With the increasing competition in today’s globalized market, lowering costs to maintain profits or to survive in the industry is the focal point of most organisations. Therefore, layoffs have become a common tactic of organisations to reduce labour and operation costs. There is no denying that reducing a workforce could improve efficiency and contains several benefits; however, it also has a number of drawbacks and even brings long-term pernicious effects to organisations. In the following paragraphs, three major points will be discussed, including the selection process to decide who lay off, the possible negative effects, and the strategies to minimize the negative outcomes using theories of organisational justice.
Organisational justice has three major components, the ‘three-factor model’, which includes distributive, procedural and interactional justice, which appears to be correlated with each other (Ambrose and Arnaud, 2005; Ambrose and Schminke, 2007, cited in Cropanzano et al. 2007, p. 3). It has been argued by Cropanzano et al. (2007) that the impression and results of downsizing are so negative that workers perceive distributive injustice directly. However, the interactive effects of the three aspects of justice provide us with a chance to remedy the pernicious effects of certain injustices (Townsend and Wilkinson 2011, p.388; Skarlicki and Folger 1997).
In the context of a small retail chain where 10% of 90 workers are to be made redundant, 9 workers are planned to be laid off. Starting from the selection and appraisal system, the
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