contentious, oppressive, or
exploitative employment relationship are sometimes referred to as the ________.
108) ________ emphasizes repetitive, narrowly defined tasks be performed by workers to
achieve high output.
109) One undesirable outcome stemming from the labor problem was that workers themselves
could not buy the goods and services they were producing. In other words, workers lacked
________ power.
110) The ________ school of thought believes that market competition between self-interested
agents will derive the best outcomes for both employers and their employees.
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111) According to the neoliberal school of thought, employees should be paid according to
their ________.
112) According to the neoliberal school of thought, unions act like ________ because they
control the supply of labor and set wages at levels that are artificially high.
113) The ________ school of thought argues that the labor problem stems from poor
management and nonalignment of the interests of the firm and its workers.
114) Labor organizations that have the power to elect their own officials, manage their own
finances, and make their own strategic and tactical decisions are called ________.
115) The ________ school of thought argues that imperfectly competitive labor markets create
problems such as bargaining power imbalances.
116) The industrial relations school believes that there are two important mechanisms for
balancing the goals of employers and employees: ________ and labor unions.
117)
The most radical of the four schools of thought is the ________ school.
118) ________ is an example of a critical industrial relations perspective that envisions a
political, rather than revolutionary, transition away from capitalism.
119) The ________ view of employment relationships emphasizes that all workplace issues
can be structured as shared interests.
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120) The ________ school of thought sees the workplace as a plurality of legitimate interests,
some conflictual and some mutual.
121) That the employment relationship consists of a mix of conflicting and mutual motives of
labor, management, and society is known as the ________ view of workplace conflict.
122) The critical industrial relations school of thought views industrial relations as an inherent
________.
123) The ________ school of thought believes that firms should design and implement better
supervisory methods, selection procedures, training methods, compensation systems, and
evaluation and promotion mechanisms to create motivated and efficient workers.
124) In the critical industrial relations school of thought, when employee voice is considered
important, governance must be achieved through ________.
125) In the industrial relations school of thought, when employee voice is not considered
important, governance must be achieved through ________.
126) When workers are not entitled to equity or voice, and the sole concern of employers is
efficiency, workers are viewed as ________.
127) The ________ movement has brought the problem of 21st-century economic and social
inequality into the public consciousness.
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128) Under the critical industrial relations school of thought, the preferred methods of
workplace governance are ________.
129) When managers develop better management practices and policies that improve
workplace efficiency because of the presence or threat of a union, it is known as the ________.
130) When workers and unions from multiple workplaces join together to pursue common
interests in the political and social arenas, it is called a ________.
ESSAY. Write your answer in the space provided or on a separate sheet of paper.
131) Describe some of the stereotypes that exist about unions in the U.S. Explain how the
various elements of popular culture reinforce these stereotypes.
132)
Describe what is meant by the labor problem.
133)
Why was the labor problem considered a problem?
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134) According to the neoliberal school, how are efficiency, equity and voice achieved in
society? What does this school of thought have to say about the role of government and unions?
135) According to the human resource management school, how are efficiency, equity and
voice achieved in society? What does this school of thought have to say about the role of
government and unions?
136) According to the industrial relations school, how are efficiency, equity and voice
achieved in society? What does this school of thought have to say about the role of government
and unions?
137) According to the critical industrial relations school, how are efficiency, equity and voice
achieved in society? What does this school of thought have to say about the role of government
and unions?
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138) Explain how each of the four schools of thought would respond to the following question:
Are employer and employees equals in the labor market and legal arena?
139) How is conflict conceptualized differently under the unitarist and pluralistic views of
conflict in society?
140) According to each of the four schools of thought, what was the cause of the labor
problem? Given the causes, what solution does each school propose?
141) How was the Great Depression instrumental in setting the workplace governance rules in
the United States?
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142) Using the various schools of thought, describe how the U.S. has changed in its approach
to labor relations since the early days of industrialization.
143)
In what ways have unions been both a positive and negative force in society?
144) Match the following schools of thought about the employee relationship with their views
of labor unions.
1. Critical industrial relations
Bad: Monopolies that benefit a few at the
expense of everyone else
1. Industrial relations
Unnecessary and ineffective: Add
unproductive conflict
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1. Human resource management
Important but inadequate: They are useful
for protecting worker interests but greater
sociopolitical changes are required
1. Neoliberalism
Important: They are necessary to achieve
employee efficiency, equity, and voice in
democratic, capitalist societies
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Answer Key
Test name: Chap2
1) FALSE
2) FALSE
3) FALSE
4) TRUE
5) TRUE
6) FALSE
7) TRUE
8) FALSE
9) TRUE
10) TRUE
11) TRUE
12) FALSE
13) FALSE
14) TRUE
15) TRUE
16) TRUE
17) TRUE
18) TRUE
19) TRUE
20) TRUE
21) TRUE
22) TRUE
23) FALSE
24) FALSE
25) FALSE
26) TRUE
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27) TRUE
28) TRUE
29) FALSE
30) TRUE
31) FALSE
32) FALSE
33) FALSE
34) TRUE
35) TRUE
36) TRUE
37) FALSE
38) TRUE
39) FALSE
40) FALSE
41) FALSE
42) FALSE
43) FALSE
44) FALSE
45) TRUE
46) TRUE
47) TRUE
48) FALSE
49) TRUE
50) FALSE
51) A
52) D
53) B
54) C
55) B
56) A
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57) C
58) D
59) B
60) C
61) D
62) C
63) A
64) C
65) B
66) C
67) C
68) B
69) C
70) A
71) C
72) B
73) B
74) A
75) D
76) D
77) D
78) C
79) D
80) A
81) A
82) B
83) C
84) A
85) C
86) D
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87) A
88) A
89) B
90) D
91) D
92) D
93) C
94) D
95) C
96) A
97) B
98) C
99) B
100) B
101) B
102) C
103) D
104) A
105) B
106) C
107) labor problem
108) Mass manufacturing
109) purchasing
110) neoliberal
111) economic value
112) monopolies
113) hrm
114) independent unions
115) industrial relations
116) statutory government
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117) critical industrial
118) Socialism
119) unitarist view
120) industrial relations
121) pluralist
122) class conflict
123) hrm
124) worker cooperatives
125) government regulation
126) machines
127) Occupy
128) worker cooperatives and socialism
129) shock effect
130) labor movement
131) Unions are commonly stereotyped as corrupt, greedy organizations
that create an inconvenience for the consumer, use violence to achieve
their goals, and/or are ineffective in achieving workplace improvements.
Union workers are often portrayed as lazy and unwilling to work outside
of their narrowly defined roles. These stereotypes are reinforced through
news media reports that focus reporting on the small number of strikes
that occur while neglecting to highlight the vast majority of collective
bargaining agreements that are settled peacefully. In addition, television
shows, movies, and commercials portray union workers in ways that
reinforce the stereotypes: lazy, dull, and unmotivated or unwilling to
perform for their employers.
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132) The labor problem of the early 1900s was characterized by
undesirable working conditions arising from the inequitable and
adversarial relationship between employers and their employees. These
undesirable conditions included unsafe working conditions, long hours
of work, low wages, and no job security.Today’s critical issues in human
resources and industrial relations are:Significant labor market
disparities.Problems of low-wage workers trying to move out of poverty
and support families.Corporate pressures for cost control, quality, and
flexibility to compete in a global, information-rich economy.The need to
educate individuals as lifelong learners because of ever-changing
technologies.Problems of workโlife balance, especially for working
mothers and single parents.
133) There are two main reasons why the labor problem was considered
a problem. First, from a purely humanitarian perspective, workers and
their families deserve better lives than this. As members of a productive
democratic society, they should be entitled to share in the economic
wealth generated from their labor and have some voice in how they are
treated in the workplace. Second, from a purely business perspective, the
labor problem limited economic growth by concentrating wealth which
failed to generate new markets and consumer purchasing power.
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134) According to the neoliberal school, efficiency, equity and voice are
achieved through free market competition or the competitive forces of
supply and demand. Prices in a competitive market reflect the value of
what’s being purchased and hence, wages in a competitive labor market,
reflect the value of that labor. If competition exists, the optimal
outcomes for both workers and employers are achieved. If an employer
tries to pay too little or offers unsafe working conditions, workers can
exercise voice by quitting and finding another employer. This
encourages employers to provide equity in the workplace. Under the
mainstream economics school, the only role government should play is
in preserving individual property rights and ensuring competitive
markets. Labor unions play no useful role at all under this model rather, they are an impediment to marketing competition because they
act as monopolies that restrict the supply of labor and interfere with free
market forces.
135) According to the human resource management school, efficiency,
equity and voice are achieved by management policies and practices that
are responsive to the needs of employees. Good management practices
that encourage equity and voice will also result in greater efficiency
through healthy employment relationships.Unions are perceived as a
negative influence on the workplace culture, encouraging adversarial
and unhealthy relationships between management and their employees.
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136) According to the industrial relations school, efficiency, equity and
voice can only be achieved when there is a balance of power between
employers and their employees. Balance of power is only possible when
workers have the right to collectively bargain with their employers
through independent unions.In this school of thought government can
play a role in establishing minimum standards and preserving the right
for workers to unionize and bargain collectively. Unions are the main
mechanism, however, through which efficiency, equity and voice are
achieved. They are therefore critical to achieving balance.
137) The critical industrial relations school sees the employer and
employee relationship as unworkable. Hence, the only way efficiency,
equity, and voice can be achieved is to completely change the
employment relationship by eliminating an ownership class. This means
that all workers would become owners through worker control over
production.This school of thought is suspicious of government, seeing it
as a means by which more powerful elements of society can create an
unlevel playing field that permanently puts the working class at a
disadvantage. Unions are seen as useful entities that can bring about
social revolution but, once worker control is achieved, unions would
have only a small role to play.
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138) In neoliberal thought, efficiency, equity, and voice are achieved
through free-market competition. Employees are paid their economic
value and are free to quit if they feel they are being exploited. The
human resource management school sees employers and workers as
unequal partners in the employment arena, necessitating good
management practices that encourage efficiency, equity, and voice. The
industrial relations school sees employers as having significantly more
power than employees, necessitating laws that protect workers’ rights to
collective bargaining and unionization. Finally, the critical industrial
relations school sees workers as substantially inferior to employers in
their bargaining power. Further, employer’s greater bargaining power
allows them to manipulate the legal and social system to their advantage,
creating a permanent working class that is never able to move up in the
world.
139) The unitarist view asserts that conflict between employers and their
employees is not a permanent, inherent feature of the employment
relationship. Rather, employers and employees have common goals and
interests which must be aligned by good management practices. By
contrast, the pluralist view sees conflict between employers and unions
as both shared and conflicting. It acknowledges that both parties have
multiple, sometimes conflicting needs. While there are some shared
interests between them, there is always an inherent conflict over the
employer’s drive for higher profits and the employees’ push for better
terms of employment (e.g., higher wages, better benefits).
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140) From the perspective of the neoliberal school, the conditions of the
labor problem are not seen as exploitation if there is sufficient labor
market competition. In neoliberal thought, efficiency, equity, and voice
are achieved through free-market competition. The human resource
management school sees poor management as the cause of the labor
problem and, as such, the solution is better management practices that
encourage employee equity and voice. The industrial relations school
sees an imbalance in bargaining power as the cause of the labor problem.
The solution is to encourage independent unionization and collective
bargaining that will equalize the imbalance in power. Finally, the critical
industrial relations school sees the labor problem as a manifestation of
class conflict and the ability of the ownership class to manipulate the
rules and laws of society to their best advantage. The solution, according
to this school of thought, can only be found by assuming worker control
over modes of production and decision-making in society.
141) The severity of the Great Depression in the 1930s called into
serious question the wisdom of the laissez-faire legal and economic
philosophy. During this time period, as part of President Roosevelt’s
New Deal, U.S. labor law was born. As a consequence, U.S. laws
pertaining to labor unions and collective bargaining reflect the central
belief of the industrial relations school that unions are needed to counter
corporate bargaining power and provide industrial democracy. National
labor policy is based on the assumption that the pluralist conflict in the
employment relationship is best resolved via collective bargaining to
balance efficiency, equity, and voice. This is supplemented by
government laws establishing additional standards and safety nets, such
as a minimum wage, mandated overtime pay, old age assistance and
insurance (Social Security), and unemployment insurance.
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142) In the initial days of industrialization, the mainstream economics
school of thought prevailed as illustrated by the drive systems used by
management which treated employees like any other factor of
production. When this proved problematic (e.g., increased numbers of
strikes, etc.), there were some extreme attempts to curtail management
practices using militant methods consistent with the predictions of the
critical industrial relations school. However, this method proved to be
expensive and precipitated a move to the human resource management
school of thought as well as the industrial relations school. For a time,
the industrial relations approach seemed most successful at curtailing
labor conflict and union strength grew accordingly. However, with
increased competition from globalization, the restrictive union contracts
became very problematic. A movement away from the industrial
relations school and toward the human resource management school was
brought about by an increase in government regulation over the
employment relationship and a dramatic decline in unionization rates
due to declines in traditionally unionized industries such as
manufacturing. The human resource management school has dominated
current practice with respect to workplace governance although some
might argue that the Occupy movement signals a return to the principles
of the critical industrial relations school.
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143) Unions have been credited with reducing wage inequality,
increasing the likelihood of benefits, seniority rights, and just cause
discipline and discharge standards in the workplace. In addition, unions
have been instrumental in pushing for unemployment and workers
compensation, and decreasing the likelihood of discrimination against
workers. Unionized workers are more likely to receive benefits they are
entitled to and less likely to be retaliated against by an employer. They
are also less likely to quit their jobs. On the other hand, unions are
usually associated with lower profits and may or may not improve
productivity at a particular employer. Unions also reduce employment
growth.
144)
1. Critical industrial relations
Bad: Monopolies that benefit a few at the
expense of everyone else
4
1. Industrial relations
Unnecessary and ineffective: Add
unproductive conflict
3
1. Human resource
management
Important but inadequate: They are useful
for protecting worker interests but greater
sociopolitical changes are required
1
1. Neoliberalism
Important: They are necessary to achieve
employee efficiency, equity, and voice in
democratic, capitalist societies
2
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