Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-04T13:03:23.575Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Dynamics of Downsizing: The Swedish Tobacco Monopoly in the 1920s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 February 2015

Abstract

The aim of this article is to clarify and discuss the various ways firms can make workforce reductions. How do managers perceive the options for downsizing and why do they implement a particular mix of measures before another? These questions are addressed in relation to the downsizing process undertaken in the 1920s by the Swedish Tobacco Monopoly, a state-owned company that had to balance between rational business conduct and social responsibility. The study makes use of rich primary sources, such as board minutes and memos, from the company and from the Tobacco Workers’ Union. Its main contribution is to move beyond the simple characterization of reductions as being either smooth or harsh and instead emphasize the multitude of choices involved in reducing head count. The article also emphasizes the active roles of managers and union officials in shaping reductions and the overall characteristics of the organization.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2013. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliography of Works Cited

Books

Baer, Willis N. The Economic Development of the Cigar Industry in the United States. Lancaster, PA: The Art Printing Company, 1933.Google Scholar
Baumol, William Blinder, Alan S. Wolff, Edward N. Downsizing in America: Reality, Causes and Consequences. New York: Russel Sage Foundation, 2003.Google Scholar
Cooper, Patricia. Once a Cigar Maker: Men, Women and Work Culture in American Cigar Factories, 1900–1919. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1987.Google Scholar
Cox, Howard. The Global Cigarette: Origin and Evolution of British American Tobacco 1880–1945. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000.Google Scholar
Creamer, Daniel Swackhamer, Gladys V. Cigar Makers—after the Layoff: A Case Study of the Effects of Mechanization on Employment of Hand Cigar Makers. Philadelphia: WPA, 1937.Google Scholar
Gálvez Muñoz, Lina. Compañia Arrendataria de Tabacos: Cambio Tecnológico y Empleo Femenino, 1887–1945. Madrid, Spain: LID Publishing, 2000.Google Scholar
Katz, Daniel Kahn, Robert L. The Social Psychology of Organizations. New York: Wiley, 1978.Google Scholar
Kaufmann, Stuart B. Challenge and Change: The History of the Tobacco Workers International Union. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 1986.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Paul R. Lorsch, Jay W. Organization and Environment. Boston: Harvard University, 1967.Google Scholar
Lazear, Edward. Personnel Economics for Managers. New York: Wiley, 1998.Google Scholar
Lindbom, Tage Kuhm, Evert. Tobaksarbetarnas förbund i Sverige1889–1939. Stockholm, Sweden: Svenska tobaksindustriarbetareförbundet, 1940.Google Scholar
Manning, Caroline Byrne, Harriet. The Effects on Women of Changing Conditions in the Cigar and Cigarette Industries. Washington, DC: United States Department of Labor, 1932.Google Scholar
Om tobak i Sverige: Jubileumsskrift 1915–1965. Stockholm, Sweden: Svenska Tobaks AB, 1965.Google Scholar
Schön, Lennart. Sweden’s Road to Modernity: An Economic History. Stockholm, Sweden: SNS, 2010.Google Scholar
Styrelsens förvaltningsberättelse. Stockholm, Sweden: AB Svenska Tobaksmonopolet, various years.Google Scholar
Svenska Tobaksmonopolet 1915–1940. Stockholm, Sweden: AB Svenska Tobaksmonopolet, 1940.Google Scholar
Årsredovisning och revisionsberättelse för verksamhetsåret 1950. Stockholm, Sweden: AB Svenska Tobaksmonopolet, 1951.Google Scholar

Articles and Essays

Budros, Art. “The Mean and the Lean Firm and Downsizing: Causes of Involuntary and Voluntary Downsizing Strategies.” Sociological Forum 17 (2002):307–41.Google Scholar
DeWitt, Rocki-Lee. “The Structural Consequences of Downsizing.” Organization Science 4 (2003):3040.Google Scholar
Freeman, Sarah J. Cameron, Kim S. “Organizational Downsizing: A Convergence and Reorientation Framework.” Organization Science 4 (1993):1029.Google Scholar
Gálvez Muñoz, Lina. “Engendering the Experience of Wages: The Evolution of the Piecework System at the Spanish Tobacco Monopoly, 1800–1930s.” In Experiencing Wages: Social and Cultural Aspects of Wage Forms in Eurpe since 1500, edited by Scholliers, Peter Schwarz, Leonard,201–27. New York: Berghahn Books, 2003.Google Scholar
Gálvez Muños, Lina Comin, F. “Business and Government: Labour Management in the Spanish Tobacco Monopoly (1887–1935).” In Business and Society: Entrepreneurs, Politics and Networks in a Historical Perspective, edited by Kuijlaars, Anne-Marie Prudon, Kim Visser, Joop,159–69. Rotterdam, The Netherlands: Centre of Business History, 2000.Google Scholar
Greenhalgh, Leonard Lawrence, Anne T. Sutton, Robert I. “Determinants of Work Force Reduction Strategies in Declining Organizations.” Academy of Management Review 13 (1988):241–54.Google Scholar
Hannah, Leslie. “The Whig Fable of American Tobacco, 1895–1913.” Journal of Economic History 66 (2006):4273.Google Scholar
Karlsson, Tobias. “Downsizing, State Ownership, and Modern Labor Management: Severance Pay at the Swedish Tobacco Monopoly.” Business and Economic History On-Line 5 (2007):125.Google Scholar
Karlsson, Tobias. “Downsizing: Personnel Reductions at the Swedish Tobacco Monopoly, 1915–1940.” PhD dissertation, Lund University, 2008.Google Scholar
Karlsson, Tobias. “Allocating Job-Losses: The Mass-Layoffs at the Swedish Tobacco Monopoly in 1921.” Scandinavian Economic History Review 58 (2010):100–18.Google Scholar
Lewis, Robert. “The Workplace in Economic Crisis: Canadian Textile Firms, 1929–1935.” Enterprise & Society 10 (2009):498528.Google Scholar
McCune, Joseph Beatty, Richard W. Montagno, Raymond V. “Downsizing: Practices in Manufacturing Firms.” Human Resource Management 27 (1988):145–61.Google Scholar
Parker, Sharon K. Chmiel, Nik Wall, Toby D. “Work Characteristics and Employee Well-Being Within a Context of Strategic Downsizing.” Journal of Occupational Health Psychology 2 (1997):289303.Google Scholar
Sutherland, John. “Workforce Reduction Strategies: An Empricial Examination of the Options.” Employee Relations 20 (1998):148–63.Google Scholar
Thornhill, Adrian Saunders, Mark N. K. “The Meanings, Consequences and Implications of the Management of Downsizing and Redundancy: A Review.” Personnel Review 27 (1997):271–95.Google Scholar
Turnbull, Peter. “Leaner and Possibly Fitter: The Management of Redundance in Britain.” Industrial Relations Journal 19 (1988):201–13.Google Scholar
Turnbull, Peter Wass, Victoria. “Job Insecurity and Labour Market Lemons: The (Mis)management of Redundancy in Steel Making, Coal Mining and Port Transport.” Journal of Management Studies 34 (1997):2851.Google Scholar
Wagar, Terry H. “Factors Affecting Permanent Workforce Reduction: Evidence from Large Canadian Organizations.” Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences 14 (1997):303–14.Google Scholar
Wass, Victoria. “Who Controls Selection under ‘Voluntary’ Redundancy? The Case of the Redundant Mineworkers Payments Scheme.” British Journal of Industrial Relations 34 (1996):249–65.Google Scholar
White, P. J. “The Management of Redundancy.” Industrial Relations Journal 14 (1983):3240.Google Scholar
Zitzewitz, Eric W. “Competition and Long-Run Productivity Growth in the UK and US Tobacco Industries 1879–1939.” Journal of Industrial Economics 51 (2003):133.Google Scholar

Archival Sources

Svenska tobaksindustriarbetareförbundets arkiv (STF), Arbetarrörelsens arkiv och bibliotek (ARAB), Stockholm, Sweden.Google Scholar
Frans Henrik Kockums tobaksfabriks arkiv (FHK), Malmö stadsarkiv (MS), Malmö, Sweden.Google Scholar
Svenska Tobaksmonopolet (STM), Swedish Match Archives (SM), Stockholm, Sweden.Google Scholar