Introduction
Introduction
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS
MODULE - I
Meaning and Definition
This has always remained as a disputable topic whether industrial relation is same as
personal relation, human relation or labour management employer employee or union and
management relations. A discussion on industrial relation considers all these as almost same.
However this refers to all types of relationships between all the parties concerned with the
industry. Basically the relationship
ationship that exists between the management or the owner & workers
or employees is commonly called as industrial relations. IR is viewed as the process by which
people and their organization interact at the place of work to establish the terms and conditions
conditi
of employment.
Industrial Relations mean differently to different actors of the system. From the view point of
the Management IR is –
• The platform to derive best output of employees
• Ensures profit and growth of organisation.
• Gives the best value of ROI.
RO
• Creates a conducive environment.
• Maintains industrial peace.
• Ensures uninterrupted production.
• Cooperation among employees.
From the union or workers view point IR ensures –
• Improvements in wages and salaries
• Improvements in working conditions
• Quick redressal
dressal of grievances
• Control over management actions
From the Government / Society view point IR –
• Helps in social development
• Improves production and productivity
• Ensures economic growth
• Ensures social justice
According to Dale Yoder ‘It refers to the relationship between management and employees
or among employees and their organization that arise out of employment’. It is a vast complex of
relationship obtaining between management and employees, union and management, union
and employees and between employees
employees themselves. To achieve good IR it is necessary to
secure cooperation among all the parties that is employees, management, union and
government.
(ii). That it concentrates on the structure of the system, ignoring the processes within it;
(iii). That it tends to ignore the essential element of all industrial relations, that of
o the nature
and development of conflict itself.
(iv). That it focuses on formal rules, to the neglect of important informal rules and informal
processes;
(v). That it may not be integrated, and it is problematic whether or not the actors where a
common ideology;
(vi). Thatt it fails to give an account of how inputs into the system are converted into out puts;
(vii). That it is environmentally biased, and provides no articulation between the ‘internal’ plant
level systems and the wider systems;
(ix). That it makes no special provision for the role of individual personalities in industrial
relations as the actors are being viewed in a ‘structural’ rather than in a ‘dynamic’
‘d sense.
The systems model provides a useful framework for classifying and describing elements
within any industrial relations system by focusing on ‘outputs’ or rules of industrial relations
system, on their ‘processes’ such as collective bargaining and other types of rule making,
and on their ‘inputs’ such as the actors involved in rule making.