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PROGRAMME INFO |
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Peter Day examines trends and developments in industry and the world of work.
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The Editor In Business,
1210 大象传媒 White City,
London
W12 7TS
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LISTEN AGAIN |
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PRESENTER |
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We try to make ear-grabbing programmes about the whole world of work, public and private, from vast corporations to modest volunteers.
In Business is all about change. New ways of work and new technologies are challenging most of the assumptions by which organisations have been run for the last 100 years. We try to report on ideas coming over the horizon, just before they start being talked about. We hope it is an exhilarating ride. Peter Day |
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PROGRAMME DETAILS |
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Pain in the Neck
Sickness absence in the workplace: who's sick - the worker or the organisation?
Sometimes people are too ill to work, sometimes perhaps they just don't feel like it. According to the labour experts absenteeism in Britain has been stubbornly high for the last three decades. For employers, the CBI estimates being absent is costing 12 billion pounds a year in lost days at work.
On average a public sector worker is off 9.1 days every year, in the private sector the average is 6.4 days. So is Britain a nest of malingerers or is there something wrong with the way we work, or the way work works?
Interviewees:
Peter Holloway, Head of People and Organisation Development,
, Director, International Institute for Society and Health at University College London
, Chief Executive, Interserve
John Allen, Head of Employee Relations,
Hugh Robertson, Senior Policy Officer - Health and Safety,
, Director of Research, The Work Foundation
, University of Southern California Business School
Philip Augar, author, The Greed Merchants and The Death of Gentlemanly Capitalism
Work in Progress
Peter Day writes a fortnightly column for News Interactive.
Read the latest .
In Business is now podcast. You'll have the chance to download each edition of In Business, on a trial basis, for 7 days after broadcast. Each edition will be available soon after broadcast. The mp3 file can be used on portable players, such as iPods, or you can listen to it on your computer.
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