Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms

Direct union elections, a new institutional arrangement in grassroots trade unions in China, have been introduced experimentally in coastal regions since 2000. Using matched employer–employee data, this study examines the effects of direct union elections on workers’ economic wellbeing. Results reve...

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Main Authors: Le, Junjie, Liu, Qiong, Zhou, Minghai
Format: Monograph
Language:English
Published: Unpublished 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56835/
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author Le, Junjie
Liu, Qiong
Zhou, Minghai
author_facet Le, Junjie
Liu, Qiong
Zhou, Minghai
author_sort Le, Junjie
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Direct union elections, a new institutional arrangement in grassroots trade unions in China, have been introduced experimentally in coastal regions since 2000. Using matched employer–employee data, this study examines the effects of direct union elections on workers’ economic wellbeing. Results reveal that 1) union members with directly elected leaders receive higher wages than those without and 2) direct union elections are positively correlated with worker satisfaction. Additional evidences suggest that effects of direct elections work through stronger union leadership and harmonious industrial relations, resembling the voice-response face of unionism. The effect of direct elections significantly weakens or disappears when we exclude the large firms from the analysis. Meanwhile, the effect of union membership regains its significance. We argue that direct elections are a government-sponsored experiment in which large firms are selected to form an incentive-compatible framework among local governments, firms, and workers for explaining union effects with Chinese characteristics.
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spelling nottingham-568352019-06-10T12:19:38Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56835/ Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms Le, Junjie Liu, Qiong Zhou, Minghai Direct union elections, a new institutional arrangement in grassroots trade unions in China, have been introduced experimentally in coastal regions since 2000. Using matched employer–employee data, this study examines the effects of direct union elections on workers’ economic wellbeing. Results reveal that 1) union members with directly elected leaders receive higher wages than those without and 2) direct union elections are positively correlated with worker satisfaction. Additional evidences suggest that effects of direct elections work through stronger union leadership and harmonious industrial relations, resembling the voice-response face of unionism. The effect of direct elections significantly weakens or disappears when we exclude the large firms from the analysis. Meanwhile, the effect of union membership regains its significance. We argue that direct elections are a government-sponsored experiment in which large firms are selected to form an incentive-compatible framework among local governments, firms, and workers for explaining union effects with Chinese characteristics. Unpublished 2019-01-01 Monograph NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56835/1/Economics%20Working%20Paper%20Series-GEP-G5.pdf Le, Junjie, Liu, Qiong and Zhou, Minghai (2019) Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms. Working Paper. Unpublished. (Unpublished) direct union elections; workers’ economic wellbeing; employer–employee data; firm size; incentive compatible; two faces of unionism
spellingShingle direct union elections; workers’ economic wellbeing; employer–employee data; firm size; incentive compatible; two faces of unionism
Le, Junjie
Liu, Qiong
Zhou, Minghai
Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
title Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
title_full Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
title_fullStr Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
title_full_unstemmed Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
title_short Can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in China?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
title_sort can direct union elections increase workers’ economic wellbeing in china?: testing effects and explaining mechanisms
topic direct union elections; workers’ economic wellbeing; employer–employee data; firm size; incentive compatible; two faces of unionism
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/56835/