Abstract
This article looks at the early development of the temporary help industry in Britain. It focuses on the activities of one of the largest suppliers of temporary workers, Manpower, in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Drawing on material from The UK National Archives, the article examines Manpower's efforts to gain access as a genuine employer to the state employment exchange network to advertise their temporary vacancies. The article reveals the incremental changes in attitude within the government towards Manpower's activities and argues that this gave the company a competitive advantage over other employment agencies, facilitating their development of relations with the government and the trade unions in Britain over the 1970s and 1980s. The main conclusion of the article is that explicit attention needs to be paid to the actions and strategies of agencies themselves in order to develop an adequate understanding of the growth and development of the temporary help industry.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)
Reference42 articles.
1. UK Parliament. Committee of Enquiry into the Work of the Employment Exchanges (Barnes Committee) Minutes of Evidence, Cmd. 1140, 1921.
2. UK National Board for Prices and Incomes. Office Staff Employment Agencies Charges and Salaries. Report No. 89, Cmd. 3828. 1968.
3. UK Temporary Staffing: Industry Structure and Evolutionary Dynamics
4. The Fractured World of the Temporary Worker: Power, Participation, and Fragmentation in the Contemporary Workplace
5. The Growth of Temporary Services Work
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