Bullying
is in the eye of the beholder, at least for the time being, in this
country. There is no national definition of bullying or non-sexual
harassment behaviour in law at present.
Now it appears there is an emerging disparity between the way leaders see bullying and the way their employees see it.
A new survey has found leaders believe
bullying is on the decline. The survey, by Leadership Management
Australia, a national management training company, shows that 28% of
leaders believe bullying is happening in their organisation, down from
35% in 2006.
More companies than ever have a bullying
policy (87% today compared to 79% in 2006), but these policies appear to
have little impact on the floor.
Employees report absolutely no change in the incidence of bullying.
Over the past six years of the survey, the
percentage of employees who have observed incidents of bullying has
remained static at 33% or 34%, the number of victims at about 15% (19%
in 2006) and the number who were being bullied at the time of the survey
steady at 4% (this year) or 5% in 2006.
This year’s survey, which closed on
September 30, had 4077 respondents, comprising 264 leaders, 448 managers
and 3365 employees. LMA has conducted the Leadership, Employment and
Direction (LEAD) survey of workplace trends for the past 12 years.
LMA’s CEO, Andrew Henderson, believes there is a lack of managerial commitment to the issue.
“There are more organisations today with a
bullying management policy than six years ago, yet there is no apparent
reduction in the incidence of bullying over that time which suggests
managers and leaders are not policing the policies,” said Henderson.
Incidence of workplace issues (2012)
Workplace issues observed (2012)
|
Leaders
%
|
Employees
%
|
Inappropriate language
|
41
|
36
|
Bullying
|
28
|
33
|
Verbal harassment
|
38
|
30
|
Inappropriate emails
|
25
|
21
|
Discrimination
|
19
|
16
|
Racism
|
10
|
12
|
Sexual harassment
|
8
|
9
|
Source: Leadership Management Australia
Looking behind the numbers
The Productivity Commission estimates the
total cost of workplace bullying in Australia as between $6 billion and
$36 billion annually, and there is currently an inquiry into workplace bullying by a House of Representatives Committee. It is yet to report.
Complaints about workplace bullying are on
the increase, according to Kathryn Dent, a director of workplace law
practice, People + Culture Strategies. “We are seeing that an increasing
number of our clients are subject to receiving complaints, which leads
to an investigation,” says Dent. She says the survey findings surprise
her. “The leaders and managers we are seeing are taking it seriously.”
Workplace consultant, Leanne
Faraday-Brash, says the economic climate may be silencing employees,
except under the anonymity of a survey. “We have experienced a profound
rupture in economic certainty. Employees may be frightened to speak up
to managers now for fear of recrimination, or losing their job. Rather
than stick up for themselves, they may feel more of a pressure to comply
rather than to ask questions.”
Source: http://www.leadingcompany.com.au
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