Collective bargaining and workers’ voice are key labour rights, as well as potentially strong enablers of inclusive labour market. As the digital transformation, globalisation and demographic changes, are re-shaping the labour market, collective bargaining is well placed to design solutions to emerging collective challenges. Yet, its capacity to deliver is threatened by the weakening of labour relations in many countries, the flourishing of new − often precarious – forms of employment and the progressive individualisation of employment relationships. |
what's new
February 2021
How do collective bargaining systems and workers’ voice arrangements compare across OECD and EU countries? OECD/AIAS ICTWSS Database on collective bargaining and workers’ voice
What’s in it?
> 56 countries
> 60 years
> 100+ variables
Detailed information on trade unions, employers’ associations, statutory minimum wages, organisation of collective bargaining & wage co-ordination, social pacts and works councils.
July 2020
Policy brief of collective bargaining and gender: Can collective bargaining help close the gender wage gap for women in non-standard jobs?
data on collective bargaining
Data can be accessed using the OECD data warehouse OECD.stat
>> For information on other labour market policies and instutions in OECD countries see the OECD Employment Database
key publications
Negotiating our way up: Collective bargaining in a changing world of work November 2019 Negotiating our way up provides new insights on the effect of collective bargaining systems on employment, job quality and labour market inclusiveness, and considers their renewed role in a changing world of work. The report provides a useful resource for policy-makers, trade unions and employers’ organisations interested in understanding how to make collective bargaining work better for all in the future.
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Facing the future of work: How to make the most of collective bargaining April 2019 This chapter discusses how collective bargaining and workers’ voice can be flexible tools complementing labour market regulation in fostering a more rewarding and inclusive future of work. The chapter reviews what type of government intervention may be required to keep bargaining systems fit for purpose and to make the most of collective bargaining in a changing world of work. Finally, the chapter documents how existing institutions and social partners are adjusting to new challenges in the labour market, as well as the role of emerging actors and practices. |
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The role of collective bargaining systems for good labour market performance July 2018 This chapter assesses the role of collective bargaining for labour market performance in OECD countries. It builds on the detailed characterisation of collective bargaining systems and practices presented in the previous chapter. Using a rich mix of country-, sector- firm- and worker-level data, this chapter investigates the link of different collective bargaining settings with employment, wages, wage inequality and productivity. It then discusses how broad-based employee and employer organisations, administrative extensions, organised forms of decentralisation and wage co-ordination may contribute to better balance inclusiveness and flexibility in the labour market. |
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Collective bargaining in a changing world of work
July 2017 This chapter provides a comprehensive and up-to-date review of collective bargaining systems and workers’ voice arrangements across OECD countries. Despite the fall in trade union density and collective bargaining coverage in the last 40 years, collective bargaining remains a key labour market institution. Yet, the understanding of this key institution is limited by the fact that collective bargaining systems are often described with crude indicators and oversimplified in the literature. This chapter describes in more details the features of collective bargaining systems that are particularly important for labour market outcomes. |
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING BY COUNTRY
THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
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