Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Alison L. Booth
PART I ALLOCATIVE AND TECHNICAL INEFFICIENCY
1. Albert Rees (1963), ‘The Effects of Unions of Resource
Allocation’
2. Greg J. Duncan and Frank P. Stafford (1980), ‘Do Union Members
Receive Compensating Wage Differentials?’
3. S. Rosen (1969), ‘Trade Union Power, Threat Effects and the
Extent of Organization’
4. Harry G. Johnson and Peter Mieszkowski (1970), ‘The Effects of
Unionization on the Distribution of Income: A General Equilibrium
Approach’
5. Paul A. Grout (1984), ‘Investment and Wages in the Absence of
Binding Contracts: A Nash Bargaining Approach’
PART II UNIONS AS EFFICIENCY ENHANCING
6. Richard B. Freeman and James L. Medoff (1979), ‘The Two Faces of
Unionism’
7. Roger L. Faith and Joseph D. Reid, Jr (1987), ‘An Agency Theory
of Unionism’
PART III UNION BARGAINING POWER AND MEMBERSHIP
8. Samuel Bowles (1985), ‘The Production Process in a Competitive
Economy: Walrasian, Neo-Hobbesian, and Marxian Models’
9. Alison L. Booth (1985), ‘The Free Rider Problem and a Social
Custom Model of Trade Union Membership’
10. Alison L. Booth and Monojit Chatterji (1995), ‘Union Membership
and Wage Bargaining when Membership is not Compulsory’
11. Henry S. Farber (1983), ‘The Determination of the Union Status
of Workers’
PART IV UNIONS AND IMPERFECT COMPETITION
12. Steve Dowrick (1989), ‘Union-oligopoly Bargaining’
13. Mark B. Stewart (1990), ‘Union Wage Differentials, Product
Market Influences and the Division of Rents’
14. Stephen Nickell (1999), ‘Product Markets and Labour
Markets’
PART V MODELLING UNION BEHAVIOUR
15. Andrew J. Oswald (1985), ‘The Economic Theory of Trade Unions:
An Introductory Survey’
16. Henry S. Farber (1978), ‘Individual Preferences and Union Wage
Determination: The Case of the United Mine Workers’
17. Douglas H. Blair and David L. Crawford (1984), ‘Labor Union
Objectives and Collective Bargaining’
18. Ken Binmore, Ariel Rubinstein and Asher Wolinsky (1986), ‘The
Nash Bargaining Solution in Economic Modelling’
19. Wassily Leontief (1946), ‘The Pure Theory of the Guaranteed
Annual Wage Contract’
20. Ian M. McDonald and Robert M. Solow (1981), ‘Wage Bargaining
and Employment’
21. Thomas E. MaCurdy and John H. Pencavel (1986), ‘Testing between
Competing Models of Wage and Employment Determination in Unionized
Markets’
22. Alan Manning (1987), ‘An Integration of Trade Union Models in a
Sequential Bargaining Framework’
23. George E. Johnson (1990), ‘Work Rules, Featherbedding, and
Pareto-optimal Union-Management Bargaining’
24. Peter Kuhn and Jacques Robert (1989), ‘Seniority and
Distribution in a Two-worker Trade Union’
PART VI UNIONS AND STRIKES
25. John Kennan and Robert Wilson (1993), ‘Bargaining with Private
Information’
26. Joseph S. Tracy (1987), ‘An Empirical Test of an Asymmetric
Information Model of Strikes’
PART VII CHOICE OF BARGAINING STRUCTURE
27. Henrik Horn and Asher Wolinsky (1988), ‘Worker Substitutability
and Patterns of Unionisation’
28. Byoung Heon Jun (1989), ‘Non-cooperative Bargaining and Union
Formation’
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An Introduction by the editor to both volumes appears in Volume
I
PART I THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF UNIONS
1. Peter Kuhn (1998), ‘Unions and the Economy: What We Know; What
We Should Know’
2. Stephen Machin, Mark Stewart and John Van Reenen (1993), ‘The
Economic Effects of Multiple Unionism: Evidence from the 1984
Workplace Industrial Relations Survey’
3. David Card (2001), ‘The Effect of Unions of Wage Inequality in
the US Labor Market’
4. Richard B. Freeman (1984), ‘Longitudinal Analyses of the Effects
of Trade Unions’
5. Chris Robinson (1989), ‘The Joint Determination of Union Status
and Union Wage Effects: Some Tests of Alternative Models’
6. George Jakubson (1991), ‘Estimation and Testing of the Union
Wage Effect Using Panel Data’
7. Martyn J. Andrews, Mark B. Stewart, Joanna K. Swaffield and
Richard Upward (1998), ‘The Estimation of Union Wage Differentials
and the Impact of Methodological Choices’
PART II UNIONS AND HOURS OF WORK
8. William M. Boal and John Pencavel (1994), ‘The Effects of Labor
Unions on Employment, Wages, and Days of Operation: Coal Mining in
West Virginia’
9. Alison Booth and Fabio Schiantarelli (1987), ‘The Employment
Effects of a Shorter Working Week’
PART III PUBLIC SECTOR UNIONISM
10. Richard B. Freeman (1986), ‘Unionism Comes to the Public
Sector’
11. Carl M. Stevens (1966), ‘Is Compulsory Arbitration Compatible
With Bargaining?’
12. Caroline Minter Hoxby (1996), ‘How Teachers’ Unions Affect
Education Production’
PART IV UNIONS AND THE MACRO-ECONOMY
13. Robert J. Flanagan (1999), ‘Macroeconomic Performance and
Collective Bargaining: An International Perspective’
14. Lars Calmfors and John Driffill (1988), ‘Bargaining Structure,
Corporatism and Macroeconomic Performance’
15. Richard Layard, Stephen Nickell and Richard Jackman (1991),
‘Wage Bargaining and Unions’
16. Huw Dixon and Neil Rankin (1994), ‘Imperfect Competition and
Macroeconomics: A Survey’
17. Alan Manning (1993), ‘Wage Bargaining and the Phillips Curve:
The Identification and Specification of Aggregate Wage
Equations’
18. David Soskice and Torben Iversen (2000), ‘The Nonneutrality of
Monetary Policy with Large Price or Wage Setters’
PART V UNIONS AND FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
19. Robin Naylor (1999), ‘Union Wage Strategies and International
Trade’
Name Index
Edited by Alison L. Booth, Professor of Economics, University of Essex, UK and Fellow, CEPR (Centre for Economic Policy Research), UK
'The two volumes represent an essential collection in all
university libraries and are outstanding reference tools of a
widely dispersed literature for researchers and students in labour
economics and industrial relations (note that many of the included
articles are not easily available in the libraries of many
South-Eastern Universities and research centres).'
*Darko Marinkovic and Bruno S. Sergi, South-East Europe Review*
'Students of labor markets will welcome this intelligently-chosen
compendium of classic papers on the economics of trade unions. This
two-volume collection brings together eminent contributions to
research over a period of more than fifty years. Here is the place
to look for what economists have to say about the role of unions in
the determination of productivity, wages, employment, work hours,
and a host of other things. It provides a valuable opportunity to
take stock of where we are in this class of research and how we
arrived here.'
*John Pencavel, Stanford University, US*
'At a time at which unions struggle to redefine themselves, and
governments think about the right set of labor market institutions,
this collection puts together what economists know about unions. No
ideology masquerading as science here. Just all the classics.'
*Olivier Blanchard, MIT, US*
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