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Title: Human Resources Planning Prof. John Kammeyer-Mueller MGT


1
Human Resources Planning
  • Prof. John Kammeyer-Mueller
  • MGT 6366

2
Human Resources Planning Outline
  • External influences
  • Developing numerical forecasts
  • Core vs. flexible workforce decisions
  • Affirmative action

3
General Economic Conditions,Job Growth, HR
Movement Impacts
4
External Influences
  • Major types of external influence
  • Important sources of information
  • The influence of the educational system

5
Planning in a Real World Situation
  • Imagine you are trying to improve the planning
    process for professors at the University of
    Florida
  • What external factors influence labor quality and
    quantity decisions?
  • What internal factors influence labor quality and
    quantity decisions?
  • See the next pages for a SHRM template for
    planning

6
SHRM Guidelines for Preparing a Planning Worksheet
  • General environment scan and forecast
  • Describe opportunities and threats of the outside
    environment, including the social environment
    (i.e., demographic, technical, legal and
    political, and economic forces) and task
    environment (i.e., labor market, stakeholders,
    competition, and customers/clients).
  • Monitor industry trends and consider how these
    trends will impact your organization.
  • Customer/Market/Competitor Analysis
  • Understand the nature of your business
  • Determine how the market is changing and develop
    a profile of how your customers' needs and your
    competition are changing in relation to these
    market trends.
  • Strategic Planning Premise
  • Develop strategic planning premises that reflect
    the key assumptions about the future of the
    organization. These can cover the business as a
    whole (e.g., diversification or acquisition
    plans) or functional areas of the business (e.g.,
    finance, management, marketing, etc.). Separate
    must do and should do strategies.

7
SHRM Guidelines for a Planning Worksheet
  • Internal Assessment
  • Guide What is the purpose of the organization?
    What activities are performed? What does the
    business offer and how does it make it
    competitive?
  • Guide What will the organization look like in
    3-5 years? What would be seen and sensed by
    people?
  • Briefly list the major strengths, weaknesses,
    threats, opportunities (SWOTs). Strengths and
    weaknesses are internal to the business while
    opportunities and threats are external. All SWOTs
    should be one-handed (i.e., something is either a
    strength or a weakness but not both).
  • Major Goals
  • Define the key targets achievable over the next
    3-5 years in terms of business imperatives such
    as sales, market segments, finances, operations,
    technologies, employment, profits, etc. Remember
    that goals are the strategic profile of the
    organization.

8
A Practitioners Guide to Performing HR Planning
  • Developing and analyzing data that identify HR
    needs
  • the organization's mission, values, strategic
    goals and business objectives
  • federal and state laws and regulations.
  • future gaps and surpluses in the work force
  • diversity statistics
  • population demographics
  • health and safety statistics
  • turnover rates and causes
  • employee-opinion survey results
  • Developing responses to the identified needs
  • recruiting plans
  • training plans
  • developing special programs for specific needs

9
Areas Affected by Workforce Planning
  • Contributes to strategic goals and business
    objectives
  • every strategic goal and business objective has a
    human element
  • Enables employees to develop their potential to
    the fullest
  • skill-gap and surplus information projected
    during the work-force planning process
    facilitates career counseling, training,
    recruiting, diversity and retraining

10
Uses of Gap Analysis in Organizational Contexts
11
Strategic Advantages and Goals of Workforce
Planning
  • Eliminating surprises
  • Rapid talent replacement when needed
  • Developing processes that ramp up and down your
    talent inventory
  • Identifying problems early
  • Preventing problems
  • No delays in meeting production goals
  • Enhancing capabilities to respond to the future
  • Rapidly reduce labor costs without the need for
    large-scale layoffs of permanent employees.
  • Gather resources and talent when opportunities
    arise
  • HR professionals take advantage of
    talent-sourcing opportunities

12
Exh. 3.1 Examples of ExternalInfluences on
Staffing
  • Economic conditions
  • Economic expansion and contraction
  • Job growth and job opportunities
  • Internal labor market mobility
  • Turnover rates
  • Labor markets
  • Labor demand
  • employment patterns
  • KSAOs sought
  • Labor supply
  • demographic trends
  • KSAOs available
  • Labor shortages and surpluses
  • Employment arrangements

13
Labor Supply Forecasts
  • Economic conditions
  • Economic expansion
  • Job opportunities
  • Internal labor market mobility
  • Turnover rates
  • Labor markets
  • Labor demand
  • Labor supply
  • Labor shortages
  • Employment arrangements

14
  • Unemployment Rate of job seeking
  • High unemployment
  • Many job seekers, low wages, many employer
    choices
  • Low unemployment
  • Few job seekers, high wages, fewer employer
    choices

15
Trends in Employment
16
  • Unit labor costs Hourly compensation divided by
    productivity
  • Increasing ULC
  • Wages increasing, productivity decreasing,
    substitute capital for labor
  • Decreasing ULC
  • Wages decreasing, productivity increasing,
    substitute labor for capital

17
  • Labor turnover rate separations divided by
    average employment
  • Increasing LTR
  • Turbulence, lower commitment, contingent labor
  • Decreasing LTR
  • Stability, commitment, long-term relationships

18
Employers React to Immigration Problems
  • Squeeze for highly qualified workers
  • The cap on H1-B visas for 2008 was reached in
    April, meaning that no new visas would be granted
    for the year
  • In 2008 there were 123,000 applications for just
    65,000 available H1-B visas for 2009 there are
    163,000 applications
  • This shortfall in highly qualified workers leads
    companies to offshore many professional
    positionssome companies have told congress they
    will have to relocate to countries where they can
    hire more qualified workers easily
  • Workforce Management Online, April 2008

19
Total Effects of Immigration on National Economy
  • Are there downsides to immigration for the host
    country?
  • Most directly, wages in occupations that have
    high levels of immigrants should go down because
    a) immigrants have lower reservation wages and b)
    simply supply increases
  • Unemployment may also fall in occupations with
    high levels of immigrants
  • Downward pressure on wages in one industry or
    occupation can have spillover effects in other
    occupations
  • Immigrants may accept working conditions that are
    worse than native-born workers would accept
  • Note that these results relax the assumption that
    economists make about perfect mobility of labor
    and homogeneity of the workforce, but those
    assumptions are not realistic in the short run

20
Total Effects of Immigration on National Economy
  • Are there upsides to immigration for the host
    country?
  • Decreased prices for goods and services,
    especially for goods and services that are used
    by the least wealthy Americans
  • Capital is mobile immigration may reduce
    offshoring of businesses (i.e. if I can hire
    people living in the U.S., then I can still
    afford to keep my company here), thereby saving
    some domestic jobs in the process
  • Those living in the United States will also
    purchase goods and services in the United States
    rather than in their home countries, so they
    increase demand
  • Increased competitiveness with foreign firms
  • Economists often argue that, in the long run,
    wages will tend to equalize across countries
    through one mechanism or another, and that with
    immigration, the purchasing power of the poorest
    individuals should go up with more immigration
    even if they are falling further behind the
    wealthiest individuals

21
Business Owners React to Immigration Crackdowns
  • Employers are concerned because of
  • a federal enforcement crackdown on employers who
    hire undocumented immigrants
  • inaction in Congress on immigration legislation
  • a rush of punitive state measures last year that
    created conflicting requirements
  • continuing shortages of low-wage labor.
  • These employers are now starting to realize that
    nobody is in a better position than they are to
    make the case that they do need the workers and
    they do want to be on the right side of the law,
    said Tamar Jacoby, president of ImmigrationWorks
    USA.
  • If we have to terminate 20 people, thats going
    to jeopardize 100 other jobs of people who are
    legal, Americans, people who are making a good
    living, said on anonymous source who runs a
    multi-million dollar electronics parts
    manufacturing firm.
  • Source NY Times, July 6, 2008

22
Are Employee Concerns about Immigration Justified?
  • Example findings
  • Extensive reviews typically suggest that a 10
    increase in immigration often leads to about a 1
    or lower decrease in wages for native born
    workers and few or no increases in unemployment
  • Friedberg Hunt, The Impact of Immigrants on
    Host Country Wages, Employment, and Growth,
    Journal of Economic Perspectives, 1995
  • Immigration from 1980-2000 reduced the wages of
    native workers by around 3.2, with larger
    effects for high school dropouts and smaller
    effects for the educated
  • George J. Borjas, The Labor Demand Curve Is
    Downward Sloping, Quarterly Journal of
    Economics, 2003
  • The effects of immigration are most negative for
    native born Hispanics, African Americans, and
    those with low levels of education effects can
    be mildly positive or neutral for those with
    higher levels of education

23
Are Employee Concerns about Immigration Justified?
  • These results should also apply if an appropriate
    high skill group can be found with high
    immigration levels
  • Compare fields based on the number of doctorates
    granted to foreign born individuals
  • A 10 increase in the supply of doctorates to
    foreign born individuals in a particular field
    leads to a 3 decrease in wages for that field
  • Borjas, The Labor Market Impact of High-Skill
    Immigration, American Economic Review, 2005
  • However, research shows that for workers in
    information technology, wages do not decrease,
    and unemployment rates do not increase, when the
    number of H1-B visas increase
  • Zavodny. The H-1B program and its effects on
    information technology workers, Economic Review -
    Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 2003
  • Immigration from Canada and Mexico into
    occupations is actually negatively related to
    long-run unemployment rates at the industry level
  • Dorantes Huang, Unemployment, immigration, and
    NAFTA A panel study of ten major U.S.
    industries, Journal of Labor Research, 1997.

24
Emerging Trends Baby Boomers Near Retirement Age
  • May be a problem
  • By 2014, more than 1 in 5 workers will be 55 or
    older, according to the BLS.
  • 40 percent of retirees were forced to stop
    working earlier than they had planned, largely
    because of health problems or job loss.
  • The annual cap on H-1B visas is 65,000, down from
    a high of 195,000 earlier this decade.
  • It can take years before someone has sufficient
    skills to replace an experienced worker who
    retires
  • Or perhaps not
  • Wages rise, drawing new people into understaffed
    fields.
  • Immigration and offshoring can reduce skill
    shortages.
  • About 31 percent of those 55 and older were in
    the workforce in 1984. That number climbed to 36
    percent in 2004, and the figure will jump to 41
    percent in 2014, according to the Bureau of Labor
    Statistics.

25
Emerging Trends An Aging Workforce
  • Experience at the FBI
  • More than 40 of FBI agents had five or fewer
    years of work experience after September 11, and
    they needed to add many more in a hurry
  • Problem exacerbated by a mandatory retirement age
    of 57
  • The FBI turned to retired agents as trainers for
    newcomers, and also encouraged them to act as
    consultants
  • Experience at CVS
  • CVS doubled its over-55 workforce between 1992
    and 2002
  • CVS recruited at senior centers
  • Older workers were integrated into general
    training after they realized the skills and
    attitudes of older workers had a positive impact
    on younger trainees
  • A few general principles for retaining an older
    workforce
  • Need to ensure flexible schedules are available
  • Provide health-care coverage onsite
  • Find jobs that are less physically intense but
    still critical
  • Ensure that they arent locked out of training
    and development issues

26
Thinking about the Labor Market of Today
  • Increases in technology, medical, and human
    services fields
  • Decreases in clerical and manufacturing jobs

27
Educational System Effects
  • Occupations with formal education
  • Healthcare
  • Physicians
  • Nurses
  • Management
  • Research
  • Scientists
  • Engineers
  • Occupations with formal training
  • Trades
  • Electrician
  • Plumber
  • Welder
  • Carpenter
  • Arts
  • Writer
  • Artist
  • Musician

28
Effects of Educational Requirements for HR
Planning
  • Need for external associations
  • Campus recruiting offices
  • Professional groups
  • Trade unions
  • High wages and an involved workforce
  • Likely to have more occupational commitment
  • Able to influence legislation for professional
    qualifications
  • May be able to influence workplace practices

29
Developing Internal Forecasts
  • Markov Analysis and Large Group Action Plans
  • Replacement and succession planning

30
Developing Internal Labor Shortfall Estimates
  • Managerial judgment
  • Based on informal estimates
  • Probably accurate for individual positions
  • Can take complex situations in the environment
    and context into account
  • Quantitative techniques
  • Based on formal projections
  • Accurate in general for large numbers of
    positions
  • Can only consider previous trends

31
Internal analysis using a Transition matrix
32
Internal analysis using a Transition matrix
33
Internal analysis using a Transition matrix
34
Internal analysis using a Transition matrix
35
Internal analysis using a Transition matrix
36
So What Do We Do with This Information?
  • First, identify likely areas of discrepancy
  • Then, create action plans for each position
  • How can we address the shortages of entry level
    managers and assistant managers?
  • How can we address the excess number of associate
    and general managers?
  • How are these strategies interdependent

37
The Missing Piece from Markov Analysis Strategy
  • Assume that the company we assessed is in the oil
    and gas industry
  • What trends might change the number of people we
    have?
  • What other types of breakdowns might we want to
    assess?
  • Managers by skill specialization?
  • Managers by region of the world?
  • What strategic pieces of information would also
    contribute to decision making?

38
Succession Planning
  • Specific individuals for specific jobs
  • Usually for upper management
  • For promotion from within
  • Why would it be done?
  • Need to consider KSAO in depth to ensure no
    skills gaps in critical positions
  • Develop estimates for future career growth to
    help employees understand career tracks
  • Recognize where future training will be needed

39
Typical Replacement Chart
40
Succession Planning
  • Builds specific training areas on top of
    replacement charts
  • Sometimes performed with software as a
    developmental aide

41
Succession Plan Example
42
An Example of HRIS Succession Planning Software
43
Core vs. Flexible Workforce
  • Legal contracts and employment status
  • Psychological contracts and employee commitment
  • When core vs. flexible workforce arrangements are
    most beneficial

44
Fundamental Principles in the Employment
Relationship
  • Legal contracts
  • Formal documents
  • Binding in court
  • Explicit terms
  • Psychological contracts
  • Informal agreements
  • Not binding
  • Implicit terms

45
Legal Concepts of Contracting and Employment
Relationships
  • Four principles of legal contracts
  • Mutual assent both parties agree
  • Consideration exchange of goods or services
  • Legal intention no illegal terms
  • Contractual capacity both parties of sound mind

46
The Formal Employment Relationship
  • The law recognizes employment as a unique
    relationship
  • Common law test
  • Perform work under the direction of the employer
  • Are paid for completion of specific tasks
  • A few elements from the IRS test (not legally
    binding)
  • Hiring, supervising, paying, or terminating other
    employees
  • Continuing relationship between worker and
    employee
  • Set hours of work, set mode of completing work
  • Payment for hours worked rather than by the job
  • Do not realize profit or loss through management
    of resources
  • Services are not made available to the general
    public (i.e. the relationship is exclusive)

47
Employees or independent contractors?
  • Employee
  • An agent who is under the principals control
    regarding the physical details of work
  • Independent contractor
  • An agent who exercises his/her own control
    regarding the physical details of work
  • Additional costs associated with employees
  • Benefits like health insurance, pensions, etc.
  • More legal coverage for EEO law, minimum wages,
    etc.
  • Dont have to pay contractors if work is
    inadequate
  • Vicarious liability (i.e. employers liable for
    employee actions)

48
Progressive standards for involuntary turnover
  • Employment at will
  • Employers can fire employees for no reason.
  • Varies widely from state to state.
  • Discharge with recompense
  • Discharge for no reason, but employers required
    to provide severance or at least a warning.
  • Many western European nations include mandatory
    severance payments to those who are discharged.
  • Discharge only for cause
  • Must prove employee negligence or economic
    hardship
  • In the U.S., this is mostly for unions
  • More common in western Europe
  • Many western European nations have longer average
    durations of unemployment, which has been
    attributed to job protections

49
Erosion of at will comes from two sources
  • Labor law
  • One initial bar on at will termination is the
    provision in the National Labor Relations Act
    that forbids firing of workers for union
    sentiments.
  • Additionally, union contracts also set guidelines
    for when terminations are and are not permissible.
  • Discrimination law
  • Extending the NLRA protections, Title VII, ADEA,
    and ADA all require non-discrimination in terms,
    conditions, and privileges of employment, which
    encompasses terminations.
  • Also incorporates whistleblower provisions for
    these acts.

50
Specific reasons for erosion of the at will
standard
  • Implied contract
  • Cannot terminate after promising long term
    employment or the presence of a contract
  • Often in employee handbooks or oral statements
    like, Youve got a long future ahead of you
    here.
  • Covenant of good faith and fair dealing
  • Cannot terminate employees to deprive
    benefits/commissions, or prevent pension vesting.
  • Public policy
  • Cannot fire employees for refusing to perform
    illegal acts, whistleblowing, or exercising
    rights provided by law or civic duty (e.g., jury
    duty).

51
Legal Concepts of Contracting and Employment
Relationships
  • Additional principles of psychological contracts
  • Incompleteness due to bounded rationality all
    contracts cant spell out all the details so
    people fill them in individually
  • Automatic processesmental models prevent people
    from recognizing when contract terms have changed

52
Examples of Core vs. Flexible Workforce Decisions
  • Tanglewood
  • Core employees?
  • Flexible employees?
  • Hospital chain
  • Core employees?
  • Flexible employees?
  • Think about places youve worked in these terms

53
Affirmative Action
  • Definitions
  • Critical themes underlying the debate over
    affirmative action
  • Methods for implementing affirmative action

54
Affirmative action Redressing the past or
revisiting it?
  • Individually
  • For two minutes write down every single word that
    comes to mind when you think of affirmative
    action
  • Define what you think an affirmative action plan
    is in a single sentence (be specific)
  • Define what you think cannot be part of an
    affirmative action plan
  • Small group
  • Come up with the three most common free
    association words
  • Develop a consensus on the facts of affirmative
    action
  • Develop a consensus on what affirmative action
    isnt

55
What Do We Know about Perceptions of AA?
  • You will find many differences in perspectives
  • Minorities are typically more in favor of AA
    programs
  • Political ideology is also an important component
  • Why might this be the case?
  • Self-interest?
  • A sense of entitlement?
  • Expectations for fair treatment?

56
Kravitz Klineberg Reactions to Two Versions of
Affirmative Action
  • Major question do different racial/ethnic groups
    have different thought processes that explain
    differences in preference for AA
  • Several factors that might influence why there
    are differences in preferences for AA
  • Who stands to gain?
  • Belief in prejudices
  • Political orientation

57
Kravitz Klineberg Reactions to Two Versions of
Affirmative Action
  • Elements of individual preferences
  • Structuralist (vs. individualist) explanations
    for inequality
  • Democrat vs. Republican
  • Belief in levels of discrimination
  • Elements of procedure preferences
  • Tiebreaks will be preferred to typical or
    undefined AA types
  • Systems that emphasize elimination of past
    discrimination will be preferred

58
Kravitz Klineberg Reactions to Two Versions of
Affirmative Action
  • Sample and method
  • One of the most diverse sets of participants in
    this research field
  • Study from the 1998 Houston Area phone survey
  • Attitudes assed as
  • Evaluation of a companys typical affirmative
    action plan on a 1-7 scale
  • Evaluation of a hiring policy where there are two
    candidates with exactly the same qualifications,
    and Blacks are underrepresented in the company

59
Kravitz Klineberg Reactions to Two Versions of
Affirmative Action
  • Perception that procedures give unfair advantage
    was a primary predictor of preferences
  • Those who though there was discrimination against
    African Americans preferred both procedures
  • Republicans and Whites disliked the typical
    procedure, but did not object to the tiebreak

60
Kravitz Klineberg Reactions to Two Versions of
Affirmative Action
  • Focus here is on the typical program
  • Different predictors for each group.
  • White preferences for typical were easiest to
    model (highest multiple R)
  • Results were much weaker for the tiebreak
    procedure

61
Kravitz Klineberg Reactions to Two Versions of
Affirmative Action
  • Implications
  • Belief that AA policies give unfair advantage was
    an important predictor
  • Belief that AAP involve preferential treatment
    was also significant
  • White reactions were much more related to their
    perceptions of degree of discrimination against
    African Americans
  • Hispanics were less concerned about historical
    discrimination

62
Why do perspectives differdoes discrimination
exist?
  • People who strongly prefer the merit principle
    are more likely to be opposed to affirmative
    action
  • However, when they believe discrimination exists,
    these meritocratic individuals like affirmative
    action
  • Differences in beliefs about AA between
    racial/ethnic groups may be because of
    differences in beliefs about the existence of
    discrimination

63
Affirmative action A question of stigmatization
  • Ward Connerly
  • Supported Californias Prop. 209
  • "The use of race does not get us beyond race."
  • Race has become a "social construct" where
    minorities are perceived as being on the outside
    trying to get in.
  • Clarence Thomas
  • Opposing vote on affirmative action at UMich
  • it is an open question today whether their skin
    color played a part in their advancement.

64
Research on stigmas and affirmative action
  • Scenarios describing a hypothetical
    organizations affirmative action plan were
    provided
  • When the company used completely equal
    opportunity, black candidates were described as
    more achievement oriented than whites
  • When the company used a preference for
    minorities, black candidates were described as
    less achievement oriented than whites
  • Also found in field research

65
Summary of the Research Evidence
  • Broad areas of agreement
  • Most people think consideration of minority
    status is okay when qualifications are equal
  • Most people oppose quotas and preferential
    treatment
  • Minorities and non-minorities are just as opposed
    to AA if they think it gives unfair advantage
  • An explanation for disagreement
  • Minorities and non-minorities both are more
    favorably disposed to AA if they think that there
    is a lot of discrimination
  • There is division with communities of minorities
    regarding the potential stigmatizing influence of
    AA

66
Affirmative action Redressing the past or
revisiting it?
  • So what is affirmative action?
  • Intentional inclusion of women and minorities in
    the workplace based on a finding of their
    previous exclusion
  • Continually keeping statistics on representation
    of various groups across several levels of the
    organization to see if there are problems
  • Affirmative action plans are established noting
    the goals for inclusion of individuals and
    timelines
  • Sample language
  • (Employer's Name) will take Affirmative Action to
    ensure that all employment practices are free of
    such discrimination. Such employment practices
    include, but are not limited to, the following
    hiring, upgrading, demotion, transfer,
    recruitment or recruitment advertising,
    selection, layoff, disciplinary action,
    termination, rates of pay or other forms of
    compensation, and selection for training,
    including apprenticeship.

67
What are the Effects of AA Policies?
  • Surveys from a large number of employers suggest
    that affirmative action policies
  • Increase firms willingness to hire women and
    underrepresented minorities
  • Increase the number of women and minority
    applicants as well as the number of women and
    minorities who apply
  • Yields applicants who are somewhat less qualified
  • Increases employer expenditures on recruiting,
    screening, and training practices, which helps to
    offset the effects of lower applicant
    qualifications on subsequent job performance
  • Source Holzer and Neumark, What Does Affirmative
    Action Do? Industrial and Labor Relations Review,
    2000.

68
What are the Effects of AA Policies?
  • Studies examining EEO-1 reports alongside
    managerial reports of firm policies show
  • Efforts to moderate managerial bias through
    diversity training and diversity evaluations are
    least effective at increasing white women, black
    women, and black men in management.
  • Efforts to attack social isolation through
    mentoring and networking show modest effects.
  • Efforts to establish responsibility for diversity
    through affirmative action policies and standing
    diversity committees and officers lead to the
    broadest increases in managerial diversity.
  • Source Kalev, Dobbin, Kelly Best Practices or
    Best Guesses Assessing the Efficacy of Corporate
    Affirmative Action and Diversity Policies.
    American Sociological Review, 2007.

69
How Widespread is AA?
  • Executive order 11246 mandated that all federal
    contractors must
  • take affirmative action to ensure all individuals
    have equal opportunity for employment
  • have a formal written plan for affirmative action
  • What does it take to be a federal contractor?
  • If you receive over 50,000 and over 50 employees
  • So what kinds of companies are covered?
  • In total, about 22 of the countrys workforce is
    covered by an AAP

70
Affirmative action Redressing the past or
revisiting it?
  • Affirmative action is sometimes required
  • As a remedy for discriminatory behavior
  • For anyone getting federal contract money (Ex.
    Order 11246)
  • Social services agencies
  • Some universities
  • Construction companies

71
Recent court decisions The University of Michigan
  • Points policy (undergraduate)
  • 80 for academic GPA from tenth and eleventh
    grades
  • 12 points for standardized test scores.
  • Geography 10 points - Michigan resident
  • Alumni 4 points - "Legacy" (parents,
    step-parents)
  • Essay 3 points - Outstanding essay
  • Leadership and service1 point State 3 points
    Regional 5 points National
  • Miscellaneous 20 points - Socio-economic
    disadvantage 20 points - Underrepresented
    minority 5 points - Men in nursing 20 points -
    Scholarship athlete
  • Totality of the applicant policy (law school)

72
Within-Group Norming One Proposed Solution
Scenario 20 applicants for a warehouse
job Top-down hiring Pick the 10 strongest (here,
7 men and 3 women) Within group norming Hire the
5 strongest women and the 5 strongest men
Strength
Within group norming
Top down hiring
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
Males
Females
73
Affirmative action Policies and Limitations
  • What can be done?
  • Recruiting
  • Advertisement in publications targeted to women
    or minorities
  • Recruiting at historically black universities
  • Encouraging women and minorities to apply
  • Staffing
  • Preferring certain groups if qualifications are
    equivalent
  • Providing additional training
  • What cannot be done?
  • Bakke vs. U of California
  • No set aside programs
  • Similar decision2002 Boston firefighters
  • CRA 1991
  • No within-group norms
  • No quotas
  • UMich undergraduate
  • Cannot give points
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