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Title

European Rigidity Versus American Flexibility?: The Institutional Adaptability of Collective Bargaining.

Authors

Ebbinghaus, Bernhard; Kittel, Bernhard

Abstract

According to the unified theory, higher unemployment in Europe as compared to the United States is caused by higher wage rigidity, which, in turn, results from more "inflexible" labor market institutions. Focusing on wage coordination, the empirical analysis shows that the variety of bargaining patterns across European countries and during the period 1971 to 1998 contradicts a simple U.S. -Europe juxtaposition. Although some countries have to cope with excessive wage growth, many others do not trigger higher average wage growth and some coordination forms even show better performance than the United States. Secondly, contrary to the contention of rigidity, the labor market actors in most European countries are responsive to the performance of their bargaining system; they tend to adapt their system if wages seem to overshoot Hence, the rigidity of Europe thesis does not hold in a more detailed cross-national and long-term analysis of institutional changes in wage bargaining.

Subjects

EUROPE; UNITED States; COLLECTIVE bargaining; LABOR unions; UNEMPLOYMENT; WAGES; INDUSTRIAL relations

Publication

Work & Occupations, 2005, Vol 32, Issue 2, p163

ISSN

0730-8884

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1177/0730888405274537

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