1 / 23

The Theory of Trade Unions: A Brief Introduction

The Theory of Trade Unions: A Brief Introduction. Background. suppose labour markets are competitive i.e. each employer thinks they can hire as many workers as they want at the going market wage, B

hubert
Télécharger la présentation

The Theory of Trade Unions: A Brief Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Theory of Trade Unions: A Brief Introduction

  2. Background • suppose labour markets are competitive i.e. each employer thinks they can hire as many workers as they want at the going market wage, B • the wage paid will be equal to B - there is no point in paying a higher wage and a lower wage results in no workers being hired. • the firm will choose the level of employment to maximize profits which leads to MRPL=B:

  3. In a picture…

  4. What happens to wages/employment if there is a union? • need to make some assumptions about: • the preferences of the union • the process of bargaining between employer and union.

  5. The preferences of unions • large literature debating what the objective function of a union is likely to be. • But good reason to think unions like: • higher wages (unions do set out to raise wages for their members) • higher employment (they normally fight reductions in employment). • A simple way of capturing these ideas is to assume that the utility function has the form:

  6. So indifference curves look like..

  7. The Process of Bargaining • Two main issues: • the subject of bargaining • whose preferences, employer or union, get most weight in determining the outcome. • On the subject of bargaining, there are two main models: • the labour demand curve (or right-to-manage) model • unions and employer negotiate the wage but employment is determined unilaterally by the employer. • the efficient bargain model • unions and employer negotiate both the wage and employment.

  8. The Labour Demand Curve Model • Given wage, employment will be where MRPL=w • But what will be the wage? • Consider extreme case where union has all the bargaining power • Will choose point on labour demand curve that gives highest utility

  9. Graphically…

  10. What determines how high this wage will be? • One can show that the wage will be lower: • the more sensitive is labour demand to the wage (the higher the wage elasticity of labour demand) – a high elasticity makes the trade-off between wages and employment less attractive. • the more the union cares about employment relative to the wage.

  11. Between the extremes.. • What happens if we have some distribution of bargaining power between union and employer between the two extremes we have discussed? • It should not be hard to see that we will have some outcome on the labour demand curve between the two extremes and that the wage will be lower: • the more bargaining power the employer has

  12. In the labour demand curve model.. • Unions raise wages • Unions reduce employment • Unions reduce profits • In a model with capital they would also reduce investment • But perhaps this is not the final word

  13. The Efficient Bargain Model • The labor demand curve model is based on a ‘realistic’ set of assumptions. • The criticism is that the outcome has unexploited gains from trade. • To see this consider drawing iso-profit curves on Figures. The have an inverted u-shape and, more importantly, they are horizontal at all points on the labour demand curve.

  14. Implication • at the monopoly union outcome, the firm iso-profit curves and union indifference curves are not tangential • both parties could be made better-off by swapping a reduction in the wage for some increase in employment away from the labor demand curve. • The efficient bargain model makes both wages and employment the subject of bargaining • leads to an outcome in which all gains from trade are exploited and union indifference curves and firm iso-profit curves are tangential. • there are many such points differing in the distribution of surplus between employer and union – the set of these points is called the contract curve.

  15. The Contract Curve • Can show that contract curve has the form • If γ=0 then same as labour demand curve • If 1>γ>0 then downward-sloping • If γ=1, then vertical • If γ>1, upward-sloping • Unions raise wages but may also raise employment (depending on preferences)

  16. Empirical Evidence: Wages • very large literature on the effect of unions on wages (the union wage mark-up). • Typically this includes union status in an earnings function together with other factors and interprets the coefficient on the union variable as the causal effect of union status on wages. • Little experimental or quasi-experimental evidence but people accept this literature as it gives ‘sensible’ answers – a mark-up of 15+% in the US, 10% in the UK (though zero in recent years).

  17. Empirical Evidence: Employment • The literature on the impact of unions on employment is tiny. • In part this is because the equivalent of the above wage regression – regress employment on union status leads to a strong positive effect, something people have been very reluctant to believe. • Perhaps for good reason, as unions may be more likely to succeed in organizing workers in large firms.

  18. diNardo-Lee • Contribution needs to be set against weaknesses of other literature • They exploit the fact that unions in the US have to win a representation election to be allowed to negotiate. • This leads to a RDD design in which one can compare subsequent outcomes in firms where the union just won with the outcome in firms where the union just lost. • There is a good discussion in the paper of what one can hope to estimate using this – the ‘impact of unionization’ is too simple. They summarize what one might expect in:

  19. Conclusion • union impact on the ‘bottom line’ is very small on: • business survival • Employment • Output • Productivity • wages • i.e. unions seem to do very little. A representative type of empirical finding is:

  20. The Effect on Employment

  21. A puzzle • Even the effect on wages is very small compared to previous estimates. • How can we interpret these results and reconcile them with other findings: • studies ‘young’ unions who have less impact – but wage effect on cross-section is similar to other studies. • can only identify effect at margin but not much evidence of other effects. • Its all a bit troubling – this study has the best quality data but conclusions that are at odds with • what many people think • the fact that employers spend large sums of money trying to avoid unions.

  22. Conclusion • Hard to get good research design to study the effect of unions • Best study we has fails to find any effects at all • But reluctant perhaps to believe that • Research does not always give us clear answers

More Related