Employment and Length of the Working Week in a Unionized Economy in which Hours of Work Influence Productivity.
Conditions are derived for signing the employment effects in a unionized economy of a legislated cut in hours when productivity depends on the number of hours worked each week. Aggregate data suggest that employment will generally increase after a small cut in hours for the United Kingdom but the employment effect is ambiguous for Australia. Disaggregate data for Australia suggest that the employment effect of a cut in hours is often positive. However, any cut in hours imposed on a monopoly union, without a cut in pay, will unambiguously lead to a drop in employment. Copyright 1993 by The Economic Society of Australia.
Year of publication: |
1993
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Authors: | Booth, Alison ; Ravallion, Martin |
Published in: |
The Economic Record. - Economic Society of Australia - ESA, ISSN 1475-4932. - Vol. 69.1993, 207, p. 428-36
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Publisher: |
Economic Society of Australia - ESA |
Saved in:
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