Event

The Impact of Unions on Nonunion Wage Setting: Threats and Bargaining by David Green

Join us for this week's event in the Applied Economics Research Seminar Series, Autumn Term 2024

  • Thu 14 Nov 24

    14:00 - 15:30

  • Colchester Campus

    Economics Common Room 5B.307

  • Event speaker

    David Green

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars
    Applied Economics Research Seminar Series

  • Event organiser

    Economics, Department of

The Impact of Unions on Nonunion Wage Setting: Threats and Bargaining by David Green

Join us for the latest Applied Economics Research Seminar Series event, Autumn Term 2024.

David Green, from the Vancouver School of Economics at the University of British Columbia, will present this week's seminar on The Impact of Unions on Nonunion Wage Setting: Threats and Bargaining.

Abstract

In this paper we provide new estimates of the impact of unions on nonunion wage setting. We allow the presence of unions to affect nonunion wages both through the typically discussed channel of nonunion firms emulating union wages in order to fend off the threat of unionisation and through a bargaining channel in which nonunion workers use the presence of union jobs as part of their outside option. We specify these channels in a search and bargaining model that includes union formation and, in our most complete model, the possibility of nonunion firm responses to the threat of unionisation. Our results indicate an important role played by union wage spillovers in lowering wages over the 1980-2010 period. We find de-unionisation can account for 38% of the decline in the mean hourly wage between 1980 and 2010, with two-thirds of that effect being due to spillovers. Both the traditional threat and bargaining channels are operational, with the bargaining channel being more important

The seminar will begin with a presentation and will end with a Q and A session.

It will be held in the Economics Common Room at 2pm on Thursday 14 November. This event is open to all levels of study and is also open to the public. To register your place and gain access to the webinar, please contact the seminar organisers.

This event is part of the Applied Economics Research Seminar Series.