Wage Effects of Unions and Industrial Councils in South Africa
In South Africa, unions which played a crucial in the country's transition from apartheid, are coming under fire. Some argue that a high union wage premium, and the industrial council system are important causes of inflexibility in South Afric...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/01/1089593/wage-effects-unions-industrial-councils-south-africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19728 |
Summary: | In South Africa, unions which played a
crucial in the country's transition from apartheid, are
coming under fire. Some argue that a high union wage
premium, and the industrial council system are important
causes of inflexibility in South Africa's labor market.
The authors analyze unions' direct effect on
workers' wages (including the time-honored question
about whether the union wage gap is real, or reflects the
fact that workers who are members of unions, differ from
those who are not), and ask whether there is evidence that
industrial council agreements force affected employers to
pay union wages for non-union workers. They estimate that
among Africans, union members earn about twenty percent more
than non-members, while among whites, union workers earn ten
percent more than non-union workers. They find that African
non-union workers, who are covered by industrial council
agreements, receive a premium of six to 10 percent; the
premium is positive, but not statistically significant for
whites. In addition, the union gap is smaller inside the
industrial council system, than outside the system for
Africans, implying that the total union premium for union
members covered by an industrial council agreement, is
similar to the union premium outside the industrial council
system. Among Africans, the industrial council, and union
wage gaps, are greatest among low-wage workers. To increase
employment, policies in South Africa should focus on
increasing competition among employers within sectors,
rather than increasing competition among workers, by trying
to reduce union power. |
---|