All about power after all? A multi-level analysis of employers’ organization membership in Europe

IF 1.3 2区 管理学 Q3 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR
Alex Lehr, Giedo Jansen, Bernd Brandl
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Abstract

Employers’ organizations (EOs) are the voice of business interests in social partnership and socio-economic policy making. Their legitimacy depends on the willingness of employers to join them as members. We examine the role of two types of power that EOs confer onto their members as drivers of EO membership: countervailing power against labour and organizational power. By analysing large-scale micro-level data on more than 30,000 business establishments across 27 EU countries in 2013 and 2019, we find that at the micro-level, company size, workplace unionization and the presence of trade unions and works councils are positively associated with membership, as is union density at the macro-level. These findings suggest that, in contrast to contemporary arguments in the EO literature, countering the collective power of labour remains an important motivation for EO membership. The positive impact of company size also suggests that organizational power, that is the ability to influence public policies and collective agreements through EOs, dominates the services provided by EOs to their members as a selective incentive for EO membership. Further tests of this argument, however, yield inconclusive results.

Abstract Image

一切都是关于权力的?欧洲雇主组织成员资格的多层次分析
雇主组织是企业利益在社会伙伴关系和社会经济政策制定中的代言人。它们的合法性取决于雇主是否愿意加入成为其成员。我们研究了雇主组织赋予其成员的两类权力对雇主组织成员资格的推动作用:对抗劳工的权力和组织权力。通过分析 2013 年和 2019 年 27 个欧盟国家 3 万多家企业单位的大规模微观数据,我们发现,在微观层面,公司规模、工作场所工会化以及工会和劳资协议会的存在与会员资格正相关,而在宏观层面,工会密度也与会员资格正相关。这些研究结果表明,与当代雇员组织文献中的观点不同,对抗劳工的集体力量仍然是雇员组织成员的一个重要动机。公司规模的积极影响还表明,组织权力,即通过雇主组织影响公共政策和集体协议的能力,在雇主组织为其成员提供的服务中占据主导地位,成为雇主组织成员的选择性激励因素。然而,对这一论点的进一步检验并没有得出结论。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Industrial Relations
British Journal of Industrial Relations INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
11.50%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: BJIR (British Journal of Industrial Relations) is an influential and authoritative journal which is essential reading for all academics and practitioners interested in work and employment relations. It is the highest ranked European journal in the Industrial Relations & Labour category of the Social Sciences Citation Index. BJIR aims to present the latest research on developments on employment and work from across the globe that appeal to an international readership. Contributions are drawn from all of the main social science disciplines, deal with a broad range of employment topics and express a range of viewpoints.
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