Lecture Notes Theories of HRD ECO 217
Lecture Notes Theories of HRD ECO 217
Lecture Notes Theories of HRD ECO 217
1. Introduction
8. Brain Drain
READING TEXT
INTRODUCTION
Any country or organization in the world has about 3 types of resources namely; physical, financial
and human resources.
1. Physical Resources – These are those items or equipment’s and materials which the
organization controls of which real estate and machinery are most common. This category
also includes raw materials and natural resources.
2. Financial Resources – In the simplest term, financial resources means money. However, as
economists we know that there are various kinds of money. Therefore, financial resources
includes hard currency, letters of credit, bonds, treasury bills, account receivables etc.
Financial resources may be generated in a variety of ways namely; sales goods and
services, sales of stocks and bonds, subsidies and even donations or grants.
3. Human Resources – These are people who are part of an organization or a country. They
may be direct employees part-time workers, temporary employees, consultants or people
with a variety of other relationships with the organization. The organization makes
different kinds of demands on these people and has various ways of classifying them.
Without human resources, an organization is nothing but merely factories, expensive
equipment and some impressive balance sheet. When you think of the millions of
organizations that provide us with goods and services, how often do you explicitly consider
that these organizations depend on people to make them operate? Is it only under unusual
circumstances such as when teachers or doctors go on strike that you consider the important
role that employees play in their organization? How were they found and selected? Why
do they come to work on a regular basis? How do they know what to do on their jobs? Will
today’s employees be prepared for the work their organization will require of them in 10 –
30 years? Can the future manpower requirement be estimated today? These are some
important questions which the study of human resource development intends to answer.
3. Frictional shortages
The LDCs recognize frictional shortages due to lack of an organized employment market,
increase in the sudden demand for manpower in labour shortage regions and immobility of
labour.
4. Replacement of foreign personnel
There are current manpower shortages of highly skilled manpower at the top levels in the
LDCs of Africa, Gulf countries, Caribbean and Pacific countries, Latin America and the
poor countries of Eastern Europe due to the replacement of foreign personnel.
Manpower surpluses
Manpower surpluses relate to both unskilled and skilled workers available for and in search of
gainful employment. They consist of the following;
1. The underemployed
This category includes open and the disguised unemployed. The open unemployed are
those who are working less than the normal working hours while the disguised unemployed
are those whose contributions to output is less than what they can produce by working
normal hours of work per day.
2. The educated unemployed and underemployed
This refers to those persons who have obtained at least a secondary school certificate. In
LDCs structural rigidities and slow rate of growth have failed to increase job opportunities
for them in spite of the increase in educated manpower. Underemployment amongst the
educated is a result of their taking a job below their skilled level.
3. Urban unemployed and underemployed
Urbanization and increased rural education, rural-urban migration creates opportunity for
competing on the available jobs in the industrial sector that cannot absorb the growth of
the labour force.
Strategies of manpower planning
There are 3 broad strategies used in HRD planning in order to correct the imbalances between
surpluses and shortages of manpower in an economy. These strategies include;
1. The development of formal education
In developing formal education we consider all aspects of the educational system that
develop the highly skilled manpower especially at the university level and the sub-
professionals at the colleges of education and the polytechniques and semi-skilled labour
from the secondary nand primary school. Education development at this level should
incorporate skill development through cognitive and psycho-motor skills that the
individual learns on the process of education and applied at the world of work.