reference entryThe SAGE Encyclopedia of Economics and SocietyJan 1, 2015Closed access

Principles of Scientific Management, The

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Abstract

This brief essay by the founder of scientific management has served for nearly a century as a primer for administrators and for students of managerial techniques. Although scientific management was developed primarily as a system for increasing productivity in industry, its principles have been applied to all kinds of large-scale enterprises, including operations with departments and agencies of the federal government. It is in this volume that Frederick Winslow Taylor gave the theory of scientific management its clearest airing. Born in 1856, Taylor began work at age eighteen as an apprentice to a pattern-maker and as a machinist. A few years later he joined the Midvale Steel Company as a laborer, and in…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Scientific management
  • Engineering
  • Operations management
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Decent work and economic growth
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