Collective Bargaining: According To Beach, "Collective Bargaining Is Concerned With The Relations
Collective Bargaining: According To Beach, "Collective Bargaining Is Concerned With The Relations
Collective Bargaining: According To Beach, "Collective Bargaining Is Concerned With The Relations
The union may negotiate with a single employer or may negotiate with a group of
businesses. A collective agreement functions as a labour contract between an
employer and one or more unions. Collective bargaining consists of the process of
negotiation between representatives of a union and employers in respect of the
terms and conditions of employment of employees, such as wages, hours of work,
working conditions, grievance procedures, and about the rights and responsibilities
of trade unions.
It is also asserted that “the terms of agreement serve as a code defining the rights
and obligations of each party in their employment relations with one another, it
fixes large number of detailed conditions of employees and during its validity none
of the matters it deals with, internal circumstances give grounds for a dispute
counseling and individual workers”.
(i) Existence of a strong representative trade union in the industry that believes in
constitutional means for resolving the disputes.
(ii) Existence of a fact-finding approach and willingness to use new methods and
tools for the solution of industrial problems. The negotiation should be based on
facts and figures and both the parties should adopt constructive approach.
(iii) Existence of strong management which can integrate the different parties, i.e.,
employees, owners, consumers and society or Government.
(iv) Agreement between the employer and the employees and on mutual rights and
liabilities should be there.
(v) In order that collective bargaining functions properly, unfair labour practices
must be avoided by both the parties.
(vii) Collective bargaining should be best conducted at plant level. It means if there
are more than one plant of the firm, the local management should be delegated
proper authority to negotiate with the local trade union.
(viii) There must be change in the attitude of employers and employees. They
should realise that differences can be resolved peacefully on negotiating table
without the assistance of third party.
(ix) No party should take rigid attitude. They should enter into negotiation with a
view to reaching an agreement.
Collective bargaining is a continuous process and does not end with one
agreement. It provides a mechanism for continuing and organised relationship
between management and trade union. It is a process that goes on for 365 days of
the year.
4. It is a Process:
It has fluidity. There is no hard and fast rule for reaching an agreement. There is
ample scope for compromise. A spirit of give-and-take works unless final
agreement acceptable to both the parties is reached.
7. It is Dynamic:
It is relatively a new concept, and is growing, expanding and changing. In the past,
it used to be emotional, turbulent and sentimental, but now it is scientific, factual
and systematic.
In this process, if one party wins something, the other party, to continue the
metaphor of the cake, has a relatively smaller size of the cake. So it is a win-lose’
relationship. The integrative bargaining, on the other hand, is the process where
both the parties can win—each party contributing something for the benefit of the
other party.
9. It is an Art:
Conciliation is a term often applied to the art of collective bargaining, a term often
applied to the action of the public board which attempts to induce collective
bargaining.
The marketing concept views collective bargaining as a contract for the sale of
labour. It is a market or exchange relationship and is justified on the ground that it
gives assurance of voice on the part of the organised workers in the matter of sale.
The same objective rules which apply to the construction of all commercial
contracts are invoked since the union-management relationship is concerned as a
commercial one.
According to this theory, employees sell their individual labour only on terms
collectively determined on the basis of contract which has been made through the
process of collective bargaining.
The uncertainty of trade cycles, the spirit of mass production and competition for
jobs make bargain a necessity. The trade union’s collective action provided
strength to the individual labourer.
It enabled him to resist the pressure of circumstances in which he was placed and
to face an unbalanced and disadvantageous situation created by the employer. The
object of trade union policy through all the maze of conflicting and obscure
regulations has been to give to each individual worker something of the
indispensability of labour as a whole.
This creates a joint Industrial Government where the union share sovereignty with
management over the workers and defend their group affairs and joint autonomy
from external interference.
The collective bargaining advances the mutual understanding between the two
parties i.e., employees and employers.
The role of collective bargaining may be evaluated from the following point of
view:
The main object of the organisation is to get the work done by the employees at
work at minimum cost and thus earn a high rate of profits. Maximum utilization of
workers is a must for the effective management. For this purpose co-operation is
required from the side of the employees and collective bargaining is a device to get
and promote co-operation. The labour disputes are mostly attributable to certain
direct or indirect causes and based on rumors, and misconceptions. Collective
bargaining is the best remedial measure for maintaining the cordial relations.
Labour has poor bargaining power. Individually a worker has no existence because
labour is perishable and therefore, the employers succeed in exploiting the
labourers.
The working class in united form becomes a power to protect its interests against
the exploitation of the employers through the process of collective bargaining.
Collective bargaining can be made only through the trade unions. Trade unions are
the bargaining agents for the workers. The main function of the trade unions is to
protect the economic and non- economic interests of workers through constructive
programmes and collective bargaining is one of the devices to attain that objective
through negotiations with the employers, Trade unions may negotiate with the
employer for better employment opportunities and job security through collective
bargaining.
Collective bargaining prevents the Government from using the force because an
amicable agreement can be reached between employer and employees for
implementing the legislative provisions. Labour problems shall be minimised
through collective bargaining and industrial peace shall be promoted in the country
without any force.
The success of collective bargaining lies in the attitude of both management and
workers which is actually not consistent with the spirit of collective bargaining in
India. There are certain problems which hinder the growth of collective bargaining
in India.
History
The term "collective bargaining" was first used in 1891 by Beatrice Webb, a founder of the field
of industrial relations in Britain.[2] It refers to the sort of collective negotiations and agreements
that had existed since the rise of trade unions during the 18th century.
United States
In the United States, the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 made it illegal for any employer
to deny union rights to an employee. The issue of unionizing government employees in a public-
sector trade union was much more controversial until the 1950s. In 1962 President John F.
Chicago (1979) when the Supreme Court held that the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
could not assert jurisdiction over a church-operated school because such jurisdiction would
state.
United States[edit]
In the United States, the National Labor Relations Act (1935) covers most collective agreements
in the private sector. This act makes it illegal for employers to discriminate, spy on, harass, or
terminate the employment of workers because of their union membership or to retaliate against
unions, or to refuse to engage in collective bargaining with the union that represents their
employment.[12] Unions are also able to secure safe work conditions and equitable pay for their
labor.
At a workplace where a majority of workers have voted for union representation, a committee of
employees and union representatives negotiate a contract with the management regarding wages,
hours, benefits, and other terms and conditions of employment, such as protection from
termination of employment without just cause. Individual negotiation is prohibited. Once the
workers' committee and management have agreed on a contract, it is then put to a vote of all
workers at the workplace. If approved, the contract is usually in force for a fixed term of years,
and when that term is up, it is then renegotiated between employees and management.
Sometimes there are disputes over the union contract; this particularly occurs in cases of workers
fired without just cause in a union workplace. These then go to arbitration, which is similar to an
informal court hearing; a neutral arbitrator then rules whether the termination or other contract
contribute towards the cost of representation (such as at disciplinary hearings) if their fellow
employees have negotiated a union security clause in their contract with management. Dues are
generally 1–2% of pay. However, union members and other workers covered by collective
agreements get, on average, a 5-10% wage markup over their nonunionized (or uncovered)
counterparts.[9] Some states, especially in the south-central and south-eastern regions of the U.S.,
have outlawed union security clauses; this can cause controversy, as it allows some net
beneficiaries of the union contract to avoid paying their portion of the costs of contract
negotiation. Regardless of state, the Supreme Court has held that the Act prevents a person's
union dues from being used without consent to fund political causes that may be opposed to the
individual's personal politics. Instead, in states where union security clauses are permitted, such
dissenters may elect to pay only the proportion of dues which go directly toward representation
of workers.
In 1931, the Supreme Court, in the case of Texas & N.O.R. Co. v. Brotherhood of Railway
Clerks, upheld the act's prohibition of employer interference in the selection of bargaining
required to collect all collective bargaining agreements covering 1,000 or more workers,
Sweden
In Sweden the coverage of collective agreements is very high despite the absence of legal
mechanisms to extend agreements to whole industries. In 2018, 83% of all private sector
employees were covered by collective agreements, 100% of public sector employees and in all
90% (referring to the whole labor market).[10] This reflects the dominance of self-regulation
(regulation by the labour market parties themselves) over state regulation in Swedish industrial
relations