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international human resource management
Questions and Answers of
International Human Resource Management
What is the percentage of employees who are being displaced as a result of downsizing?
What is the percentage of employees who are dissatisfied with the current range of employee benefits?
What is the percentage of employees who are unmarried with domestic partners?
What is the percentage of employees who have adopted children?
What are the main sources of work-related stress?
What is the percentage of employees who indicate that they experience high levels of work-related stress?
Which employees are more likely to prefer telecommuting?
Which employees are more likely to prefer flextime?
What is the percentage of employees who currently engage in a variety of wellnessrelated activities?
How many employees care for elderly dependents, and how many days have those employees missed work to provide elder care?
How many employees have young children, and how many days have those employees missed work to care for an ill child?
What special work/family problems are employees facing?
What are current dependent care arrangements, costs, and satisfaction levels?
What education levels are required of qualified employees?
To what extent bare resources available to recruit and train employees?
What is the age profile of the employees?
What is the size of the organization?
What is the percentage of females employed?
Will the employer provide income tax guidance to employees who maintain an offsite office area?
Is telecommuting viewed as a substitute for dependent care?
Will the employer be liable for injuries resulting directly from off-site work activities?
Will the employer provide assistance to ensure the adequacy or safety of the off-site work area?
Does the employer have the right to visit the off-site location to see if it meets health and safety standards?
How will confidential or proprietary materials be protected?
Who absorbs costs of insurance to protect equipment from theft, damage, or misuse?
Who provides needed office supplies?
Who is responsible for travel expenses to and from work on days when employees come in to the office?
Who is responsible for off-site-related expenses (e.g., air conditioning, renovation)?
Who absorbs costs (installation, monthly service) of telephone lines installed for use during the program?
Does the employer retain ownership of property provided to telecommuters?
Will employers provide the equipment required for the job?
Will employees be expected to come in to the office as requested when the workload requires it?
Will employees divide their time between days at the office location and at the offsite location?
How can employers be assured that employees are accessible during working hours?
Can employees vary their hours to suit their preferences?
How will employees account for time worked?
Will the total number of work hours change during the program?
Will salary, job responsibilities, or benefits be changed because of employee participation in the program?
If an employee’s performance deteriorates, will he or she be asked to return to the office work location?
If the program is terminated, can employees return to their office work location?
If telecommuting is not to their liking, can employees return to their office work location?
Who is eligible to telecommute?
What are the results of the pilot program?
Has a pilot program been conducted?
10. Review the questions for telecommuters in Appendix A and then do one of the following assignments:a. Develop a written telecommuter agreement for a particular public organization to be signed by
9. Select one of the programs discussed in this chapter and conduct an online search for additional information on this subject. Share the information you find with the class.
8. Identify each of the paradoxes mentioned in this chapter and consider various ways to resolve each paradox. Can you identify additional paradoxes related to these topics?
7. Choose any one of the employee-friendly policies mentioned in this chapter and outline the implementation steps that are most important at each of the six stages from the point of view of the
which policies appeal most to particular types of employees.
6. Have each team member create a hypothetical employee profile by identifying that individual’s personal characteristics on each of the following dimensions: age, gender, dependent children,
5. Separate into four or five different groups. Within each group, select three to five of the workerfriendly programs covered in this chapter, and have each group member interview someone who is
4. Identify other not-so-employee-friendly policies that are not addressed in this chapter.
3. Review examples of employee-friendly policies discussed in this chapter. Identify as many paradoxes related to those policies as you can and discuss ways to resolve them.
2. Form groups and let each group select one of the family-friendly policies discussed in this chapter.Discuss the following: (a) the advantages, (b) the disadvantages, (c) the outcome indicators you
1. Create two columns on a whiteboard or chalkboard headed “Buzzwords of Government Success”and “Ideal Friendship and Family Life.” Brainstorm and write down words for each topic, one column
“We apply rigorous discipline to learn how to earn a living, but not how to live.”
“How do leaders serve their people? They pay good wages and treat employees with respect.”
20. In the context of the importance of distributive and procedural justice in pay determination, consider these observations:
19. Reformers advocate performance pay to replace longevity systems. Ironically, the federal General Schedule longevity system is performance based. It has never been properly implemented because its
18. Comparable worth is an important issue in rank-in-job classification systems. Why is it irrelevant in rank-in-person systems (Chapter 5)?
17. Examine this paradox: One of the most robust findings in social science research is one of the most ignored—managers use rewards hoping to get the benefit from motivated employee behavior, but
16. Discuss the following paradox: American employees work longer hours than they did a generation ago and work longer hours than employees in most other advanced nations, yet they are among the
15. Your division has been selected as a demonstration project that will establish a pilot program to ensure individual equity. Top management has created an employee advisory committee to recommend
14. There are many paradoxes in the human resource management compensation function. Identify at least three and discuss ways to resolve them. To what extent do they relate to the fundamental
13. Because managers typically lack flexibility to increase employee pay (except to a limited extent in performance appraisal; Chapter 10), they may resort to finding ways to upgrade jobs (Chapter 5)
12. Analyze the importance of and controversies surrounding benefits from the perspective of the employee (one team) and the employer (another team). If some governments use benefit programs to
11. Resolved: “If recruitment and placement functions of human resource management are done well, then incentive pay plans are irrelevant—even harmful.” One team should argue the affirmative
10. This chapter claims that pay is important because it is vital, visible, and vicious in organizations.Divide into groups and analyze, from the perspective of the paradox of needs, at least three
9. The head of a public interest group observed in 2011 that “a lengthy pay freeze, increased employee pension contributions, limited bonuses for outstanding employees, and a hiring freeze will
8. In 2011, Transocean, whose drilling rig exploded in the 2010 Gulf oil disaster, awarded employee bonuses in recognition of the company’s “best year in safety performance.” Comment.
7. Discuss the following statement: “From Enron to Global Crossing, from BP to Mining and Minerals Service (in the Interior Department) from the Veterans Administration bonus issue to the latest
6. Explain why it is so difficult for “the great pay debate” to be resolved. Hint: Pay systems receive criticism from both those who think employees are paid too much and those who think they are
5. According to U.S. Senator Paul Sarbanes, “As much as it is a disservice not to support the federal workforce, at the end of the day it’s a disservice to the public.” Explain.
4. At the end of the chapter, it was suggested that the number of work hours be decreased in the name of employee fairness. Actually, European economists have long claimed that organizational
3. To what extent do flexible benefit programs resolve individual–organization compensation dilemmas? Would it be better to abolish benefits altogether (Exhibit 7.8)? Identify the conditions
2. If teamwork, process improvement, and citizen service are hallmarks of quality management, then discuss the most appropriate pay system for an agency pursuing quality.
1. Discuss the following statement, employing “Leonardo’s parachute” (see the book’s introduction):“We need to pay people based on their value-added contributions to their organization as
12. Job seekers usually do not have good information about the climate for engagement in the organizations of prospective employers. What questions might you ask during a job interview to better
11. Think of a specific situation in which you gave feedback. What impact did it have? How can you improve the effectiveness of your feedback?
what that person is willing to give, as well as what that person expects to get from you and what you are willing to give. Then make the contract and put it in place for a few weeks. What are the
10. Make a psychological contract with someone, preferably a work colleague or someone working under you. To ensure that the understanding works out, discuss what you want from that person and
9. Identify ways in which your immediate supervisor has knowingly and unknowingly affected your motivation. Which of these increased your motivation? Which decreased your motivation? How would you
8. Give three examples of how Vroom’s expectancy theory applies to situations you have experienced.
Do you agree that permanent higher salaries are not associated with permanent higher motivation? If so, how would you deal with motivating workers who already make a good amount of money?
What are the less important needs? How important is money?
7. Indicate the needs that your team members have at work. What are the most important needs for them?
6. Identify and discuss in your team the characteristics of supervisors that motivate and increase employee engagement. How would you recruit and select for these elements? How would you interview
5. Assume that the members of your group are responsible for a group project, such as a group presentation for your class. Make a psychological contract for the group. Discuss what people need to
4. Consider the statement that “difficult employees may seek to avoid being disciplined by corrupting, compromising, or blackmailing their supervisors through social, sexual, or ethical
3. Examine the list of items that promote a “climate for engagement” and develop a list of specific activities that could affect engagement. Identify those HRM activities that might do the most
2. Discuss what motivates people the most in their jobs in order to verify the claims that “people are motivated to pursue and satisfy their needs,” and “people vary in their needs.” How can
1. Based on your experience, what levels of engagement do you see in the organizations with which you are familiar? Do you agree that the 25–50–25 rule is accurate? What are the characteristics
Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship as a Pesticide Applicator.Employees must respond to emergency conditions, and so must live within a fifteenmile distance or be able to report within a
Certain designated positions require the employee to be certified by the U.S.
After accepting an offer of employment, all persons are required to have a physical examination by a doctor of choice verifying the applicant’s physical ability to perform the duties
11. If you were the analyst looking at the position reclassification request in this chapter’s appendix (for the Equipment Operator 2), what would you view as its positive and negative points?
10. What are the similarities and dissimilarities between broadbanding and rank-in-person systems?
9. The reform of civil service will be an important topic of discussion and debate for the next several decades. What are the implications of the civil service reform initiative in Georgia? Do you
8. You are a manager whose best worker has “topped out”; that is, the employee is at the top step of her pay grade. Furthermore, her job is properly classified. Unfortunately, the government
7. As a class, determine which members are currently employed in the public sector and then select some of them to be interviewed about their jobs in small groups. After the interviews, each small
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