published in: David Card, Richard Blundell, and Richard B. Freeman (eds.), Seeking a Premier Economy: The Economic Effects of British Economic Reforms, 1980-2000, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London, 2004, 181-232
After expanding in the 1970s, unionism in Britain contracted substantially over the next two
decades. This paper argues that the statutory reforms in the 1980s and 1990s were of less
consequence in accounting for the decline of unionism than the withdrawal of the state’s
indirect support for collective bargaining. The principal goal of the reforms was to boost
productivity so the paper examines the link between unions and productivity finding only a
small association by the end of the 1990s. Private sector unionism has become highly
decentralized which renders it vulnerable to the vagaries of market forces.
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