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Measuring Bargaining Power Through Grievance Outcomes

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Measuring Bargaining Power Through Grievance Outcomes
Abstract
Using data from a large Ontario steel mill, it is argued that grievance outcomes provide a useful proxy to measure bargaining power. Three independent variables are constructed: 1. the match of a complaint with a specific grievable category in the collective agreement (the complaint/grievance match), 2. the general grievance type, and 3. the work site (works division). Various hierarchical log-linear/logit models are fitted to estimate grievance outcomes. The model that best fits the data is one that includes the interaction between the complaint/grievance category match and grievance type as well as the interaction between the complaint/grievance category match and works division. The results show that under most conditions, bargaining outcomes favor management. Under a specific constellation of conditions, however, bargaining outcomes favor labor. Thus it is only under this specific set of conditions that labor has greater bargaining power than management.
Publication
Relations industrielles / Industrial Relations
Volume
48
Issue
3
Pages
480-502
Date
Summer 1993
Language
English
ISSN
0034379X
Accessed
3/9/15, 9:18 PM
Rights
Copyright Universite Laval - Departement des Relations Industrielles Summer 1993
Citation
Suschnigg, P. (1993). Measuring Bargaining Power Through Grievance Outcomes. Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, 48(3), 480–502. http://www.erudit.org/revue/ri/1993/v48/n3/index.html