posted on 2013-01-15, 15:10authored bySigmund Wagner-Tsukamoto
Purpose – The purpose of the paper is to critically question conventional views of the
one-dimensional, mechanistic and negative image of human nature of Scientific Management. Both
for worker behavior and for managerial behavior positive aspects of an image of human nature are
reconstructed in organizational economic terms.
Design/methodology/approach – Through institutional economic reconstruction, drawing on the
methods and concepts of organizational and institutional economics, the portrayal of workers and
managers by Scientific Management is critically assessed.
Findings – It is suggested that a conceptual asymmetry exists in Taylor’s writings regarding the
portrayal of human nature of workers and managers. Whereas for workers a model of self-interest was
applied (through the concepts of “systematic soldering” and “natural soldiering”), Taylor portrayed
managers through a positive, behavioral model of human nature that depicted the manager as
“heartily cooperative”. The key thesis is that by modeling managers through a rather positive image of
human nature Taylor could no longer methodically apply the model of economic man in order to test
out and prevent interaction conflict between potentially self-interested managers and workers.
Research limitations/implications – The paper focused on Scientific Management to advance the
thesis that the portrayal of human nature has been ill approached by management and organization
theorists who were apparently pioneering an institutional and organizational economics. Future research
has to broaden the scope of research to other pioneers inmanagement and organization research, but also
to critics in behavioral sciences, such as organization psychology, who may misunderstand how
economics approaches the portrayal of human nature, in particular regarding self-interest.
Practical implications – Taylor’s portrayal of managers as naturally good persons, who were not
self-interested, caused implementation conflict and implementation problems for Scientific Management
and led to his summoning by the US Congress. By modeling managers as heartily cooperative, Taylor
could no longer analyze potentially self-interested behavior, even opportunistic behavior of managers in
their interactions with workers. Scientific Management had thus no remedy to handle “soldiering” of
managers. This insight, that managerialism needs to be accounted for in a management theory, has
manifold practical implications for management consultancy,management education, and for the practice
of management in general. Students and practitioners have to be informed about the necessary and useful
role a model of self-interest (economic man) methodically plays in economic management theory.
Originality/value – The paper reconstructs the portrayal of human nature in early management
theory, which seemingly anticipated the advances – and certain pitfalls – of modern institutional
economics. The paper unearths, from an economic perspective, conceptual misunderstandings of
Taylor regarding his image of human nature of workers and managers.
History
Citation
Journal of Management History, 2008, 14 (4), pp. 348-372 (25)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/School of Management