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Corporate restructuring, work intensification and perceptual politics: Exploring the ambiguity of managerial job insecurity

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Article

Hassard, John ; Morris, Jonathan

Economic and Industrial Democracy

2020

41

2

May

323-350

enterprise restructuring ; job insecurity ; management attitude ; survey

Japan ; United Kingdom ; USA

Business economics

https://doi.org/10.1177/0143831X17710733

English

Bibliogr.

"Whereas social theorists, qualitative investigators and survey-based analysts suggest advanced economies are increasingly characterized by managerial job insecurity, database and questionnaire researchers propose relatively stable tenure rates for managers. This article aims to make sense of this ambiguity. First, following interviews with managers in Japan, the UK and the USA, the authors offer support for the ‘global convergence' thesis, through data reflecting greater job insecurity generated by comparable and recurrent corporate restructuring. Second, considering research suggesting relative stability in managerial tenure rates, the authors argue that their findings – signifying increased insecurity – can be explained in terms of the ‘perceptual politics' of US-style shareholder capitalism impinging, hegemonically, upon occupational sensibilities. Third, in conclusion, they suggest that everyday managerial experience can be understood in light of corporations purposively instilling a perceptual ‘insecurity message' in managers, essentially as part of a tangible control strategy directed at the inexorable ratcheting-up of management productivity demands globally."

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