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Why are German employers associations declining? a challenge to the conventional wisdom

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posted on 2023-08-05, 11:50 authored by Wolfgang Schroeder, Stephen SilviaStephen Silvia

This paper challenges the conventional explanation for declining density of German employers associations. The dominant account asserts that German trade unions have taken advantage of increased globalization since the 1980s which has made internationally active enterprises more vulnerable to production disruptions to extract additional monopoly rents from multinational employers via aggressive collective bargaining. Small firms have responded to the increased union pressures by avoiding membership employers associations, which has produced the density declines. Data, however, disconfirm the conventional explanation; compensation increases have actually become increasingly smaller over the decades. This paper presents an alternative explanation that is consistent with the data. We argue that it is the large product manufacturers rather than the trade unions that have greatly increased price pressures on parts suppliers, which has led to a disproportionate number of suppliers to quit employers associations. The paper also discusses these findings in light of the varieties of capitalism literature. It points out that this literature has depicted national models as too homogeneous. The decision of several German employers associations to offer different classes of membership represents an accentuation of variety within national varieties of capitalism.

History

Publisher

Center for European Studies, Harvard University

Notes

CES Germany & Europe Working Papers, No. 05.3, 2005.

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/1961/auislandora:83884

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