2 EMPLOYEE REPRESENTATION
the habit of hasty generalization, which will suffice to illustrate the
many misconceptions regarding the movement. Inasmuch as such
a notion may influence or determine conduct, its extension is regret-
table; for the employer who inaugurates émployee representation as
an antidote for unionism not only paves the way for serious opposi-
tion but ignores his opportunity to make of employee committees a
constructive force furthering the ends of production and public
service. The trade union leader, on the other hand, who sees in
employee representation only an adversary, it has more than once
been demonstrated, misdirects his efforts in a futile and untimely
battle.
There is need for an evaluation of the movement which will provide
at least tentative answers to the many pressing questions which are
being asked on all sides. What motives have prompted inauguration
of employee’ representation? What objectives actuate the parties
to employee representation after it has passed through the initial
stages of its development? Is employee representation a vital
phase of a newer era in personnel relations, or but a passing panacea?
What bearing, if any, has employee representation on the develop-
ment of a more truly cotperative spirit in business? Is it likely to
alter any of our prevalent conceptions regarding property rights?
Is the spread of employee stock ownership making superfluous em-
ployee representation by substitution of a proprietorship interest for
the present employment interest? Does the growth of employee
representation indicate a need for any special treatment of industrial
government in public school or collegiate curricula to qualify workers
and managers for more effective participation in the industrial organi-
zations to which they will later belong? These and a host of other
queries, many of them more specific, are being asked. Answers are
needed not simply because the questions suggest themselves but
because intelligent direction of business enterprises requires a con-
scious philosophy of purpose and an understanding of the means
available for attaining desired ends. Blind imitation of practices
established by large and flourishing corporations is rarely wise; yet
it is likely that some of the representation plans which have been
adopted originated in the desire to emulate others. On the other
hand, there are some industrial administrators who refuse to play
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