Labor Relations
Module 4: Labor Relations in a Global
Environment
Topics
1. Unions, the Global Economy, and Free Trade 2. Labor Relations and Multinational Corporations 3. The Labor Relations Environment in Foreign Countries
1. Unions, the Global Economy, and Free Trade
Today international trade and global economic activity are enormous. In recent years, the focus
has shifted from the national economy to a more global perspective. Many developing nations
are experiencing newfound prosperity, and U.S. firms are rapidly expanding their overseas
markets. However, the net benefits of globalization have been uneven. Many American jobs have
been lost. Among the hardest hit have been industries with a strong union presence—steel,
automobiles, textiles, and consumer electronics. An estimated 17 million American workers have
been displaced since the early 1980s. About one-third of these jobs were in manufacturing.
The AFL-CIO has begun to recognize that unions must broaden their perspective. They can no
longer concern themselves exclusively with U.S.-based corporations and the domestic economy.
If unions are to survive and prosper, they must incorporate a more global perspective. Speaking
at a gathering of worldwide trade unions in 2001, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney stated:
[t]he global economy that corporations have forged can only be tamed by the international
solidarity of working families everywhere…[w]e must commit to pressuring our governments to
champion the cause of building enforceable workers' rights into the rules of the global market.
(Sweeney, 2006)
Sweeney and other union leaders acknowledge the benefits of expanding global trade. They also
point out that these new economic realities come with some costs. To fuel their growing
economies, countries are sometimes forced to compete among themselves to attract investment
capital. This competition does not always translate into higher wages or an enhanced standard of
living. In fact, in some instances, competition for new plants and new investment may actually
drive down wages. Organized labor also believes that expanding global competition can erode
workers' rights, threatening important job protections.
Pros and Cons of the Global Economy
The pros and cons of the expanding global economy are hotly debated. Some economists agree
with the concerns expressed by the AFL-CIO. Unquestionably, global enterprises and keen
competition for investment capital have taken on added importance in recent years. As countries
scramble for limited capital and investments in new plants and equipment, the effect may be
downward pressure on both wages and environmental standards.
Protections for workers (wage-and-hour laws, safety statutes, fair-employment laws, and job
security) may follow the same downward path. Other experts sharply disagree. They argue that
employers are less concerned with maintaining low wage levels and more concerned with
identifying a productive workforce and a good infrastructure to support their business. For
example, high-technology companies need to maintain close ties with universities as a ready
source of intellectual capital. Finally, supporters of globalization point out that many MNCs have
actually raised the labor standards and improved employee working conditions in countries
where they have opened production facilities.
Free Trade Agreements
Another dramatic change has been the recent proliferation of free trade agreements.
Increasingly nations are forming pacts to reduce trade barriers and encourage the free movement
of goods and services across their national borders. Perhaps the best-known regional trade
agreement is the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The net effects of this and
similar agreements are hotly debated. Consumers have clearly benefited because of lower prices
and increased selection, and U.S. exports to Canada and Mexico have increased substantially
since the 1993 enactment of NAFTA. However, over the same period, the United States has
experienced a substantial decrease in manufacturing jobs.
Thus, the overall effects have been uneven. Looking at free trade on a global rather than a
regional basis, it is clear that virtually any product can be manufactured more cheaply in China
than it can in higher-wage countries of North America and western Europe. Enhanced trade with
China has generated a selection of reasonably priced consumer goods for the American market.
However, the migration of manufacturing capacity to Asia poses a direct threat to American jobs,
both union and nonunion.
Organized labor has taken a strong stand against the expansion of free trade pacts. Indeed, the
AFL-CIO has launched protests at several trade conferences aimed at reducing trade and tariff
barriers. Union concerns extend beyond the mere loss of jobs. Unions also see free trade
agreements as responsible for an overall deterioration in worker rights. Fundamental worker
rights were addressed in one of the supplemental agreements to NAFTA, the so-called North
American Agreement on Labor Cooperation (NAALC). Through the NAALC, Canada, Mexico,
and the United States adopted a statement of principles. These include a shared commitment to
enforce 11 basic worker rights, including protection for the right to strike, prohibitions against
child labor, and appropriate compensation for occupational injuries.
Like NAFTA itself, NAALC has yielded mixed results. The agreement fails to provide specific
remedies where a worker's rights have been violated. In addition, there are no simple
mechanisms to sanction governments that do not adhere to the letter or spirit of the agreement.
The procedures to address infractions are cumbersome. However, labor and human rights groups
have used NAALC as a basis to convene conferences and studies on worker rights and have
raised public awareness of the problem. When claims of abuses have surfaced, NAALC
members have sought to avoid public airing of the accusations, which has resulted in the
informal resolution of many worker complaints.
2. Labor Relations and Multinational Corporations
In addition to contending with the overall expansion in world trade and the growth in free trade
agreements, unions must also contend with the growth of multinational corporations (MNCs).
Corporations that produce and market goods across national borders and maintain a presence in
several countries are not new. Many large U.S. corporations sought to tap foreign markets as
early as the 1950s. In addition, the notion of moving a portion of manufacturing operations
abroad is hardly a new concept. Nevertheless, some of these enterprises have grown enormous in
size and impressive in their influence. Some authors have pointed out that the annual revenues of
Wal-Mart stores, which operate in a multitude of countries, are about same as the gross national
product of Austria. Other examples of very large MNCs are Exxon Mobil, an integrated producer
and marketer of energy products, and General Motors, which manufactures cars and trucks in
locations as diverse as Brazil and Australia.
American unions have not kept pace with the explosive growth of these behemoth enterprises.
For example, when Japanese or European auto manufacturers opened U.S. assembly plants,
unions used the same organizing tactics traditionally used with U.S.-based manufacturers. They
also appealed to the workers' sense of patriotism and directed negative publicity toward these
offshore companies.
The companies responded with a blend of traditional American tactics as well as approaches
from their home countries. For example, Japanese firms do not hesitate to hire labor lawyers and
consultants to help them remain union free. In addition, they have emphasized trust between
managers and employees, restricted executive "perks," and encouraged work teams. This positive
approach to human resources management combined with traditional American tactics has
created additional challenges for unions. Union efforts to organize these foreign manufacturers
operating on U.S. soil have been no more successful than when unions try to organize domestic
corporations. In both arenas, they are winning around 50 percent of all secret-ballot elections
conducted by the NLRB.
MNCs present additional challenges for unions. Strikes may be less effective. The purpose of a
strike is to place economic pressure on the enterprise. The union does so by denying the
employer its labor source in hopes of choking off production. The notion is to starve the
enterprise of its revenue source until it succumbs to the union's demands. But an MNC can often
divert production to an alternative overseas location or obtain goods from one of its outlying
manufacturing facilities. In fact, unions perceive that MNCs are actually on the offensive against
organized labor, insisting upon cuts in employee benefits or demanding more favorable work
rules. Some of these companies simply say to the union, "if you don't give us the concessions we
want, we will move our facilities overseas or send a portion of our work to an alternative
facility."
Bargaining in a transnational setting also requires unions to overcome a number of obstacles. For
example, labor relations laws and collective bargaining structures vary from country to country.
Indeed, trade unions themselves often have difficulty collaborating across national borders.
Local union leaders are reluctant to share authority with foreign counterparts. In addition,
American unions are often uncomfortable with the socialist or communist political affiliations of
overseas unions. Finally, MNCs have generally resisted any sort of centralized or transnational
bargaining. Most experts agree that this attitude will change only if unions can surmount some of
the other issues just mentioned.
3. The Labor Relations Environment in Foreign Countries
As with residents of other countries, those of us in the United States tend to view other countries
in terms of our own culture, practices, and patterns of living. However, our system of labor
relations is unique. No other country has a system that operates in quite the same manner. The
major features of a nation's labor relations system can be evaluated by examining three key
dimensions: (1) union density, (2) recognition procedures, and (3) bargaining structures.
Union Density
Union membership is in sharp decline in the United States. With the exception of unions
representing public employees (state, county, municipal, federal, and so forth), major U.S.
unions have been losing members for more than 20 years. Recent data from the Bureau of Labor
Statistics show that only about 12 percent of American workers belong to unions. In contrast,
several northern European countries boast unionization rates exceeding 80 percent. That is nearly
seven times greater than membership in the United States. Even in neighboring Canada and
Mexico, more than 20 percent of active workers belong to unions, a rate nearly double the U.S.
rate. Membership is on the rise in both countries (Holley, 2005, p. 682; Baltimore Sun, 2007, p.
6E).
Recognition Procedures
Under U.S. labor laws, employers may insist upon a secret-ballot election as a precondition to
recognizing and dealing with a labor organization. In addition, employers are permitted to
conduct sophisticated campaigns to convince employees to vote "no union." This is not the case
in many other countries. Employers are generally more accepting of unions in Canada, for
example, and are less likely to engage in antiunion tactics.
Card checks are a widely accepted means to gain union recognition in Canada. This method
denies employers the opportunity to conduct protracted antiunion campaigns. Canadian labor
laws themselves are more restrictive concerning permissible antiunion campaign tactics. Mexico
permits the closed shop, a practice that is illegal in most U.S. industries. This system requires
than an individual join a union before he or she is hired. Mexican unions may also insist upon the
termination of an individual who refuses to maintain union membership and pay required dues.
Bargaining Structures
The relationship between an employer and a union in the United States is based on the concept of
exclusivity—the basic notion that if the employer must deal with a union, it need only deal with
a single union as the representative of a given group of employees. In Great Britain, exclusivity
is not the prevailing model. Most bargaining does not take place at the company level.
Agreements are forged between large multiemployer associations and union umbrella
organizations. A manufacturing company might have ongoing relationships with as many as six
or seven different unions. In sharp contrast to the United States, there are no national labor laws
compelling negotiations or the resolution of employee grievances. Although deeply entrenched
in the national culture, Great Britain's collective bargaining system is purely voluntary in nature.
Germany has 16 major national unions. However, the most important collective bargaining
agreements are not negotiated at the national or plant level. Instead regional agreements are the
most important. Companies and unions within a specific geographic area of the country reach
agreements applicable to all employees within the region. Also typical of the European model,
the government is a much more active and visible participant in the labor relations process.
Senior government officials will often intercede directly in collective bargaining and may play a
vital role in brokering a final agreement.
In both Europe and Latin America, labor unions and political parties are intimately intertwined.
Union members depend upon sympathetic politicians to support laws protecting employee rights
and enhancing benefits. In turn, politicians look to the unions for political and financial support.
Nowhere are unions more visible than in Great Britain. There, organized labor has its own highly
influential political party, the Labour Party. Recently, the British government has been led by
prime ministers from the Labour Party, and the government has enacted legislation making it
easier for unions to organize new groups of employees.
Module 4 Self-Assessment Questions
Please go to My Tools > Self Assessments > to complete this self assessment.
References
Holley, W. H., Jr. (2005). The labor relations process (8th ed.). Mason, OH: Southwestern.
Sweeney, John. (September 9, 2006). Labor unions and globalization. [Online]. University of
Iowa Center for International Finance and Development. Available:
www.uiowa.edu/ifdebook/issues/globalization/reading table/labor.shtml
Union membership declines. (2007, January 26). The Baltimore Sun, p. 6E.