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Collective Bargaining and the Public Interest
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Canadian opinions about labour unions have changed in recent years. The more frequent use of strikes to resolve disputes has contributed to a growing intolerance of unions, particularly in the publ...
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01 June 1989

Collective Bargaining and the Public Interest presents a critical assessment of the way society marshals and deploys its labour force. David Winch's analysis is based on the economic theory of how markets work and the criteria of welfare economics by which they can be evaluated. Using neoclassical economic theory to analyse the welfare economics of collective bargaining, Winch examines where and to what extent legitimate third-party inter-ests are involved when labour unions and firms come together to negotiate collective agreements. Winch also makes important recommendations for public policy. He concludes that while unions and collective bargaining serve society well, the process of dispute resolution by conflict, or strike, does not. He proposes that arbitration be employed instead of strike or lock-out as a last resort mechanism of dispute resolution.
Price: $110.00
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication Date:
01 June 1989
ISBN: 9780773561984
Format: eBook
BISACs:
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Public Finance, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations
"No economist specialising in the analysis of collective bargaining has carried out the type of analysis conducted here... fills a significant gap." W.C. Riddell, Department of Economics, University of British Columbia.