Fordism
By: Steve • Research Paper • 1,268 Words • November 16, 2009 • 1,428 Views
Essay title: Fordism
“Fordism Is Dead”
BBLS 3 Group 2 Team 2
Definitions:
Fordism encompasses systems of mass production and consumption characteristics of highly developed economies in the 1940’s – 1960’s. At the time the emphasis turned towards specialisation, standardisation and control. Mass production rested on presumption that activities should be simplified and controlled from above.
Post Fordism was seen as a direct confrontation with principles of fordism. It involved the introduction of an increasingly skilled, highly motivated and extremely flexible workforce. The main aim was to engender flexibility and innovation through the decentralization of power.
Neo Fordism was originally subsumed under the more general concept of post fordism. It involves modification of fordist practices rather than direct confrontation. Changes with Neo fordism includes centralizing research and management functions in advanced industrialized nations, transference of production to lower cost countries, and use of flexible patterns of production and labour organizations in order to reduce costs.
Effects of a Changing Economy:
1. Globalisation
Need to be flexible with ability to reconfigure resources in order to take full advantage of potential benefits of globalization. There may be advantages to coordinating activities on a worldwide scale but shouldn’t ignore opportunities at a local level – aspects of standardization and flexibility need to be integrated. Increased globalization means increased complexity for a firm and thus the bureaucratic firms associated with Fordism need to be adapted to deal with complexity.
2. New Technologies
New technologies have facilitated greater interdependence between organizations. Options created by the internet and ICT have led to a whole new area of choice as to organization structures. Technology has enabled greater flexibility in production and also aided the development of mass production. Therefore technology has facilitated the expansion of Fordism practices in relation to production but also allowed firms move away from Fordism and the original organization structures.
3. Knowledge Based Environment
Value is increasingly being created through how information and knowledge flows & hence organizing to maximize efficiency of production is less relevant. Given that Fordism was based on premise of mass production combined with lower costs we can clearly see how the importance of Fordism is waning. Growth of low cost production economies has resulted in twin needs for organizations: to motivate individuals to contribute to organizational knowledge generation and to devise organizational arrangements to support organizational learning processes. The bureaucratic & rigid structure used in fordism period doesn’t actively encourage such needs & must be adapted.
4. Hyper-competition
Markets are being redefined as consumers develop new needs and wants. Industry boundaries are eroded and there is increased pressure on firms in the form of increased competition and demands from consumers. Organisations must be able to adapt and reconfigure spontaneously if they wish to survive.
5. Social Awareness
Organisations need to consider numerous categories including employees, customers, society and competitors. They can no longer simply focus on cost and neglect other issues, which was the case during the height of Fordism. Many companies have moved to lower cost countries as laws regarding employee relations are weak. Question remains, will these countries continue to allow organizations ignore their social obligations or will all firms have to give up their domineering fordist practices in the near future?
The Ford Company:
Old Culture:
Dominant fordist strategies were predicated upon product market stability and maximization of scale of economies through a highly integrated division of labour based on dedicated machinery, deskilling of labour and direct managerial control with finely defined tasks and centralized planning of work. Fordist principles gave rise to inflexibility, problems when demand changed, low trust, adversial relations and alienated/reserved workers. Conflicts between departments resulted in deadlocks and the greatest cost was waste of time.
Changes:
Competitiveness, empowerment and humanity deemed to be new important focuses in the company hence the firm established PMI (Participative