[/floatl]Yomiuri: Psychologist claims company climate poisons performance
Koichi Okamoto, social psychology professor at Toyo Eiwa University, says many Japanese companies suffer from an organizational climate that revolves around person-oriented thinking and encourages decision-making based on the people involved rather than the issues at stake. According to Okamoto, person-oriented climates are susceptible to breaking the law or violating rules, as well as covering up infractions. Notable examples include the restructuring of Snow Brand Milk Products Co., which was rocked by scandals over food-poisoning and false-labeling of beef, and the bankruptcy of Yamaichi Securities. He believes this climate is behind last year's spate of false food-labeling scandals. For example, decisions made by presidents or other high-ranking executives are regarded as right and absolute, while those made by younger employees are not, according to Okamoto's definition of this thinking. In these companies, bosses tend to evaluate subordinates based on subjective likes and dislikes, and employees often take it personally if somebody objects to their proposals. "Your decisions should be based on analyses of the pros and cons [of an issue], which is, in my word, an issue-oriented style of thinking," Okamoto said. However, Okamoto, who studied the correlation between person-oriented organizational climates and the 1999 criticality accident at JCO Co.'s Tokaimura nuclear fuel processing plant in Ibaraki Prefecture as member of the government's accident investigation committee, said person-oriented thinking is not peculiar to Japanese. "I found [person-oriented thinking dominant] in American companies located in Japan," Okamoto said. "If you seek differences, the differences may be that [employees and bosses in American firms] are expected to be replaced rather frequently." In Japan, person-oriented climates tend to be self-reinforcing within corporations because employees are expected to stay with one company for many years and executives are selected from among these employees, he added.
