Work Motivation under Communist Rule: Heritage from the Past in Modern Public Sector Organisations
Pubblicato online: 06 lug 2024
Pagine: 269 - 285
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/ceej-2024-0018
Parole chiave
© 2024 Palina Prysmakova, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Applying retrospective design methodology, the article adds to our knowledge about inherited organisational values and their impact on management policies and practices. Questioning the label of Central and Eastern European workforce as low-motivated, shirking and passive, this article outlines the historical context of work motivation in former communist countries, investigating to what extent the motivation in public service organisations today may be explained by the past. It employs a framework developed by
Confirming Inglehart’s ‘scarcity’ theory, this article demonstrates that the several decades that passed after the fall of communism were insufficient in completely overcoming communist heritage. Malfunctions of the centralised communist motivation system resulted from the discordance between the management intentions and actions. Dysfunctions of monetary-based incentive schemes caused overwhelming work lethargy of shirking employees, who were discouraged from being creative or displaying initiative. Such patterns have still been observable at some public organisations in former Soviet countries. Thus, the past centralisation of the state continues to determine individual work motivation in public sector domains even today.