Journal Article
No. 2019-15 | February 14, 2019
José Ramón García and Valeri Sorolla
When is there more employment, with individual or collective wage bargaining?
(Published in Survey and Overview)

Abstract

In a standard Diamond-Mortensen-Pissarides labour market with frictions, the authors seek to determine when there is more employment with individual wage bargaining than with collective wage bargaining, using a wage equation generated by the standard total surplus sharing rule. Using a Cobb-Douglas production function, they find that if the bargaining power of the individual is high compared to the bargaining power of the union, there is more unemployment with individual wage setting and vice versa. When the individual worker and the union have the same bargaining power, if the cost of opening a vacancy is sufficiently high, there is more unemployment with individual wage setting. Finally, for a constant marginal product of labour production function AL, when the individual worker and the union have the same bargaining power, individual bargaining produces more unemployment.  

Data Set

JEL Classification:

E24, O41

Links

Cite As

José Ramón García and Valeri Sorolla (2019). When is there more employment, with individual or collective wage bargaining? Economics: The Open-Access, Open-Assessment E-Journal, 13 (2019-15): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.5018/economics-ejournal.ja.2019-15