The traditional model of employer-employee relations in the United States was a "psychological contract" in which employees made long-term commitments to organizations in exchange for long-term job security, training and development, and internal opportunities for promotion. Beginning mainly with the recession in the early 1970's, this paradigm began to unravel. Organizations began using extensive downsizing and outsourcing to decrease the number of permanent employees in the workforce. Among employees this situation has resulted in a decided shift in desire: instead of working their way up in an organization, many now prefer to work their way out. Entrepreneurship at the small business administration are now the fastest-growing majors in business schools.

Several factors have generated movement from the old paradigm to the new one. Organizations have had legitimate and pressing reasons to shift to a new paradigm of employer-employee relations. Large numbers of permanent employees make it difficult for organizations to respond quickly to downturns in demand by decreasing payroll costs. The enormous rights in wrongful discharge suites has created incentives for organizations to use temporary, contract, and leased employees in order to distance themselves from potential litigation problems. Moreover, top management is under increased pressure from shareholders to generate higher and higher levels of return on investment in the short run, resulting in declines in hiring, increases in layoffs, and shortage of funds for employee development.

At the same time, a lack of forthrightness on the part of organizations has led to increased cynicism among employees about management's motivation and competence. Employees are now working 15 percent more hours per week than they were 20 years ago, but organizations acknowledge this fact only by running stress-management workshops to help employees to cope. Sales people are being asked to increase sales at the same time organizations have cut travel, phone, and advertising budgets. Employees could probably cope effectively with changes in the psychological contract if organizations were more forthright about how they were changing it. But the euphemistic jargon used by executives to justify the changes they were implementing frequently backfires; rather than engendering sympathy for management's position, it sparks employees' desire to be free of the organization all together. In a recent study of employees' attitudes about management, 49 percent of the sample strongly agreed that "management will take advantage of you if given the chance."


The passage suggests that organizations' movement to the "new paradigm" (highlight text) is based in part on the expectation that wrongful discharge suites against employers are ____?


less likely to be filed by non-managerial employees than by managers

less likely to be filed by leased employees than by contract employees

less likely to be filed by contract employees than by permanent employees

more likely to be filed by employees with a long history in the organization than by newer hirers

more likely to be filed in small organizations than in large ones

考题讲解

此讲解的内容由AI生成,还未经人工审阅,仅供参考。

正确答案是 C。原因是本文提到,对于组织来说,巨大的错误解雇诉讼起到了一个激励,使得它们用临时的合同和租赁的雇员来避免这些潜在的诉讼问题。因此,在这种情况下,C 选项正确,错误解雇诉讼更有可能由合同雇员而不是永久雇员提出。

展开显示

登录注册 后可以参加讨论

快来第一个发言吧
GMATLA-RC