Title: Unions and Collective Bargaining
1Unions and Collective Bargaining
- Labour
- Lecture 1
- Dr. Toke S Aidt
2Practicalities
- Course material on http//www.econ.cam.ac.uk/facul
ty/aidt/ teaching.htm. - Office hour Monday 12-13, room 31.
- Supervisions from TF (assignment on web-page).
3Purpose of course
- Economic approaches to unions and collective
bargaining versus industrial relations
approaches. - Focus on theoretical models and econometrical
testing rather than institutional details. - Prof. Browns lectures will complement this.
4Overview
- Lecture 1 The orthodox view and the monopoly
union - Lecture 2 Bargaining models of unions and and
the Hicks Paradox. - Lecture 3 Collective response and hybrid models
of unions. - Lecture 4 Empirical evidence on union mark-ups.
5The Orthodox View
- Unions distort the allocation of factors of
production. - share supernormal profits with firms.
- monopolise labour supply.
- threat of a strike.
- The monopoly costs of unions
- misallocation of labour
- the hold-up problem.
- and many others
6Misallocation of labour
WU
WNU
VMPL in union sector
DW cost
Wu
Wc
Wnu
VMPL in nonunion sector
7Hold-up problem
- Union and firm share rents.
- The size of the rent depends on investments in
capital by firm. - Firm anticipates that it will only get a share of
the extra rent generated by its investment. - Firm has incentive to under-invest.
- Inefficiently low levels of investments.
8A theory of unions
Objectives
Collective agreement
Conflict
Economics constraints
Strikes lock outs
9What does the union maximize?
Little empirical evidence a standard revealed
preference problem.
w union wage n employment t membership b
outside wage
- Economic welfare of the members
- No principal agent problem
Utilitarian union
Expected utility
The same?
10Union indifference curves
Trade off between high wages and high employment
of members.
A
B
n
11Firms
Profit maximization (so, ignore agency problems)
constant elasticity
w
production function
price
n
Labour demand function
12Product market conditions
- Perfect competition (takes p as given)
- restrictions on entry
- no non-union foreign competitors
- fixed capital
- Imperfect competition (face product market
demand)
- High correlation between imperfections
- Product differentiation
Rents available for sharing
13Conflict resolution
Union wants high wages and employment, but firms
are only willing to employ many at low wages.
- Monopoly union model
- Right to manage model
- Efficient bargaining model
- Strike models
14The monopoly union model
- All workers in a sector are unionised.
- Decentralized bargaining.
- Union sets the wage, w
- The firm sets employment given the wage (the
right to manage).
Note No explicit bargaining takes place.
15st
w
A
wu
b
n
t
nu
16Union mark-up
Elasticity of labour demand
- The more inelastic the labour demand the higher
- the mark-up.
- No mark-up if demand is perfectly elastic.
17The model in action
- The Business cycle labour demand shifts in and
out
w
If the elasticity of labour demand is constant,
then the union model predicts a sticky nominal
wage.
normal
wu
n
recession
182. Outside option
w
low b
Outside option improves and the union wage goes
up.
wu
wu
Outside options bad in recession?
n
high b
3. Membership effects More members have no
impact on the optimal union wage.
19Empirical implications
- b affects wages, but not employment directly.
- Membership (t) has no impact on wages
- wages are sticky.
20What is next?
- Bargaining and agreement (Nash bargaining)
- Models of unions based on bargaining
- right to manage model
- the efficient bargaining model
- Empirical evidence on these models