Corporate Decisionmaking and the Moral Rights of Employees: Participatory Management and Natural Law: Participatory management--the philosophy of involving employees in corporate decisionmaking--arguably is the most important industrial relations phenomenon of the last three decades. It has been endorsed by such disparate figures as President Bill Clinton and Pope John Paul II. Thousands of U.S. firms have adopted one form of employee involvement or another. Insofar as the academic literature on participatory management is concerned with normative questions, it is dominated by calls for some form or another of government-mandated employee participation in corporate decisionmaking. Normative analyses of participatory management by pro-mandate scholars have developed two justifications for government intervention: One sounds in the language of economics, typically arguing that participatory management is an efficient system of organizing production that is nevertheless being thwarted by various market failures requiring governmental correction. I have explored this argument elsewhere, concluding that government-mandated employee involvement cannot be justified on economic grounds [Stephen M. Bainbridge, Privately Ordered Participatory Management: An Organizational Failures Analysis, (1998)].
In this Article, I evaluate the other set of pro-mandate arguments; namely, the claim that employees have a right to participate in corporate governance. On close examination, much of the normative literature on employee participation amounts to little more than "rights talk," i.e., political rhetoric dressed up in legal and/or moral rights terminology. For ideologically motivated proponents of employee participation, this is a useful debating tactic because our culture's fixation with individual rights imbues any rights-based claim with an air of legitimacy and incontrovertibility. Using rights-based terminology to phrase the question, however, often impedes or even precludes meaningful analysis. The task before us is thus two-fold. First, we must subject the claim that employees have a right to participate in corporate governance to a rigorous process of specification and assessment. Second, we must ask whether this right--as so specified--merits codification into positive law. I have two principal foils in this article. The first is Roman Catholic social teaching on work and capitalism, which offers the most fully realized statement of natural law principles applicable to the problem at hand. The second is a body of literature to which I will refer as secular humanist. This literature consists mainly of rights talk drawing on precepts of humanistic psychology. Although scholars approaching the problem from this angle thus are not working within a natural law paradigm, their work deserves examination both because it has certain superficial similarities with Catholic social teaching and because it represents the other dominant theory upon which rights-based claims are made in support of government-mandated participatory management. Although both the relevant Catholic social teachings and secular humanist arguments are complex and nuanced, both fairly can be said to emphasize two basic claims. First, participation is asserted to be an essential mechanism for full development of human personality. Self-realization and self-actualization are the conceptual engines driving this claim. Second, participation is posited to be an essential feature of human dignity. I have identified three basic ways in which participation might be related to human dignity: Participation may promote trust between employers and employees. Participation promotes workplace democracy. Participation rights protect employees from opportunistic conduct by employers. I argue only the latter theory rises to the level of plausibility, and it cannot justify government-mandated employee participation.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
I must say I was heartened by the recent posts of Father Araujo and Eduardo Penalver. Araujo tells me that I may not be a Catholic if I do not have a certain kind of "allegiance to Peter." (Like Eduardo (not to mention most American Catholics), I suspect that I do not have the kind of loyalty that Araujo has in mind though it is hard to be sure).
Penalver tells me that I do not leave the Church even if I sign up with the Episcopalians or the United Church of Christ ("at least in some sense" - a sense that Penalver believes Araujo could not subscribe to). My own view is that the Catholic Church has a large tent. How large that tent might be is contested. Some would see a much smaller tent than I. It would be hard to deny that MOJ has a large tent, however. So I am heartened.
New York Times
September 2, 2007
Safety Agency Faces Scrutiny Amid Changes
By ERIC LIPTON
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 — In March 2005, the Consumer Product Safety Commission
called together the nation’s top safety experts to confront an alarming
statistic: 44,000 children riding all terrain vehicles were injured the
previous year, nearly 150 of them fatally.
National associations of pediatricians, consumer advocates and
emergency room doctors were urging the commission to ban sales of
adult-size A.T.V.’s for use by children under 16 because the machines
were too big and fast for young drivers to control. But when it came
time to consider such a step, a staff member whose name did not appear
on the meeting agenda unexpectedly weighed in.
“My own view is the situation is not necessarily deteriorating,”
said John Gibson Mullan, the agency’s director of compliance and a
former lawyer for the A.T.V. industry, according to a recording. The
current system of warning labels and other voluntary safety standards
was working, he said. “We would need to be very careful about making
any changes.”
Robin L. Ingle, then the agency’s hazard statistician and A.T.V.
injury expert, was dumbfounded. Her months of research did not support
Mr. Mullan’s analysis. Yet she would not get to offer a rebuttal.
“He had hijacked the presentation,” Ms. Ingle said in an interview.
“He was distorting the numbers in order to benefit industry and defeat
the petition. It was almost like he still worked for them, not us.”
[To read the rest, click here.]