Learning organisations Nathalie Greenan Centre d’Etudes de l’Emploi and TEPP-CNRS Edward Lorenz University of Nice-CNRS OECD/France workshop on Human resources, education and innovation, 7-8 December 2009 Outline What is a learning organisation? A quantitative assessment at the European level based on the EWCS →The spread of learning organisations →The trend in work complexity Policy issues What is a learning organisation? (1) An organisation able to adapt and compete at low cost through learning Common definitional ground → multi-level concept: individual-teamorganisation → role of learning cultures: beliefs, norms and values supportive of employee learning → specific HRM policies supportive of learning culture What is a learning organisation? (2) Tradeoffs in organisational design → stimulate dynamic properties / provide stability in the organisational structure → standardisation/routine versus mutual adjustement/innovation Scientific and technical skills deal with an employee participation contraint to innovation in order to avoid conflicts between vested interest in the organisation → characteristics of the innovative idea → socio-demographic characteristics of the workforce → soft skills → group processes → customer focus → transparency and fairness The spread of learning organisations in the EU-15 (1) Percent of employees by cluster reporting each variable Variables Learning new things in work Problem solving activities Complexity of tasks Discretion in fixing work methods Discretionary Lean Taylorism learning production 93.9 81.7 42.0 95.4 98.0 5.7 79.8 64.7 23.8 89.1 51.8 17.7 Traditional organisation 29.7 68.7 19.2 46.5 Average 71.4 79.3 56.7 61.7 Discretion in setting work rate Horizontal constraints on work rate 87.5 43.6 52.2 80.3 27.3 66.1 52.7 27.8 63.6 53.1 Hierarchical constraints on work rate 19.6 64.4 66.5 26.7 38.9 Norm-based constraints on work rate 21.2 75.5 56.3 14.7 38.7 5.4 59.8 56.9 7.2 26.7 Team work Job rotation Quality norms Responsibility for quality control 64.3 44.0 78.1 86.4 84.2 70.5 94.0 88.7 70.1 53.2 81.1 46.7 33.4 27.5 36.1 38.9 64.2 48.9 74.4 72.6 Monotony of tasks Repetitiveness of tasks 19.5 12.8 65.8 41.9 65.6 37.1 43.9 19.2 42.4 24.9 Automatic constraints on work rate Source: EWCS 2000 The spread of learning organisations in the EU-15 (2) Percent of employees by country in each organisational class Discretionary Lean Taylorist Traditional Total learning production organisation organisation EU-15 39.1 28.2 13.6 19.1 100.0 Scandinavian countries Denmark 60.0 21.9 6.8 11.3 100.0 Finland 47.8 27.6 12.5 12.1 100.0 Sweden 52.6 18.5 7.1 21.7 100.0 British Isles Ireland 24.0 37.8 20.7 17.6 100.0 UK 34.8 40.6 10.9 13.7 100.0 Western Europe Austria 47.5 21.5 13.1 18.0 100.0 Belgium 38.9 25.1 13.9 22.1 100.0 Germany 44.3 19.6 14.3 21.9 100.0 France 38.0 33.3 11.1 17.7 100.0 Luxembourg 42.8 25.4 11.9 20.0 100.0 Netherlands 64.0 17.2 5.3 13.5 100.0 Mediterranean countries Greece 18.7 25.6 28.0 27.7 100.0 Italy 30.0 23.6 20.9 25.4 100.0 Spain 20.1 38.8 18.5 22.5 100.0 Portugal 26.1 28.1 23.0 22.8 100.0 Source: EWCS 2000 Learning organisations and innovation mode(1) Countries with a high proportion of learning forms of work organistion have more lead innovators: higher in-house creative capacity Countries where lean and taylorist forms of work organisation dominate have more non-innovators and technology adopters: more reliance on outside suppliers of new technology Learning organisations and innovation mode (2) Learning organisations, HRM and organisational culture Further training Payment system Piece rate Pay based on group performance Pay based on enterprise performance Consultation and assessment Frank discussions with employer over performance Consultation over changes in working conditions Regular formal performance assessment Assistance Assistance from employer External assistance Learning culture measures Apply one’s own ideas in work Intellectually demanding job Opportunities to learn and grow at work Source: EWCS 2005 Model 1 Discretionary Learning .27*** Model 2 Model 3 Lean Taylorist Model 4 Simple .04 -.25*** -.44*** -.28*** -.29*** .29*** .42*** .31*** -.01 .21*** -.09 -.42*** -.50*** -.09 -.20* .06 .15*** -.17*** .11** .25*** .42*** -.00 -.21*** .11* -.18*** -.27*** -.46*** .09* .03 -.01 .15*** .00 -.39*** -.03 -.11 .64*** .25*** .28*** .12** .49*** .21*** -.99*** -.53*** -.36*** -.36*** -.55*** -.53*** Learning organisations in public and private sectors in EU-27 Private Sector Autonomy Methods of work in work Speed or rate of work Manufacturing construction Services and utilities 56.4 64.3 Public Sector Total 60.6 Health Public Education and social Total administration work 68.1 85.8 68.1 74.3 59.9 67.0 63.6 70.5 78.7 65.5 71.9 Cognitive Learning new things dimensions Problem solving activities of work Complexity of tasks Self assessment Quality Quality norms 69.2 67.5 68.3 80.7 86.5 83.8 83.7 75.6 81.8 78.9 84.7 86.6 86.5 85.9 64.5 58.6 61.4 71.7 65.2 70.9 69.2 73.1 84.6 67.1 71.7 69.9 77.7 65.5 65.9 78.9 69.6 74.8 78.7 73.4 71.1 Task rotation with decision on task division Teamwork without decision on task division Monotony of tasks 49.2 47.9 48.5 56.6 45.4 65.5 55.3 29.4 32.4 31.0 32.9 39.9 46.1 40.3 34.8 28.5 31.4 36.1 17.3 27.1 26.8 48.9 40.6 44.5 41.1 30.8 38.8 36.8 Repetitiveness of tasks 28.0 22.8 25.3 20.0 14.8 25.5 23.8 36.6 15.3 25.8 11.1 3.5 8.9 7.8 62.8 42.8 52.2 31.8 35.1 31.4 32.8 49.1 40.7 44.6 39.3 27.6 29.0 32.1 57.1 47.6 52.0 46.9 31.1 51.4 42.6 Automatic Work pace Norm-based constraints Hierarchical Horizontal Source: EWCS 2005 The complexity paradox (1) 4 core characteristics of complex work: Complex tasks Learn new things Choose or change the order or tasks Choose or change the methods of work Source: EWCS 1995, 2000 and 2005 Degree of work complexity Rank Trend 2005 95-05 EU-15 (-) Scandinavian countries Denmark 1 (+) Finland 4 0 Sweden 2 0 British Isles Ireland 9 (+) UK 10 (-) Western Europe Austria 5 (+) Belgium 7 0 Germany 13 (-) France 8 0 Luxembourg 6 (+) Netherlands 3 0 Mediterranean countries Greece 14 (+) Italy 11 (-) Portugal 12 0 Spain 15 (-) The complexity paradox (2) Trend analysis Individual level Country level Random component Source: EWCS 1995, 2000 and 2005 Degree of work complexity 1995-2000 : -0,089*** 1995-2005 : -0,079*** Female : (-) Age : min (15-24) max (35-44) Computer use : (+) Self employed : (+) Fixed term contract : (-) Supervisory role : (+) Secteur : min (manufacturing) max (construction) Occupation : min (elementary) max (professionals) Number of patents : (+) % of tertiary attainment: + % of trade in GDP : (+) % of aged 50 and more: Unemployment rate : + % part time: (-) % females: (+) Intra country correlation in % : 5,94% The complexity paradox (3) Work complexity has all the more decreased that forces are present that should contribute to its development: ICT diffusion, growing experience and education, development of the service sector Increasing heterogeneity across EU-15: evidence of a country effect in this trend Objective reasons → standardisation → polarisation Subjective reasons → overqualification → organisational changes Policy issues: Innovation The bottleneck to improving the innovative capabilities of European firms might not be low levels of R&D expenditures, which are strongly determined by industry structures and consequently difficult to change, but the widespread presence of working environments that are unable to provide a fertile environment for innovation. If this is the case, then the next step for European policy is to encourage the adoption of ‘proinnovation’ organisational practice, particularly in countries with poor innovative performance. Policy issue: Training At the individual level, further training is positively correlated with learning and lean forms of organisation Institutional set-up matters: a mobile workforce and labour market policies emphasising expenditures in further training favour learning types of jobs Could a lack of intermediate skills acquired in vocational education and further training create a learning bottleneck and favour more standardised organisations? Need to target further training policies on part time and precarious workers Policy issue: HRM practices evaluation practices, employment security and pay system based on collective performance are positively correlated with learning and lean types of jobs Learning cultures mediates the impact of HRM variables on the likelihood of employee learning HRM policies probably play a role in mitigating conflicts in change situation Need to identify best HRM practices conditional on innovation patterns and institutional settings Conclusion: measurement issue Indicators for innovation need to do more than capture material inputs such as R&D expenditures and the available pool of technical and scientific skills. Indicators also need to capture how these material and human resources are used and whether or not the work environment promotes the further development of the knowledge and skills of employees. Need for more data to inform evidence based policy taking into account the interaction between institutions, learning models of organisation and innovation patterns. A survey instrument linking information from employers with information from employees would allow to build a rich set of indicators for scoreboards as well as conducting research giving analytical insights to set hard facts into context.