Collective bargaining in Northern Europe under strain: multiple drivers of change and differing responses to them

"Since the 1980s, wage regulation in Europe has been marked by decline and decentralization of collective bargaining. Since the turn of the century, this trend has been reinforced by increased mobility of labour and production factors in the wake of EU’s eastward enlargement, the economic crisi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dølvik, Jon Erik, Marginson, Paul
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Oslo 2018
FAFO
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19306819124911240919-Collective-bargaining-in-North.htm
_version_ 1771659899473756161
author Dølvik, Jon Erik
Marginson, Paul
author_facet Dølvik, Jon Erik
Marginson, Paul
collection Library items
description "Since the 1980s, wage regulation in Europe has been marked by decline and decentralization of collective bargaining. Since the turn of the century, this trend has been reinforced by increased mobility of labour and production factors in the wake of EU’s eastward enlargement, the economic crisis hitting especially southern Europe hard, and the deregulatory political intervention in labour markets instigated by EU and the Troika in these countries. How have these upheavals affected wage regulation in Northern Europe, which has been considered as the bedrock of coordinated collective bargaining and generally was less affected by the crisis? This is the issue addressed in this Fafo-paper, analyzing developments in wage coordination, articulation between bargaining levels, and wage floor regulation in six Northern European countries (Germany, the UK, and four Nordic countries). Concentrating on the impact of European cross-border developments and actor responses to them – especially among organized employers – it asks whether changes in northern wage regulation have mainly been driven by spill-over from the changes in southern Europe (South to North contagion); the EU’s new economic governance regime (Transnational disruption); strengthened regime competition among the northern, high-cost countries themselves (North-North competition), and/or the surge in East-West mobility after the EU/EEA enlargement (East-West destabilization)."
format TEXT
id 19306819124911240919_d7e25f75da1e4ea9a34da3e5e8cdae2a
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19306819124911240919_d7e25f75da1e4ea9a34da3e5e8cdae2a
is_hierarchy_title Collective bargaining in Northern Europe under strain: multiple drivers of change and differing responses to them
language English
physical 52 p.
Digital
publishDate 2018
publisher Oslo
FAFO
spellingShingle Dølvik, Jon Erik
Marginson, Paul
collective bargaining
collective agreement
Collective bargaining in Northern Europe under strain: multiple drivers of change and differing responses to them
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=137740295592
title Collective bargaining in Northern Europe under strain: multiple drivers of change and differing responses to them
topic collective bargaining
collective agreement
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19306819124911240919-Collective-bargaining-in-North.htm