Does better quality contracting improve pay and HR practices? Evidence from for-profit and voluntary sector providers of adult care services in England
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2015Metadata
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Grimshaw, Damián
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Does better quality contracting improve pay and HR practices? Evidence from for-profit and voluntary sector providers of adult care services in England
Abstract
This article investigates the complex interaction between contracting arrangements and
quality of human resources (HR) practices. It draws on quantitative and qualitative
empirical evidence for the adult social care sector in England where most services
are purchased by local authorities and delivered by private for-profit and voluntary
sector organisations. The study finds sufficient evidence among surveyed care providers
that higher fees and partnership-oriented contracting have positive influences on pay
levels and quality of HR practices to suggest that better local authority contracting may
be an enabling condition for the improvement of employment standards. However, the
relatively weak statistical associations suggest other factors mediate, or distort, the
anticipated relationship between quality of contracting and quality of HR practices.
The type of provider is identified as a key mediator: private, for-profit providers and
those managed by a national chain are least likely to distribute the benefits of better
quality contracting fairly through improved employment standards.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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Journal of Industrial Relations 2015, Vol. 57(4) 502–525
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