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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday May 14 2020, @09:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the follow-the-money dept.

Older, larger companies benefit from not investing in worker safety, study finds:

When it's cheaper to pay nominal fines for violating workplace regulations than to provide safe workplaces, that indicates current safety regulations are not enough to protect workers, researchers say.

Oregon State University Public Health and Human Sciences associate professor Anthony Veltri was one of several authors on the study, an international collaboration between Mark Pagell, Mary Parkinson, Michalis Louis and Brian Fynes of University College Dublin in Ireland; John Gray of the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio; and Frank Wiengarten of Universitat Ramon Llull in Spain.

"Organizations that do not provide a safe workplace gain an economic advantage over those that do," said Veltri, who studies occupational safety and health. "The goal of improving the longevity of a business conflicts with the goal of protecting the workforce."

The study, published last week in the journal Management Science, looked at both short- and long-term survival of more than 100,000 Oregon-based organizations over a 25-year period. In this study, "survival" was defined as ongoing operations, even in the face of an ownership change.

[...] Although there are businesses that provide safe workplaces and also improve their competitiveness, such businesses are not the norm, the study says. And while organizations seeking to maximize their survival are unlikely to harm workers on purpose, they are correct in calculating that the costs of preventing all harm to workers is higher than the cost of not doing so.


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  • (Score: 2) by PartTimeZombie on Friday May 15 2020, @01:50AM (1 child)

    by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Friday May 15 2020, @01:50AM (#994472)

    Thank you.

    It's hard to argue that America are not the good guys on this site sometimes, because so many people here have no knowledge of US history, or just ignore the bits they don't like.

    You could argue that America exported it's slavery to Central America after the Civil War, and the slaves grew bananas in stead of cotton.

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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Thexalon on Friday May 15 2020, @03:11AM

    by Thexalon (636) on Friday May 15 2020, @03:11AM (#994503)

    You could argue that America exported it's slavery to Central America after the Civil War, and the slaves grew bananas in stead of cotton.

    That would be a tough argument, given that much of what USAians tend to call Latin America had slavery for most of their history post-European contact. The US absolutely acted to preserve slavery though, and were the reason there were effectively slaves growing sugar as late as the 1960's.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.