Wage Bargaining and Partial Ownership
Abstract
This paper analyzes wage negotiation between firms and unions when crossparticipation
exists at ownership level. We consider two shareholders and two
firms: one firm is jointly owned by the two shareholders and the other is owned
by a single shareholder. Labor is unionized and the firms produce substitute
products. We show that partial ownership increases the bargaining strength of
the firm owned by a single shareholder; although this firm pays lower wages
produces less output than the other firm. Compared with the case in which each
firm is owned by a single shareholder, partial ownership reduces the wage paid
by firms, the output of industry and therefore employment. Whether firms obtain
greater or lower profit depends on the degree to which goods are substitutes.
In fact, we obtain the surprising result that when the degree to which goods are
substitutes is low enough, the firm that is owned by a single shareholder makes
more profit than the other firm.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Quote Item
Estudios de Economía, Vol. 37, No. 1, Junio 2010, pp. 27-42
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