Thursday, May 30, 2019

Collective Bargaining and Labour Market Outcomes for Canadian Working W

Collective Bargaining and Labour Market Outcomes for Canadian Working Women IINTRODUCTION UNIONS, LOW PAY, AND EARNINGS INEQUALITYThe major purposes of this paper are, first, to examine the impacts of collective bargain on agitate securities industry outcomes for women workers in Canada, specifically with remark to impart, benefits coverage, the incidence of low pay and the extent of earnings in make upity, and, second, to suggest ways in which positive impacts could be extended via the expansion of collective bargaining coverage. This destiny of the paper briefly reviews the literature on the impacts of collective bargaining on earnings, low pay, and earnings inequality, and area II provides some background description of the labour market position of Canadian working women. Particular attention is paid to the situation of the majority of women who continue to work in lower paid, often dubious and part-time, clerical, sales, and service jobs. The central conclusion of the em pirical analysis in Part III, mainly based on data from Statistics Canadas 1995 Survey of Working Arrangements, is that collective bargaining coverage, controlling for other factors, has momentous positive impacts in terms of raising pay and access to benefits, and in terms of reducing the incidence of low pay among women workers. However, the level of collective bargaining coverage for women is very low in precisely those sectors of the economy where women in low paid and insecure jobs are well-nigh concentrated, namely in private services and in smaller enterprises. Promoting better labour market outcomes for women workers accordingly requires a major extension of collective bargaining. Part IV of the paper briefly considers ways in which this could be achieved through trade union action and through changes to public policy.The 1996 OECD Employment Outlook comprehensively documented profound differences in the degree of earnings inequality and the incidence of low pay in the adv anced industrial countries, noting that these two labour market characteristics are closely related in that the incidence of low pay tends to be highest in those countries where earnings inequality is the most pronounced. While there is significant variation between countries, a generalized pattern is that continental European countries, particularly in Northern Europe, have a strikingly more equal distributio... ...omen in non-unionized jobs, while for men, the wage difference was about $4.50 - or 24 per cent. The wage premium associated with unionization is shown for selected subgroups of women and men in Table 3. It is notable that the likely union wage premium tends to be higher for less educated workers, though this is more clearly the case for men than for women. This is consistent with the fact that managerial and professional occupations in the private sector have very low rates of unionization.Table 3.Average Hourly Wages of Women and Men, by Unionization and Selected Cha racteristics, Canada 1995WO manpowerMENUnionNon-UnionUnion PremiumUnionNon-UnionUnion PremiumAllAge 15 to 24Age 25 to 44Age 45 to 69Less than high schoolHigh school grad.Certificate/DiplomaUniversity degreeFull-timePart-timeManagerial/Admin.ProfessionalClericalgross revenueServicesBlue CollarFirm size less than 20Firm size 20 to 99Firm size 100 to dFirm size + 500 16.6811.2316.9217.3712.1614.6016.5621.3816.9015.9518.5919.4914.47

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