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The Crisis and Precarious Work Irish Economic Policy Conference 2014. Dr. Thomas Turner & Dr. Michelle O’Sullivan, University of Limerick. Outline. Focus on Challenges for unions following crisis public & private sectors immigration
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The Crisis and Precarious WorkIrish Economic Policy Conference 2014 Dr. Thomas Turner & Dr. Michelle O’Sullivan, University of Limerick
Outline • Focus on • Challenges for unions following crisis • public & private sectors • immigration • Challenge for dispute resolution system following crisis
Crisis & Unions in Public Sector • Union presence still strong but likely difficulty in maintaining density levels • Pay cuts & deteriorating conditions • Voluntary redundancies amongst older age groups • Lack of solidarity & consensus amongst unions
Challenges in Private sector • Difficulty in accessing & protecting workers • Changing profile of union members (about 20% are unionised) • Fragility of wage setting for precarious workers • Tensions regarding migrant workers
Wage setting mechanisms • Threats to JLCs & REAs • Importance of State support – Labour Party • Costs – loss of protection, more bureaucratic system • Benefits – some JLCs moved to REA system
Hourly Earnings By Nationality & Unionisation – Private Sector
Proportion agreeing with allowing in many or no immigrants from the same or different ethnic race
Crisis & Dispute Resolution • Crisis led to significant increases in referrals to state bodies • Such increases a symptom of industrial relations & legal systems
Sub-systems Non-unionised sub-system Unionised sub-system Disorganised; Reliance on law Regulated; Restrictions to collectivising
Contrast: The Swedish Employment Rights System • Collectivist orientation –no state agencies except LC • Cases referred to the Labour Court: averaging 400 to 450 • Union involvement in the dispute resolution process is mandated through legislation • Disputes handled directly between union and employer • Minimum intervention of the law or third parties • In many instances, the ‘priority right of interpretation’ is assigned to the ‘established union’
Conclusion • Crisis & work • Worsening conditions in public sector and private sector • Employees in precarious jobs further weakened by crisis • Immigration • Significant increase in negative attitudes between 2006 and 2010 • the decline in positive attitudes to immigrants highest in Greece and Ireland • Dispute resolution • Crisis accelerated trends in referrals to state bodies • Underlying cause: separation of collective and individual disputes in law; weak role afforded to unions in dispute resolution