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Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining

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Parties must notify FMCS within 30 days of the initial notification of the ... Imposes costs on both firm and union, forces parties to bargain seriously ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining


1
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Notification of Intent to Bargain
  • Warning period Party wishing to terminate or
    modify an existing agreement must notify the
    other party at least 60 days prior to the date
    (90 days in the case of a health care
    institution)
  • Parties must notify FMCS within 30 days of the
    initial notification of the intent to terminate
    or modify.
  • Union cannot strike during the 60-day period.
    Workers discharged for striking during the
    warning period have no NLRA rights.
  • Existing contract terms and conditions continue
    through warning period.

2
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • 2) Duty to Bargain in Good Faith
  • Section 8(d), NLRA
  • Mutual obligation of the employer and
    representative of the employees to meet at
    reasonable times and confer in good faith with
    respect to wages, hours, and other terms and
    conditions of employment, .
  • But such obligation does not compel either party
    to agree to a proposal or require the making of a
    concession.

3
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Standards for Good-Faith Bargaining
  • Totality of Conduct bad-faith determination
    hinges on pattern of behavior, not individual
    incidents
  • Employer Provision of Information
  • Employer must provide information requested by
    the union, provided
  • It is relevant to the contract
  • It does not reveal trade secrets
  • It is not unduly burdensome to collect
  • Firm must provide financial information if it
    claims inability to pay

4
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Standards for Good-Faith Bargaining
  • Surface Bargaining
  • Tactical delays or other actions that indicate
    insincere efforts to reach an agreement
  • Boulwarism Take-it-or-Leave-it offers
  • General Electrics Lemuel Boulwares strategy of
    making a reasonable offer and then refusing to
    budge.

5
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Mandatory, Voluntary and Illegal issues
    (Borg-Warner, 1958)
  • Mandatory issues
  • must be discussed if raised by either party
  • can be pushed to impasse
  • Voluntary issues
  • must only be discussed if both parties agree
  • Cannot be pushed unilaterally to impasse
  • Illegal issues
  • Cannot be raised by either party
  • See Table 5-1, p. 209, Carrell and Heavrin

6
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Mandatory issues
  • Issues included in the NLRA Section 8(d)
  • wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of
    employment
  • Borg-Warner subjects that vitally affect
    employees
  • Employee security
  • Job Performance
  • Union Security
  • Subcontracting or substitution of other labor for
    work in the bargaining unit

7
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Ratification of contract by majority vote of
    rank-and-file
  • If ratified, contract is written
  • Typical parts
  • Wage/compensation/working conditions
  • Union security
  • Job security/individual rights
  • Contract administration

8
Legal Requirements for Collective Bargaining
  • Impasse If a legal impasse is reached
  • Firm can unilaterally implement its last, best
    offer including voluntary issues
  • Parties may submit to third party intervention
    (FMCS, others)
  • Parties may agree to continue to work under the
    old contract
  • Lockout
  • Strike

9
Typical Bargaining Process
  • Figure 5-2, p. 207 of Carrell and Heavrin

10
Setting Goals Flanagans Model of Public Goods
  • Public good
  • Nonrival Consumption by one person does not
    limit amount available for others
  • Nonexclusive no one can be excluded from
    consuming the good
  • Role of homogeneity vs heterogeneity of
    preferences
  • More heterogeneity means less satisfaction
  • Union stability may be threatened if
    heterogeneity is prevalent
  • Median voter preferences matter

11
Setting Goals Flanagans Model of Public Goods
  • Problems
  • Multiple issuesno unique best solution
  • Log rolling
  • Intensity of preferences
  • Unions do the best they can
  • Monitor progress of previous contract
    administration to find sticking points
  • Review other contracts in the industry
  • Survey of members (example of the Teamsters and
    UPS, p. 213-214 in Carrell and Heavrin)
  • Economic (compensation) and Noneconomic (working
    conditions, union security, contract
    administration)

12
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • Features
  • Sticking points (reservation wages)
  • Union has minimum acceptable wage
  • Firm has maximum acceptable wage
  • Information is typically private
  • Union Resistance Curve
  • Determines how rapidly union moderates its
    demands
  • Firm Concession Curve
  • Determines how rapidly firm raises its offer
  • Contract Zone

13
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • Features
  • Union reservation wage and resistance depends on
    union bargaining position
  • Unemployment Rate
  • Strike fund
  • Industry experience re wages, benefits
  • Possible permanent loss of jobs, union security
    if there is an impasse

14
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • Features
  • Firm reservation wage and concession depends on
    firm profitability
  • Potential for lost market share and revenue if
    production is disrupted
  • Potential for use of substitute labor for union
    labor
  • Other plants
  • Replacement workers
  • Firm profitability and productivity growth
  • Inventories

15
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
Wage
Concession
W
Resistance
T
Time
16
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • HIGH UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

Wage
C
C
W
R
R
T
Time
?
17
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • LOW UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

Wage
C
C
W
R
R
T
Time
?
18
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • Role of strike date
  • Imposes costs on both firm and union, forces
    parties to bargain seriously
  • Steepens resistance and concession curves

19
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • ROLE OF STRIKE DATE

Wage
C
C
?
W
R
R
T
Time
20
Bargaining Theory Hicks Theory of Union
Resistance and Employer Concessions
  • Role of uncertainty
  • May cause parties to underpredict rivals
    resistance or overpredict likelihood of
    concessions
  • Strikes as Mistakes

21
Bargaining Theory Ashenfelter-Johnson Model
  • Features
  • Firm knows Union resistance Curve
  • Compute expected present value of profit at each
    length of strike
  • Force strike if it maximizes profit
  • Union leadership rank-and-file
  • Strikes as rational outcomes

22
Ashenfelter-Johnson modelfirm forces a strike if
wage reduction will lead to long-run higher
profitability
Wage
Resistance
Strike length
PV(Profit)
Firm Profit
Strike length
S
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