ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The impact of new production technology on employee productivity in the South African workplace

Gerhardus van Zyl    

Resumen

AbstractOrientation: This study is part of an ongoing research project on various aspects of employee productivity in the South African workplace.Research purpose: The aim of this article was to determine the firm-based employee productivity impacts because of the acquisition and introduction of new production technologies in the South African workplace.Motivation for the study: The study focusses on understanding the impact of various components of new production technology on employee productivity for different age groups and skill levels.Research approach/design and method: The study adopts two distinct estimation processes. The aim of the first set of estimations was to construct a technology index. Secondly, fixed-panel data estimations determine the percentage change in employee productivity based on technology-to-employee ratio, technology index, different technology components, different age groups and different skill levels. The manufacturing industry of Gauteng is the focus of this case study.Main findings: Estimation results indicate, in general, positive employee productivity effects, superior employee productivity gains for the 35- to 55-year employee age group and greater employee productivity gains for the lower-skilled employee segment.Practical/managerial implications: The estimation rankings of new production technology for the improvement of employee productivity, are of the utmost importance when deciding on the acquisition and introduction of different kinds of new production technologies in the workplace.Contribution/value-add: The study contributes to our understanding on how the acquisition of new production technologies could affect employee productivity at the workplace.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Girish Garg, Mohd Shamshad, Nikita Gauhar, Mosab I. Tabash, Basem Hamouri and Linda Nalini Daniel    
Financial technology, or Fintech, has captured the attention of scholars, students, and institutions across worldwide for over a decade. With a plethora of new financial services, products, and innovative methods to engage with clients, the impact of tec... ver más

 
Xiaobo Xu, Martin Young, Liping Zou and Jiali Fang    
Using New Zealand Household Economic Survey (HES) 2018 data, we examine the impact of direct financial market participation post-retirement on retirement income in New Zealand. Our results demonstrate the importance of post-retirement financial market pa... ver más

 
Lenka Vyrostková and Jaroslava Kádárová    
This article examines the impact of the macroenvironment on enterprises in euro-area countries over the period 2006?2020. Our study builds on important works and theories in the field of business, including the work of Kar and Özsahin. We employ the Pane... ver más

 
Tanja Verster and Erika Fourie    
The landscape of financial credit risk models is changing rapidly. This study takes a brief look into the future of predictive modelling by considering some factors that influence financial credit risk modelling. The first factor is machine learning. As ... ver más

 
Azlan Shah Abdul Latif, Noor Azman Ali, Zahira Ishan, Nor Siah Jaharuddin, Rohail Hassan and Adibah Abdul Latif    
Much research has been carried out to discover partnership critical success factors that influence public-private partnership success. Since most public-private partnership projects are long-term in nature and include contractual arrangements, there is s... ver más