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Collective bargaining: what does the future hold

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Directly affects living conditions of most EU citizens: 80%/90% High even where unionisation is low ... The Kerstin' dystopia: Working for an agency not a bank' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Collective bargaining: what does the future hold


1
Collective bargaining what does the future
hold?
  • Andrew Bibby
  • www.andrewbibby.com

2
The situation in 2003
  • Collective bargaining
  • Directly affects living conditions of most EU
    citizens 80/90
  • High even where unionisation is low
  • No significant decline in recent decades
    (exception UK)
  • Structures differ markedly between countries

3
The situation in 2003
  • No room for complacency
  • Share of GDP growth used for wages has fallen
  • EU accession states have much lower levels of
    collective bargaining
  • Companies are operating globally unions are
    negotiating nationally
  • The world is changing.

4
EWCs
European companies (SEs)
EU enlargement
Globalisation
The uro
Management changes
M As
5
EU social partnership
National social pacts
EWCs
Sectoral collective bargaining at national level
Delegation to business units
Company based bargaining
Personal contracts
6
Four scenarios
  • Supra-national sectoral collective bargaining
    (Judit)
  • Supra-national company-based bargaining (Joan)
  • Collapse of collective bargaining (Kerstin)
  • A multi-layered approach to bargaining

7
1 Supra-national sectoral bargaining?
  • A European-wide banking/insurance agreement?
  • Natural extension of historical process?
  • Multinationals operating cross-border
  • Extension of existing sectoral social dialogue
  • European economic monetary union
  • Defence against regime shopping in zone

8
1 Supra-national sectoral bargaining?
  • The effect of the Euro in ?24 countries
  • Levelling up workers compare wages?
  • Levelling down move to lower-cost areas?
  • Less flexibility for national governments
  • No opportunity for devaluation
  • Limited scope for fiscal policies
  • Pressure on actors in labour market
  • ECB independence

9
1 Supra-national sectoral bargaining?
  • Binding Euro-wide sectoral agreements
  • How to defend richest/best organised areas
    without penalising poorer countries?
  • NB major inequalities in EU25
  • Assumes harmonisation social security/tax
  • Unwelcome to employers
  • Challenging for unions
  • Loss of national autonomy
  • Problems of legitimacy
  • International industrial action illegal?

10
1 Supra-national sectoral bargaining?
  • It can be taken for granted that
    centralized collective bargaining on wages
    between organized employers and unions at the
    European level is out of the question at least
    in the short/medium term
  • Jon Erik Dølvik

11
2 Supra-national company-based bargaining?
  • Reflects cross-border mergers and acquistions
    activity
  • Extension of the European Works Council from
    consultation to negotiation
  • Extension of multinational framework agreements
    (eg Telefónica, VW, Danone)
  • Encouraged by the European Company (Societas
    Europaea) statute?

12
2 Supra-national company-based bargaining?
  • Unwelcome to companies
  • Unwelcome to unions?
  • Challenge to sectoral agreements
  • Loss of national autonomy
  • Limitations of current EWC model

13
2 Supra-national company-based bargaining?
  • The emergence of company-based,
    European-level bargaining or coordination is the
    least probable variant of the possible
    developments of Europeanization of collective
    bargaining
  • Franz Traxler, Univ of Vienna

14
3 Collapse of collective bargaining?
  • The Kerstin dystopia
  • Working for an agency not a bank
  • Flexible work contract working as required
  • Personal negotiation of pay and conditions
  • Unions role replaced by commercial companies
    (WorkAssist)

15
3 Collapse of collective bargaining?
  • Social dumping to offshore countries
  • Financial services no different from other
    consumer services
  • Unhappy example of UK/USA
  • Low level of collective bargaining in accession
    countries

16
3 Collapse of collective bargaining?
  • Would mean collapse of social Europe model
  • Would mean collapse of trade union movement
  • Not necessarily in employers interests?

17
4 A multi-layered approach to collective
bargaining?
  • Coordinated decentralisation
  • European level
  • National cross-sectoral level
  • National sectoral level
  • Company level
  • Local bargaining

18
Global agreements
EU social dialogue
EU sectoral social dialogue
EWCs
Nat social partnership
Cross-sectoral bargaining
Nat sectoral bargaining
Nat company bargaining
Local bargaining
19
4 A multi-layered approach to collective
bargaining?
  • A new kind of balance a kind of
    coordinated decentralisation based on
    multi-level framework bargaining and improved
    monitoring has developed in many member States
  • High Level Group on Industrial
    Relations and Change, 2002

20
4 A multi-layered approach to collective
bargaining?
  • Overall European framework
  • Sectoral agreements set key parameters/minimum
    standards combined with company negotiations?
  • Or sectoral agreements set standards for SMEs
    larger (multinational) companies negotiate
    separately?

21
4 A multi-layered approach to collective
bargaining?
  • Coordination more than simple liaison
  • Attempting to achieve the same or related
    outcomes in separate negotiations

22
4 A multi-layered approach to collective
bargaining?
  • Implications
  • Increased role for international union
    organisations
  • Initiatives like UNIs CB Network essential
  • Good information essential

23
4 A multi-layered approach to collective
bargaining?
  • Implications
  • Unions must think global, not simply European
  • Global works councils
  • Develop multinationals Framework Agreements

24
  • Andrew Bibby
  • www.andrewbibby.com
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