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Temas Públicos Nº 829 - www.lyd.org- Email:[email protected] th 20 de20Julio de 2007 July 2007 ISSN 0717-1528 ISSN 0717-1528 Collective Negotiation: When and What For? The collective negotiation is a mechanism that allows distributing the product’s value among employees and the owners of the shared capital, once paid all the others productive factors. reactions is a transfer from workers with unprotected work to protected workers. If, on the contrary, the salaries are lower than the productivity, resources from the workers are transferred to the consumers and to the capital, which is a situation that is neither The theory maintains that the most efficient efficient nor fair. The definition of ideal state is distribution should have the work receive exnot an easy definition, although the market actly its contribution to the product. The negosigns can be analyzed and untiation should take, additionalderstand the tendencies. We will ly, the least possible cost, in 1 study these aspects in depth terms of conflict . further on. In Chile there’s no evidence to Salaries and Productivity For a negotiation to agree on balanced salaries it is necessary for the conditions of the negotiations to be reasonably balanced, so the salary satisfactory can reflect the employees’ contribution. think that salaries are lower than productivity, and on the contrary, the high and constant unemployment rates are explained by strictness in salaries, particularly associated to minimum wage, only variable subject to a centralized negotiation. Productivity and Salaries in Chile In Chile the work productivity between 2000 and 2006 increased in average closer to the actual salaries, in spite of the unemployment rate which is 8.9% (rate includes emergency unemployment programs) and that increases the costs that had to be balanced with productivity increases. If we start with that initial balance, raises in salaries where no increases in productivity are reflected can only be justified by consumer’s transfers, capital returns or both. Morandé and Bergoeing believe that the market, even before the labor reform was approved (in 2001), reveals an impact equivalent to an employment tax of 6%2. Consumer’s transfers involve welfare losses that the affected will try to minimize by diverting its consumption towards other goods, if possible. Capital transfers encourage redirecting investment to other productive sectors and less exhausting technologies in “the kind of work with salary higher than its productivity” or laboring in general, reducing the employment level. A consequence of these inevitable That reform surprised by raising the regulation costs and reducing the working week from 48 hours to 45 hours (6.4%), and later in 2002 the unemployment benefit was introduced, which represents a tax equivalent to the cost of the taxes of the employee and the employer minus the value that the employee pays for that provision. 5 Graph 1: Productivity and Salaries Increase 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Average Productivity Increase 2,70% 2,20% 0,30% 0,10% 3,20% 1,80% 2,50% 1,80% Rate of real Unemployme remunerations 1,40% nt 9,00% 1,60% 9,10% 2,00% 9,70% 0,90% 9,50% 1,80% 9,50% 1,90% 8,20% 2,00% 7,60% 1,70% 8,90% adverse cycle, the most recent one, where unemployment stabilized in high levels having no tendency of adjusting in the first few years. Empirical evidence shows the strictness in salary obligations as being responsible for that and this strictness is associated mostly to the minimum wage. The duration of the collective negotiation and salary indexation would also have an effect. Collective negotiations would help as a model for sectors of the economy that don’t negotiate collectively3. (1) Productivity is measured as the variation of the product by employee. This In conclusion, during the analyzed period, there was an increase in costs and unemployment, salaries had to increase less than the productivity and but they increased anyway, reinforcing the hypothesis that the labor relations are balanced. means that the average product is the same as the marginal product. (2) In order to measure the raises in salaries various INE (National Statistics Institute) actual salaries per hour are used. (3) The unemployment rate is the INE (National Statistics Institute) official measurement, and therefore excludes de emergency jobs effect It is important to give emphasis to the fact that the salaries may increase the same as the productivity, in spite of the labor costs or income taxes. In this last case, we can perceive a lower employment level at an aggregate level. This may explain the low rates in employment participation in our country. While in Chile 58.4% of people between 15 and 64 years old work, the average the country members of the OECD is 65.3%. Labor Union Rate and Impact of the Collective Negotiation In spite of aforementioned, new legal changes are intended for the collective negotiation, whose objective seems to be to increase the syndicalism rate. However, it is appropriate to ask if the syndicalism is less than expected and therefore the objective is to give freedom to syndicalism, or if the increase of the rate is meant to be the objective itself. Additionally, it is highly questionable that this is the right way to look for more syndicalism. Additionally, our job market always reacts in front of adversity increasing the unemployment rates which are prolonged in time. The labor union density rate worldwide shows a big variability and for 2003 there were rates of 8.3% in France, 11% in Korea, even rates of 78% in Sweden or 74% in Finland4. In the graph 1 you can observe that the labor market in Chile presents serious fluctuations In the unemployment rates and that facing adversity, the adjustments are done in the work levels instead of salary changes. This was observed not only in the 1982 crisis but also In the recent Asiatic crisis, in spite of the difference in the magnitude of shock and the previous macro economic conditions. In the first crisis, unemployment took longer in adjusting to its levels. However, it is on the second In Chile5 that same year the rate was 15.6% of the wage-earning populace and in 2006 it was 14.5%, maintaining the world wide tendency. Literature mentions that this tendency which started in the eighties depends on various fac- 6 tors, among high unemployment rates in European countries, globalization, the slightest impact of inflation, etc. Considering all this, the working atmosphere is nothing but a very indirect indicator. For example, after the approval of the sub contractor’s law there have been many conflicts that have surpassed the public order and have ended up in criminal acts and this could be perfectly attributed to a change in the national politic climate. In fact, a factor that may be interesting to analyze with more detail is the development of the politicized conflicts recently like an attempt to explain the inequality occurred in the last 20 years. The important thing is to measure if there is less syndicalism than the expected by the employees and for that you can only turn to indirect indicators. For example, according to the “Dirección del Trabajo” (Institution in charge of making the labor affairs more fair), the number of fines given out for anti syndicalism practices have been only of 25, 27, 26 and 38 cases on the consecutive semesters of 2005 and 2006. On the other hand, surveys by the “Dirección del Trabajo” until 2004 (last available date), on collective negotiation processes show an attitude on the negotiation parties, confirming the low impact of strikes. Decentralized Negotiation One of the most persistent proposals of some of the Left leaning parties is to make the employer do labor negotiation with the company. The collective negotiation field is more related to efficiency and the need to reduce the probability of transfers from the consumers and other workers and doesn’t respond to the objective of increasing syndicalism per se, subject that seems to be in the agenda of socialism. This scenario couldn’t be described as anti syndicalism and the explanations for the lower rate in syndicalism should be looked for in the lack of manual labor in large companies, or in the lack of motivation of the workers. A less explored cause, in a legal context, is the lack of subject matters to negotiation on undeniable and over regulated rights, with salary indexation. It is interesting to point out that the salaries in sectors that don’t negotiate may be following the same path of the sectors where collective negotiations do take place or similar to salaries negotiated centrally such as minimum wage or the public sector readjustment. The theoretical and empirical evidence demonstrate that the conditions of the collective negotiation may give different conclusions of negotiating power between the parties. 7 Image 1: Unemployment rate 30,00 con programas de empleo de emergencia efectiva 25,00 20,00 15,00 In a business, an excessive salary pressure will displace the future investments and on the other hand, salaries lower than productivity will make the more efficient workers leave the business. Even, inside the big businesses it is totally efficient and fair to ne5,00 gotiate over cost centers and individually, be0,00 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 20 20 cause that motivates 60 62 64 66 68 70 72 74 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 more efficient people or groups to be rewarded. Source: Elaborated based on: a) Coloma and Rojas: "Evolution on the Labor Market in Chile: Reform and Results The opposite leads the in The Economic Transformation of Chile" CEP, editors Larraín, Vergara. The authors quote employees to do averfor 1960-1969 Bulletins ODEPLAN (1982). 1970-1985: Cortázar (1997). 1986-1997: INE age work, causing a official data; and for PEM, Jadresic (1986) and for 1986-1988 corrected by methodology tendency to reduce proponed by him. b) Since 1997 and after, unemployement is obtained from INE and the emergency productivity. This is because by doing reorganemployment programs from DIPRES. izations based on average productivity, employees with low producCox and Edwards6 analyzed the impact tivity are rewarded and the ones with high of the labor reforms between 1973 and 1989, productivity are punished. considering separately the effect of the changOn the other hand, a negotiation centralized es on job protection, decentralization of the colnationally allows the workers that belong to a lective negotiations and the privatization of solabor union be responsible for the cost in salary cial security. pressures over productivity. Blanchard and The authors believe that the country Phiippon affirm that the speed that the labor moved from centralized collective negotiations unions learn is a variable to considerate and to negotiation systems inside the businesses the same happens with the politicized degree and as a consequence it was possible to reof the labor union movement7. duce unemployment and the natural rate of In the case of Chile, in spite of having good unemployment. relations within the companies and in collective The advantage of the negotiations inside negotiations, more centralized negotiations on the businesses is in particular its efficiency, minimum wage and private sector readjustbecause it allows the parties to be responsible ment are constantly seen, even though they for the cost of bad decisions. are considered as a fact more than a legal 10,00 8 order. According to the available evidence, regarding strictness in payments and the impact on readjustments in minimum wages, the more qualified workers have transferred the cost to the younger ones, and therefore, it would be difficult to incorporate these kinds of cost to centralized levels. affirm that they are lower than expected or that they differ to the evolution of other countries. In any case, pretending to increase syndicalism by introducing collective negotiations within the businesses would have a high cost in efficiency, harming fundamentally the unemployed, less qualified workers and the consumers. Literature, at the same time, identifies the intermediate model as the least efficient one, because the employees of one sector compete with others and they try to take over rents without incorporating the global impact on work, as long as they can transfer the cost to other In the case of Chile, in sectors of the economy. 8 For Bertola and others spite of having good relations (2002) the first ones going within the companies and in through job losses are the collective negotiations, more centralized negotiations on workers with more offer minimum wage and private flexibility (young people sector readjustment are and women and the older constantly seen, even though ones with pensions) they are considered as a fact more than a legal order. 4 Pencavel, J. (1997): “ Regulating Collective Bargaining in Developing Countries: Lessons fron three developed countries”. 1 Morandé, F. anf Bergoeing, R. (2003): “Labor Market Distortions, Employment and Growth: The Recent Chilean Experience”. 2 Céspedes, LF and Tokman. A. (2004) “Evolución reciente del desempleo en Chile” – “Recent unemployment evolution in Chile” 3 Cowan, Micco, Mizala, Pagés, Romaguera (2003): “ Un diagnóstico del desempleo en Chile”. – “ A diagnose of unemployment in Chile” Cowan, Micco Pagés (2004) “Labor market adjustment in Chile”. Visser, J. (2006). Union Memberhip statistics in 24 countries. Monthly Labor Review. January. The figure corresponding to France was confirmed with the Chilean French Chamber. Conclusions 5 This figure, however, doesn’t come from the same source, but from the Dirección del Trabajo. In Chile there’s no evidence to think that salaries are lower than productivity, and on the contrary, the high and constant unemployment rates are explained by strictness in salaries, particularly associated to minimum wage, only variable subject to a centralized negotiation. 6 Cox, A. and Edwards, S. (2000) “Economic Reforms and Labor Markets; policy issues and lessons from Chile”. 7 Blanchard, O. Y Philippon, T. (2004) : “ The quality of labor relations and unemployment”. NBER 10.590 8 Bertola, G., Blau, F. y Khan, L (2002), “Labor Market Institutions and Demographic” NBER 9043, Even when the syndicalism rates are not high and have decreased, it is not possible to 9