The Principles of Scientific Management
Forfatter: Frederick Winslow Taylor
År: 1919
Forlag: Harper & Brothers Publishers
Sted: New York and London
Sider: 144
UDK: 658.01 Tay
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10 THE PRINCIPLES OF SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
mum prosperity for the employer, coupled with
maximum prosperity for the employé, ought to be
the two leading objects of management, that even
to state this fact should be unnecessary. And yet
there is no question that, throughout the industrial
world, a large part of the organization of employers,
as well as employés, is for war rather than for peace,
and that perhaps the majority on either side do not
believe that it is possible so to arrange their mutual
relations that their interests become identical.
The majority of these men believe that the funda-
mental interests of employés and employers are
necessarily antagonistic. Scientific management, on
the contrary, has for its very foundation the firm
conviction that the true interests of the two are one
and the same; that prosperity for the employer
cannot exist through a long term of years unless it
is accompanied by prosperity for the employé, and
vice versa; and that it is possible to give the work-
man what he most wants — high wages — and the
employer what he wants — a low labor cost — for
his manufactures.
It is hoped that some at least of those who do not
sympathize with each of these objects may be led
to modify their views; that some employers, whose
attitude toward their workmen has been that of
trying to get the largest amount of work out of
them for the smallest possible wages, may be led to
see that a more liberal policy toward their men will
pay them better; and that some of those workmen
who begrudge a fair and even a large profit to their