RELATIONS Week 7 Collective bargaining Collective bargaining • Negotiation about wages & conditions of work • Between an employer & representatives of employees (usually a union) • Non union – work directly with MOM • Labour inspectors work with employers on back pay and termination issues • Hearing before Com of Labour if necessary under EA • With the aim of arriving at an agreement Bilateral • Usually no third party • Can have a third party assist bargaining with conciliation‚ even arbitration
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CASE: TOYOTA‚ FORD‚ GM AND VOLKSWAGEN- SOME DIFFERING OPINIONS ABOUT WORKING WITH SUPPLIERS. CASE SUMMARY: The main issues at stake in this case is the working relationship Toyota has with its suppliers‚ compared to other Auto manufacturers such as ford and General Motors. Another critical issue is which sets of parts should be standardized. Both Ford and GM have embraced the concept of an electronic market place for motor vehicle parts. The AutoX-change as it is called would bring automakers and
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Supplier Appraisal Tires are important components of a car. Manufacturing tires for car companies and for the regular car owner is highly profitable as cars being bought by the millions every year. I am the owner of “Carbonic Tires” a well known tire manufacturing company named after one of the major ingredients in making tires and give it reinforcement. I have a ten million peso budget for the next quarter to spend for buying two important materials in manufacturing tires‚ Natural Rubber and
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Case study 2: Toyota- taking out costs and adding value Over the last 30 years‚ Toyota Motor Corporation has become one of the top three global car companies‚ alongside General Motors (US) and Ford (US). Its rise centres on twin strategies related to operations and marketing. This case study concentrates mainly on its operations successes but also touches briefly on marketing‚ since the two areas are interlinked. The Toyota operations strategies have been copied around the world‚ though rarely
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Seventy four years since its founding‚ Toyota Motor is almost at the pinnacle of the global auto industry‚ having overtaken Ford Motor and General Motors in vehicle sales. Toyota was established in 1937 in Japan. Toyota has grown from being a small Japanese carmaker in the 1960s to the biggest carmaker in 2007‚ outranking General Motors. The founding principles for this success were embodies by the “Toyota Way” – a respect for learning‚ truth‚ trust‚ team-work‚ challenge and continuous improvement
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Plea Bargaining Paper Linda Robinson CJA/224 09/29/2014 Many successful criminal prosecutions in the Unites States end not with Jury trials‚ but with plea bargains. Plea bargains are agreements between defendants and prosecutors where defendants agree to plead guilty to some or all of the charges against them in exchange for concessions from the prosecutors. These agreements allow prosecutors to focus their time and resources on other cases and reduce the number of trials that judges need
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The Toyota Way From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation‚ search The Toyota Way is a set of principles and behaviors that underlie the Toyota Motor Corporation’s managerial approach and production system. Toyota first summed up its philosophy‚ values and manufacturing ideals in 2001‚ calling it “The Toyota Way 2001.” It consists of principles in two key areas: 1) continuous improvement and 2) respect for people:[1][2][3][4] |Contents
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SUPPLIER RELIABILITY The components of supplier reliability cover both response time and quality. The more often a supplier is unreliable‚ the greater is the tendency for its customers to hold more safety inventory to compensate for supplier incompetence. By changing suppliers or improving existing supplier reliability‚ a business can reduce its safety inventory levels in the knowledge that the supplier can support the business efficiently. The main variables are as follows: • Response time
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1Toyota the world largest automaker. Continuing gas pedal problems prompted Toyota to recall 2.17 million cars Thursday - marking the third time the automaker has made such a move since 2009. Toyota issued the recall at the urging of the U.S. Department of Transportation. The world’s No. 1 automaker said the recall will address a problem with accelerator pedals getting jammed under floor mats or driver’s side carpeting. The new recall includes 600‚000 4Runner SUVs made between 2003 and 2009
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AMRITA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS‚ AMRITAPURI TOYOTA (TOYOTA MOTOR CO. AND ITS SUPPLIERS) IN CHINA INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS PROJECT INTRODUCTION The Chinese automobile sector is one of the key sectors which was benefited by the policy reforms that started in 1987 in China. This industry has posted double digit growth rates in the past two decades and is promising to sustain that growth rate in the future also. According to Hua Wang (Policy Reforms and Foreign Direct Investment: The Case of
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