THE
IMPACT OF EMPLOYEES PARTICIPATION IN DECISION MAKING IN NIGERIAN PUBLIC SECTORS
(A CASE STUDY OF POWER HOLDING
COMPANY OF NIGERIA (PHCN) ENUGU)
ABSTRACT
In a
centralized organization, employees are not allowed to participate in decision
making. This is because it is feared that they are not competent and as a
result will not contribute meaningfully in decision of the organization. The
essence of this project research is to assess the impact of employees
participation in decision making in Nigerian public sector. The study was
designed with descriptive survey method. Questionnaire interview including
library materials were also used in collecting data. A test technique was used
in testing for reliability of instrument. Research questions were posed and the
understated hypothesis tested with chi-square method. Employees participation
serves as a training and testing ground for future members of upper management,
lack of qualified and company oriented individuals undermine employees‟
participation in decision making and the availability of skilled individuals in
organizational decision making promotes productivity. However, it was concluded
accordingly, that employee‟s participation serves as a training and testing
ground for future members of upper management. Lack of qualified and
company-oriented individuals undermine employees participation in decision
making. Availability of skilled individuals in organizational decision making
promotes productivity.
CHAPTER ONE
1.0
INTRODUCTION
Employee
participation is creating an environment in which people have an impact on
decision and actions that affect their jobs. Employee participation is not the
goal nor is it a tool, as practiced in Nigerian Public sectors. Rather,
employee participation is a management and leadership philosophy about how
people are most enabled to contribute to continuous improvement and the on
going success of the public sectors. Anyanwuocha (2003) explained that public
sector are government or state owned business organizations, which are usually
set up by act of legislation, with the main aim of maximizing public welfare.
Moving decision making power downward in public sector is at the core of what
employee participation is all about. Teams are a potentially powerful way to
move power downward. The employee participation have also been implemented in
the Nigerian public sectors in order to motivate the employees by involving
them with the management for taking serious decisions about the public sector.
Research on
employee participation begun to provide information on the number and types of
programmes that exist, their structure and their effects on a variety of
social-psychological, production and economic issues in the public sector. To
date, little is known about the financial condition of the Nigerian public
sectors with employee participation in decision making. Although the popular
literature suggest that employee participation in decision making has been implemented
in the Nigerian public sector in distress and has been effective in restoring
financial health.
1.1 BACKGROUND
OF THE STUDY
It should be
recent that a decision is a choice whereby a person forms a conclusion about a
situation. Gostell L. Wand Zalkind S.S. (1963) defined the term decision making
as a choice process, choosing one from among several possibilities. This
depicts a course of behaviour about what must be done or vice versa. Decision
however translated into concrete action. Planning engenders decision guided by
company policy and objectives, policies, procedures and programmes.
The aim of
decision making is to channel human behaviour towards a future goal.
Decision-making is however one of the most important activities of management.
It has been the pre-occupation of all management of multifarious organization
to multi-national corporations. Managers often consider decision making to be
the heart of their job in that they must always choose what is done, who will
do it, when, where and most of the time how it will be done. Traditionally,
managers influence the ordinary employers and specifically their immediate
subordinate in the organization. This has resulted in managers‟ unnatural
decision even in areas affecting their subordinates. In Germany around 1951 a
law was enacted which provides for code termination and requires labour
membership in the supervisory board and executive committee of certain large
corporation enabling subordinates to participate in decision making process
resulted to relatively and peaceful labour management relations. The basic
concept involves any power-sharing arrangement in which workplace influence is
shared among individuals who are otherwise hierarchical unequals. Such
power-sharing arrangements may entail various employee involvement schemes
resulting in co-determination of working conditions, problem solving and
decision making.
It is in this
context the researcher wishes to assess the “impact of employee participation
in decision making in Nigerian publicsector” using Power Holdings Company of
Nigeria (PHCN) Enugu as a case study.
1.2 STATEMENT
OF THE PROBLEMS
There has been
a lot of controversy as to whether an employee should participate in management
decision making or not. Some writers argued that employees should contribute in
making decision more especially where it affects them or their jobs. It is
expected that such participation will serve as training and testing ground for
future members of upper management. In Nigeria, experts that refuted the above
assertion see the arrangement as a symptom of mal-organization. They maintained
that qualified, reasonable, honest and company oriented individuals are not
available at these lower organizational levels. But the big question is, are
skilled individuals really available? All these underlay the need for an
investigative study.
1.3 OBJECTIVES
OF THE STUDY
The general purpose of this empirical study is to assess the employee‟s participation in managerial decision making in public sector organization in Nigeria with reference to Power Holding Company of Nigeria Enugu. The specific objectives are;
The general purpose of this empirical study is to assess the employee‟s participation in managerial decision making in public sector organization in Nigeria with reference to Power Holding Company of Nigeria Enugu. The specific objectives are;
1) To asses the impact of employee participation in
management decision making.
2) To determine the impact of employee participation and non-participation in management decision on productivity of the Nigerian Public Sector.
3) To make recommendations based on the research findings.
2) To determine the impact of employee participation and non-participation in management decision on productivity of the Nigerian Public Sector.
3) To make recommendations based on the research findings.
1.4
SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
It is expected
that the study will inform the management of the Power Holding Company of
Nigeria (PHCN) Enugu that to increase productivity and to ensure harmony
between management and the workers, there is need for employees participation
in decision making in the organization as it is a good motivation factor. It
will also help develop and maintain a quality work life, which will provide an
opportunity for employees job satisfaction and self-actualization. It will also
aid management of Power Holding Company of Nigeria to introduce modern schemes
for good relationship with their workers, to enable them meet the challenges of
change in the future.
Finally, this
work is also beneficial to the Nigerian Public Sector in general and also
important to government, academic potential and future researchers on the issue
of employees participation in decision making.
1.5 SCOPE OF
THE STUDY
The study is
limited as it looks at the impact of employees participation in decision making
in Nigerian Public Sectors, A case study of Power Holding Company of Nigeria
(PHCN) Enugu. Power Holding Company of Nigeria is typical of public sector, but
it has the responsibility of providing the citizenry with power (electricity).
And it holds a large population of employees.
1.6
LIMITATIONS OF THE STUDY
In the process
of carrying out this project work, the researcher was confronted with many
challenges and limitations which are as follows: Time: There was time
constraint for the research project and within the time specified, the normal
lecturer were also in progress, therefore, the researcher was faced with a lot
of stress to combine the research work with her personal affairs and running
from one lecture to another. The effect of this work was that the period the
researcher was supposed to spend on findings and data collection was limited
and as a result more quality work was hindered.
Finance: The researcher was also faced with
financial problems. Researcher work is very tedious because it requires running
from one place to another in search of information, books, Journals, paper and
reports must be consulted but are not always available within, there was the
need to travel to gather some of the materials which involved money. Also the
researcher printed questionnaires which was distributed to the staff of Power
Holding Company of Nigeria (Enugu) which also involved money. Quality of
Information: The analysis of the data in chapter four is based on the
information provided by the staff of Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN)
Enugu. After administering questionnaires, it was expected that the information
needed will be provided by both the senior and junior staff of the company. The
junior staff were reluctant to provide some of the important information
needed. This was on the ground that such information are very secret, and it is
called industrial espionage. This challenge also affected the quality of
information provided for the research findings.
1.7 RESEARCH
QUESTIONS
In a view
accomplishing this research work effectively, the researcher poses the following:
1) Does management make decision without pre decision and consultation with employees?
2) Does management change decision when rejected by employees?
3) To what extent do employees participate in decision making?
4) How often do employees meet to discuss with managers?
1) Does management make decision without pre decision and consultation with employees?
2) Does management change decision when rejected by employees?
3) To what extent do employees participate in decision making?
4) How often do employees meet to discuss with managers?
1.8 RESEARCH
HYPOTHESIS
The researcher
formulates the following based on the objectives and problems of this research
work. Hi: Employees participation serves as a training and testing ground for
future members of upper management.
Ho: Employees
participation does not serve as a training and testing ground for future
members of upper management.
Hi: Lack of
qualified and company oriented individuals undermine employees participation in
decision making at lower organizational levels.
Ho: Lack of
qualified and company oriented individuals does not undermine employees
participation in decision making at lower organizational levels.
Hi:
Availability of skilled individuals in public sectors decision making promotes
productivity.
Ho: Availability of skilled individuals in public sectors
decision making does not promote productivity.
1.9 DEFINITION
OF TERMS
1) DECISION
MAKING: The selection
from among alternative a course of action.
2) MANAGEMENT: Management can be defined as an art
of science of achieving the objective of a business in the most efficient way.
It is made up of top and middle level management. Top management include: share
holders, Board of Director, Managing Directors or the Chief Executive/General
Manager above department level. middle level managers include: level of
department manager, deputy and assistant managers.
3)
PRODUCTIVITY: A
measure of how well resources are brought together in organization and utilized
for accomplishing a set of result.
4) PUBLIC
SECTOR: This is an
organization that is owned and managed by Government.
5) EMPLOYEES
PARTICIPATION:
This is creating an environment in which people have an impact on decisions and
actions that affect their jobs in the organization.
1.10
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
The
Neoclassical theorists recognized the importance of individual or group
behaviour and emphasized human relations. Based on the Hawthorne experiments,
the neoclassical approach emphasized social or human relationships among the
operations, researchers and supervisors (Roethlisberger and Dickson, 1943) it
was argued that these considerations were more consequential in determining
productivity than mere changes in working conditions. Productivity increase
were achieved as a result of high morale, which was influenced by the amount of
individual personal and intimate attention workers received through
participation in managerial decision making. The classical approach stressed
the formal organization. It was mechanic and ignored major aspects of human
nature. In contrast, the neoclassical approach introduced an informal
organizational structure and emphasized the following principles.
1) Individual: An individual is not a mechanical
tool but a distinct social being with aspirations beyond mere fulfillment of a
few economic and security works. Individuals differ from each other in pursuing
these desires. Thus, an individual should be recognized as interacting with
social and economic factors.
2) The work
Group: The
neoclassical approach highlighted the social facets of work groups or informal
organizations that operate within a formal organization. The concept of „group‟
and it‟s synergistic benefits were considered important.
3)
Participative Management:
Participative management or decision making permits workers/employees to
participate in decision making process. This was a new form of management to
ensure increase in productivity.
The system
approach views organizations as a system composed or interconnected and thus
mutually dependent – subsystem. These sub-system can be perceived as composed
of some components, function and process Albrecht (1983). Thus, the
organization consists of the following basic elements. Bakke, (1969).
i) Components:
There are 5 basic interdependent parts of the organizing system namely:
a) Individual
b) The formal
and informal organization
c) Patterns of
behaviour emerging from role demands of the organizations.
d) Role
comprehension of the individual
e) The
physical environment in which individuals work.
ii) Linking
Processes: The different components of an organization are required to operate
in an organized and correlated manner. The interaction between them is
contingent upon the linking processes which consist of communication, balance
and decision making.
a) Communication: Is a means for eliciting action, enacting control and effecting coordination to link decision centre in the system in a composite form.
b) Balance: Is the equilibrium between different parts of the system so that they keep a harmoniously structured relationship with one another.
c) Decision Analysis is also considered a linking process in the system approach. Decision may be to produce or participate in the system. Decision to produce depends upon the attitude of individuals and the demands of the organization. Decision to participate refers to the individuals decision to engross themselves in the organization process, that depends on what they get what they are expected to do in participative decision making.
a) Communication: Is a means for eliciting action, enacting control and effecting coordination to link decision centre in the system in a composite form.
b) Balance: Is the equilibrium between different parts of the system so that they keep a harmoniously structured relationship with one another.
c) Decision Analysis is also considered a linking process in the system approach. Decision may be to produce or participate in the system. Decision to produce depends upon the attitude of individuals and the demands of the organization. Decision to participate refers to the individuals decision to engross themselves in the organization process, that depends on what they get what they are expected to do in participative decision making.
Conclusively, these
theories are of the opinion that workers/ employees should be seen as human
beings with social and economic needs and as such be allowed to participate in
managerial decision making as it affects them
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