A collective association of workers whose aim is to improve
the pay and conditions of member workers.
Aim to:
·
Improve real incomes
·
Working conditions
·
Pensions
·
Security
·
Unfair dismissal
·
Counter monopsony power
·
Protect against discrimination
Trade union membership has declined to less than 30% of all those
employed in the UK
(2007). Reasons for this include:
·
Membership is considered to be a waste since the
economy was in a boom creating less of a need to bargain for higher wages
·
Tougher employment laws
·
Little evidence for significant mark-ups in wage
levels bought about by trade unions
·
You become less employable if you belong to a
trade union
·
Changes to the labour market: decline in jobs in
heavy industry to more service sector based, shifts towards shorter employment
contracts and more people working part-time/flexible hours
·
Some employers restricted trade unions in their
work place
Unions influence pay by:
Ø
Collective bargaining
o negotiate
pay levels above the current levels that exist. This is only effective if the
union has control over the total labour supply available in the industry.
Ø
Closed shop agreement – employer and union agree
that all workers be part of the union
o Pre-entry:
workers must join the union before starting
employment
o Post-entry:
non trade union members get the job but have to join to keep the job. This
prevents free-riders benefiting from the mark up bought by the union on wages
o This was
considered to be a labour restrictive practice and is now illegal in the UK
Pre-entry closed shop
The diagram below briefly displays a pre-entry closed shop
agreement made by unions.
S1 shows the supply for
labour in the market before the closed shop agreement. Supply shifts to the
left and becomes more inelastic because the increase in wages has minimal
effect on employment if the workers have already been employed by the firm.
Employment still, however, falls from L1
to L2 when wages rise from W1 to W2.
Perfectly competitive market
To refresh your memory of the PC market, click on the
revision notes of the PC market in the short run and long run.
This diagram shows the effects of a trade union in a perfectly competitive market. The equilibrium wage rate is W1
where the number of workers employed is L1.
The effect of the trade union is that wages are pushed up to W2 à the acceptable wage rate for union members. The
supply curve becomes W2XS. From W2X, the supply curve is perfectly elastic. Along
XS, the curve is upwards sloping because more workers are attracted to higher
wage rates. The employer wishes to hire L3
workers but the number of workers willing to work at the wage rate of W2 is L2.
Thus there is excess supply of labour, causing classical unemployment between L2-
L3.
This diagram argues that the trade union causes unemployment,
however one can counter-argue, as in
the Keynesian view. It is
unrealistic to assume that demand conditions remain unchanged because higher
wages would normally increase demand for output, thus increasing output and
increasing demand for workers to produce more output.
This diagram can also be used to explain the effect of the National
Minimum Wage, as well as trade union mark-ups.
Look out for more on the effects of trade unions in a monopsonistic market soon! (To prepare yourself, you could read Word of the Day)
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