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118 Monthly Lab. Rev. 29 (1995)
High Performance Work Systems and Firm Performance

handle is hein.journals/month118 and id is 511 raw text is: I    0lig  -Prorac  Sysem

High performance work systems
and firm performance
Benefits of employee involvement, skill training,
and other high performance work practices
tend to be greater when new methods are adopted
as part of a consistent whole, rather than in isolation

In today's competitive world economy, the
strength of U.S. firms is increasingly depen-
dent upon product quality and rapid adapta-
tion to changing conditions. To survive in this
environment, firms may choose to rely upon the
creativity, ingenuity, and problem-solving abili-
ties of their workers. To do so, they attempt to
provide workers with the information, skills, in-
centives, and responsibility to make decisions es-
sential for innovation, quality improvement, and
rapid response to change. Firms taking this ap-
proach often are referred to as high performance
work organizations.
By way of example, take the case of delivery
truckdrivers. Drivers can be assigned loads and
routes by a supervisor. Alternatively, they can be
made responsible for scheduling their own routes
and for making changes. They can use their
knowledge of customers and routes to inform ex-
isting customers of new services, acting as assis-
tant sales representatives. They can participate
in problem-solving groups to identify bottlenecks
in processes, such as the morning's sorting of
packages, that slow delivery. Installing commu-
nications equipment in trucks can facilitate team-
work to allow balancing of routes between couri-
ers with unexpectedly large shipments and those
with lighter loads, without the intervention of a
supervisor. These work practices have been used
by Federal Express couriers, and both the com-
pany and the workers appear to have benefited
from converting ordinary driving responsibilities
into jobs that require higher skills.'
While this example helps illustrate the types
of work practices firms may adopt, the anecdotal
experiences of a few firms are unlikely to be rep-
resentative. The goal of this literature review is
to ascertain whether high performance work

practices are more generally associated with bet-
ter firm performance.
Scope of the study
Many firms have implemented at least some high
performance work practices.2 In a nationally rep-
resentative sample of 700 private sector estab-
lishments, 37 percent had a majority of front-
line workers engaged in two or more high per-
formance work practices.3 Firms themselves
largely look upon high performance practices as
having been successful. Among Fortune 1000
companies using at least one practice that in-
creased the responsibility of employees in the
business process, 60 percent reported that these
practices increased productivity and 70 percent
reported that they improved quality.4
Many company initiatives, however, are
piecemeal rather than systemic. The existing
evidence suggests that it is the use of compre-
hensive systems of work practices in firms that
is most closely associated with stronger firm per-
formance.
This review of the effects of high performance
work practices focuses on studies that use quan-
titative measures of productivity, quality, and fi-
nancial performance that are comparable across
firms. Many of these measures can be assessed
at the plant or work group level, which allows
detailed analysis of effects from changes in work
practices. The review consists of two basic parts.
First, it examines the effects on labor productiv-
ity of three specific practices-training, compen-
sation linked to firm or worker performance, and
employee involvement in decisionmaking. Sec-
ond, it examines high performance systems in
which such practices are implemented together.
Monthly Labor Review  May 1995  29

Jeffrey Kling
Jeffrey Kling is a Ph.D
candidate in the
Department of
Economics at the
Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.

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