Regulating Collective Bargaining in Developing Countries: Lessons from Three Developed Countries

Labor eJournal Pub Date : 1997-09-01 DOI:10.2139/ssrn.68991
John H. Pencavel
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

September 1997 What can developing economies learn from the experience of developed economies about how best to regulate unionism and collective bargaining? This paper addresses this question by offering four principles that should guide economic policy on unionism and collective bargaining and then by examining the record of three countries - Australia, New Zealand, and Britain - to illustrate the operation of these principles. Although these three countries share a common heritage, their approach to these issues has been quite different: Australia and New Zealand designed quasi-judicial systems that have intervened extensively in collective bargaining while Britain has followed a tradition in which the explicit role of law was small. These characterizations have changed a good deal in the last fifteen years with the role of the law playing a larger part in Britain and with the systems in Australia and New Zealand undergoing substantial reform. I argue that, appearances notwithstanding, the changes in Australia have been meager while those in New Zealand have been much more radical. I argue also that the traditional characterization of Britain was never accurate and that the influence of the state on collective bargaining was indirect yet substantial. Clearly, industrial relations have changed considerably in Britain since 1979, but I suggest the changes in product market competition and the associated move toward enterprise bargaining have been the principal cause of the changes in collective bargaining and the diminished role of unionism.
规范发展中国家的集体谈判:三个发达国家的经验教训
关于如何最好地管理工会主义和集体谈判,发展中经济体可以从发达经济体的经验中学到什么?本文提出了指导工会主义和集体谈判经济政策的四项原则来解决这个问题,然后通过研究澳大利亚、新西兰和英国这三个国家的记录来说明这些原则的运作。尽管这三个国家有着共同的传统,但它们处理这些问题的方法却截然不同:澳大利亚和新西兰设计了准司法体系,广泛干预集体谈判,而英国则遵循了法律的明确作用很小的传统。这些特征在过去的15年里发生了很大的变化,法律的作用在英国发挥了更大的作用,澳大利亚和新西兰的制度也进行了实质性的改革。我认为,尽管表面上看,澳大利亚的变化是微不足道的,而新西兰的变化要彻底得多。我还认为,传统上对英国的描述从来都不准确,国家对集体谈判的影响是间接的,但却是实质性的。显然,自1979年以来,英国的劳资关系发生了很大的变化,但我认为,产品市场竞争的变化以及与之相关的企业谈判的趋势,是集体谈判发生变化和工会主义作用减弱的主要原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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