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| Title: | Union Success in Representation Elections: Why Does Unit Size Matter? |
| Contributors: | Farber, Henry S. |
| Keywords: | empirical model union election outcomes |
| Issue Date: | 1-Jun-1999 |
| Citation: | Industrial and Labor Relations Review, January 2001, pp. 329-348 |
| Series/Report no.: | 420 |
| Abstract: | I establish four facts regarding the pattern of NLRB supervised representation
election activity over the past 45 years: 1) the quantity of election activity has fallen
sharply and discontinuously since the mid-70’s after increasing between the mid-1950’s
and the mid-1970’s; 2) union success in elections held has declined less sharply, though
continuously, over the entire period; 3) it has always been the case that unions have been
less likely to win NLRB-supervised representation elections in large units than in small
units; and 4) the size-gap in union success-rates has widened substantially over the last forty
years. I develop a simple optimizing model of the union decision to hold a representation
election that can account for the first three facts. I provide a pair of competing explanations
for the fourth fact: one based on differential behavior by employers of different sizes and one
purely statistical. I then develop and estimate three empirical models of election outcomes
using data on NLRB elections over the 1952-98 time period in order to determine whether
the simple statistical model can account for the size pattern of union win rates over time.
I conclude that systematic union selection of targets for organization combined with the
purely statistical factors can largely account for the observed patterns. |
| URI: | http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp016t053f97m |
| Appears in Collections: | Working Papers
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