Brú Bautista, Enrique. Empresa
humanizada: trabajo decente y productividad. (The
humanized company: decent work and productivity). Inter-american
Technical Bulletin on Vocational Training. Montevideo, Cinterfor/ILO.
Nº 153, 2002.
It deals with the close relationship between
the concepts of productivity and decent work. Through the analysis
of processes and mechanisms of productivity improvement and
economic growth, both of countries and enterprises, the author
arrives at the conclusion that productivity and decent work
are two links of the same chain and they both affect each other.
Chacaltana, Juan; García, Norberto. Reforma
laboral, capacitación y productividad. La experiencia
peruana. (Labour reform, training and productivity.
The Peruvian experience). Lima: ILO, 2001.
In most Latin American countries, labour reform
processes have introduced significant changes in the structure
of private wage employment. In broad terms, employment under
an indefinite term contract has suffered a relative reduction,
while employment under a fixed term or temporary contract or
employment under no written contract have increased.
It is necessary to ask oneself what the economic
and productive implications of this situation will be in the
long term. Firstly, what will the productivity potential of
these workers be in the future if, as it can be guessed, only
a few employers are willing to invest in training and the qualification
of people hired over a certain period of time and who can leave
the company after receiving training? Secondly, what strategies
could be applied to achieve a sustained increase in productivity
in enterprises that can have more than half of their payroll
without any contract or under a temporary contract?
The authors arrive at the conclusion that when
more labour turnover takes place in the labour market, as a
result of the increase in temporary contract hiring, little
incentives have been given -in the margin - to enterprise-based
labour training. In that sense, they point out that "enterprises
that show high staff turnover levels have 28 per cent less possibilities
of investing in training than those which do not have this kind
of turnover".
As a result, the direct effect of labour turnover
on productivity is negative. In that sense "it was found
that enterprises that provide training generate 25 per cent
more added value than those that do not do so, by exerting control
through other variables such as business size, level of assets
and activity sector. It could also be confirmed that enterprises
which stop spending on training (100 per cent reduction), suffer
a 9 per cent reduction in their productivity levels".
Cinterfor/ILO. Vocational
training, productivity and decent work. Inter-american
Technical Bulletin on Vocational Training. Number 153, 2002.
This issue of the Bulletin gathers the main
documents presented at the Tripartite Inter-American Seminar
on Vocational Training, Productivity and Decent Work and it
also includes other articles which tackle the subjects dealt
with at this important event from different perspectives. Moreover,
it introduces a series of charts which were prepared from the
national reports presented by each delegation at the Seminar
and gives a general overview of vocational training in the countries
represented as well as some private initiatives taken by different
social actors in this field.
Labarca, Guillermo. Formación
de recursos humanos en la industria gráfica chilena.
(Human resources training in the Chilean graphical industry).
In: Labarca, Guillermo (Comp.) Training and enterprise: training
in the process of productive restructuring. Montevideo: Cinterfor/ILO,
1999. (Tools for Change, 11).
The overall objective of this study is to provide
information in order to give back up to proposed policies on
training, with the purpose of improving productivity in industrial
production. Some of the conclusions of this study are: any kind
of training for work (formal or specialised) requires a training
period to be spent on the job; detecting human resources is
a key element of training strategies; the "enterprise culture"
is a determining influence to the productive insertion of workers
and it is the necessary complement of their training processes;
workers are not the only ones who learn, enterprises do so too.
It implies mainly the access to new knowledge and its internalisation,
which is decisive when new technologies are introduced in the
productive process or in management.
Martínez Espinoza, Eduardo. La
formación profesional en una economía moderna.
(Vocational training in a modern economy). Inter-american
Technical Bulletin on Vocational Training. Montevideo, Cinterfor/ILO.
Nº 154, 2003.
The article deals with the different dimensions
of the relationship between training and the economic performance
of enterprises and countries, mainly through topics such as
productivity, competitiveness and labour market.
Mertens, Leonard. Diez
años SIMAPRO en la industria azucarera: balance y perspectivas.
(Ten years of SIMAPRO in the sugar industry: evaluation and
perspectives). Seventh National Meeting of SIMAPRO (System
for the Measurement and Improvement of Productivity) and Decent
Work on Sugar Refineries, CINTERFOR/ILO, Guadalajara (Jal),
12-13 May, 2005.
Mertens, Leonard. Training,
productivity and labour competencies in organisations: concepts,
methodologies and experiences. Montevideo:
Cinterfor/ILO, 2002. (Training Features, 15).
The purpose of this study is to show that it
is feasible and profitable to enhance the productivity and working
conditions of organisations through the ongoing learning of
their personnel. Training and productivity are, according to
the author, concepts which are closely related. If increasing
productivity implies working in a more intelligent manner, but
not necessarily harder, then it is understood that it is not
possible to increase productivity in enterprises unless training
actions are developed for workers in the company. It relates
the concept of training with the approaches on knowledge management
and learning organisations where training is provided to all
members of the organisation. Management modalities and instruments
of successful training experiences at enterprises in Latin America
and the Caribbean are analysed. To do so, specific experiences
of methodologies applied in businesses in Mexico and the Dominican
Republic are included.
Novick, Marta. Experiencias
exitosas de capacitación de empresas innovadoras en América
Latina y el Caribe. (Successful training experiences
by innovating enterprises in Latin America and the Caribbean).In:
Labarca, Guillermo (Comp.) Training and enterprise: training
in the process of productive restructuring. Montevideo: Cinterfor/ILO,
1999. (Tools for Change, 11).
This document advances in the reflection upon
the dynamics existing between the development of firms' competitive
ability and the training models used by innovating enterprises.
Training strategies developed by dynamic enterprises in Latin
America and the Caribbean are analysed; in addition, different
aspects of successful experiences are described and those which
are considered to have contributed to good performance are especially
mentioned. One of the central questions of the paper is: what
role do training strategies and human resources management play
in the development of learning at the enterprise? Are they associated
dimensions? Are they complementary, necessary or opposite? The
paper proves that successful training takes place within the
internal system of the firm. On the other hand, various types
of factors that influence training success are considered, for
example, organisational issues, human resources management policy,
strategic, methodological and technical aspects.
Ruffier, Jean. Productive
efficiency: how factories work. Montevideo: Cinterfor/ILO,
1998.
This work is placed at the intersection of sociology,
economy and engineering science and it provides a new type of
analysis based on a series of studies developed in all continents
by an international research team. It rejects the option of
an economic war fought by everyone against everyone and it introduces
some instruments for those who want to be the creators of new
wealth. Finally, it shows that a modern productive system is
nourished by relationships that go beyond the company's scope.
It forces us to rethink production bonds.
Valle, Rogerio. Calificación
y entrenamiento en empresas dinámicas de Río de
Janeiro. (Qualification and training at dynamic enterprises
in Rio de Janeiro). In: Labarca, Guillermo (Comp.) Training
and enterprise: training in the process of productive restructuring.
Montevideo: Cinterfor/ILO, 1999. (Tools for Change, 11).
This paper introduces an analysis on training
policies developed by four dynamic enterprises in Rio de Janeiro.
The four enterprises are engaged in: material reproduction,
oil chemistry, beer production and nuclear energy. The economic
and social context as well as the business restructuring processes
are taken into account as a necessary reference framework to
understand strategies concerning human resources and workers'
training. These companies have had to introduce changes in their
business strategies, their internal industrial relations, their
relationship with the environment and the State and they also
had to alter their technical culture, that is, the knowledge
reservoir of human and material resources available in the enterprise.
Each of them follows a different development path in which training
strategies are designed.
Cinterfor/OIT. Proyecto
de competencias laborales. Una experiencia con el método
AMOD (Project on labour competencies. An experience
with AMOD method).
The following document gives account of an experience
carried out in Uruguay as part of the preparation to a course
that was to be run at expert Leonard Merten's second mission
in Uruguay in July 1998. During that time, an experience with
AMOD was developed. It consisted of an application experience
and then training in that methodology. Training institutions
and enterprises of Montevideo took part in the experience ("Casa
de la mujer", as a training institution within the framework
of PROJOVEN programme and the company MACROMERCADO, a supermarket
engaged both as a wholesaler and retailer). AMOD method is easy
and quick to apply since it allows to provide short-term solutions
regarding training. This text describes its application and
the main conclusions drawn from such practice.