The big problem with these US management approaches is that they all stem from the early part of the 20th century, and are all related to Taylorism; the ideas of Frederick Taylor about 'efficiency' that were developed to manage manual labour (and were never proven to work). Fordism was a development of that where Ford split jobs into simple repetitive tasks, but paid his people a decent wage; that worked up until the 70s when people got sick of being treated like mechanical objects and the 'blue collar blues' damaged industry in both the US and the UK, while the Germans and Japanese had moved on to more participatory forms of management.
In the 1900s, manual labour was cheap and readily available; the US was experiencing an immigration driven boom, and for every job there were 10 fresh young, strong immigrants ready to take over. That's not the case in knowledge industries now, so anyone applying the management methods derived from those days is clearly a dangerous idiot; sadly, the whole MBA scheme still seems to be based on ideas from 100 years ago, which apparently worked in an entirely different environment. That's why I say it should be scrapped, on not a penny of public money should go into business degrees and MBAs, and none of them should be officially recognised until they've reformed and caught up with the modern world.
Oh, and outsourcing to low wage countries is an extension of the same failed ideas, and doomed to fail.
In the 1900s, manual labour was cheap and readily available; the US was experiencing an immigration driven boom, and for every job there were 10 fresh young, strong immigrants ready to take over. That's not the case in knowledge industries now, so anyone applying the management methods derived from those days is clearly a dangerous idiot; sadly, the whole MBA scheme still seems to be based on ideas from 100 years ago, which apparently worked in an entirely different environment. That's why I say it should be scrapped, on not a penny of public money should go into business degrees and MBAs, and none of them should be officially recognised until they've reformed and caught up with the modern world.
Oh, and outsourcing to low wage countries is an extension of the same failed ideas, and doomed to fail.
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