COVID-19 'war games': the computer program that could help save your job
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[November 11, 2020] By
Sinead Cruise
LONDON (Reuters) - Bank of England Chief
Economist Andy Haldane has signed up to judge the winner of a 'war game'
designed to help firms find alternatives to mass layoffs in the face of
a coronavirus-driven slowdown.
Confronted with the most unpredictable pandemic in memory,
cost-conscious firms have already axed millions of staff worldwide,
while UK redundancies hit a record high of 314,000 in the quarter to
Sept. 30, official data showed on Tuesday.
Unilever-owned tech firm uFlexReward created the COVID-19 War Game to
allow executives to explore the impact of huge job cuts on their future
earnings prospects.
"Many companies across the UK are facing financial strains as a result
of the COVID crisis," Haldane told Reuters.
"Simulation tools can help us understand how best to alleviate these
strains while preserving jobs, in a way that helps both businesses when
making difficult commercial decisions and policymakers when making
difficult economic decisions."
The game, designed during Britain's first lockdown this year and
available free to play on the uFlexReward website, calls on players to
devise a strategy to cut people costs of a fictional firm by 20%.
Participants weigh up the pros and cons of large-scale redundancies
versus alternatives, for the long-term benefit of the firm as well as
the broader economy.
It collates staff salaries, pensions, bonuses and share awards into one
real-time cost-base, helping players see different ways of trimming
overheads more clearly.
This can include making lots of smaller cost cuts in a so-called
'broad-front' approach, rather than one large saving in more focused
cuts like scrapping entire business units or the staff bonus pool.
Financial firms have historically slashed highly paid workforces on the
eve of recession, only to rehire rapidly when the economy rebounds.
Swapping this convention for a broad-front approach could minimise the
risks that employers end up understaffed and under-skilled when the
recovery kicks off, uFlexReward Chief Executive Ken Charman said.
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A woman uses a computer keyboard in this photo illustration, June
23, 2011. REUTERS/Tim Wimborne/File Photo
'CHANGE IS COMING'
Employers in multiple sectors are facing the prospect of a broader revolution in
the world of work, triggered by technology and mass remote working.
"We are still stuck in a very Victorian view of what work is - with fixed
working days, for a single employer and in a typically narrow role," Charman
said.
"But change is coming that will allow people to be several things at once ... if
companies lose people who are highly trained, experienced and loyal, they won't
get them back," he said.
Charman hopes the game might persuade employers to waive or cut dividends as
well as executive pay increases, and offer job-sharing, reduced hours or
part-time roles with flexibility to work elsewhere to staff who might otherwise
end up unemployed.
Pushing through alternatives to mass layoffs will require strong leadership and
communication, particularly when thousands of employee contracts need to be
renegotiated, but retaining staff could leave firms better placed when the
recovery begins, Charman said.
"Executives need to be willing to abandon the old conventions; there will be
resistance and they've got to be able to convince people this is in their best
interests," he said.
"Employers, big companies and big financial institutions are part of our
critical national infrastructure as much as the National Grid. They are the
engines of our growth, but they are under threat."
Judging of the head-to-head version of the game, featuring teams made up of
executives from Unilever and NYSE-listed technology services provider Endava,
will take place on Dec. 3.
Together with Haldane, AstraZeneca senior vice president of reward and inclusion
Rebekah Martin, Unilever head of global reward Constantina Tribou, and author
David Goodhart are among those judging the strategies.
(Reporting by Sinead Cruise; Editing by Jan Harvey)
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