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The poverty of performance appraisal

JOHN M MA HUGHES (Senior Lecturer Department of Management Manchester Polytechnic)

Industrial and Commercial Training

ISSN: 0019-7858

Article publication date: 1 December 1982

300

Abstract

The assessment of job performance is one of the most vexed problems of organisational administration. It is a problem perennially avoided by managers, yet it is one which will not go away. Without some indicators of achievement, we are told, accountability for the deployment and use of resources becomes a mockery, and organisational control is rendered impossible. Yet for one or more persons to sit in judgment on the job performance of another is, to say the least, distasteful to some, and indeed inimical and deeply offensive to not a few. PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL, as it is called, is thus a paradox. The logic of efficiency demands it, but equally strongly the logic of sentiment rejects it as unacceptable. What, then, is to be done?

Citation

HUGHES, J.M.M. (1982), "The poverty of performance appraisal", Industrial and Commercial Training, Vol. 14 No. 12, pp. 404-411. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb003919

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1982, MCB UP Limited

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