Search results
1 – 1 of 1Hanbing Fan, Yiming Dong, Dezhuang Hu and Lianfa Luo
This paper aims to examine whether labour unions influence labour conflicts and this mechanism is different in China compared with other countries.
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to examine whether labour unions influence labour conflicts and this mechanism is different in China compared with other countries.
Design/methodology/approach
This paper uses the data from the China Employer–Employee Survey that interviewed 1,208 firms and 10,087 workers in 2016 as the measurement of variables, and it uses Logit regression model to do the empirical research.
Findings
Unions cannot significantly influence labour conflicts. More active unions and unions whose leaders are appointed by the firms’ management are associated with a higher incidence of labour conflicts.
Originality/value
This paper finds a new mechanism that explains the relationship between unions and labour conflicts. The existing literature states that unions may increase labour conflicts via “monopoly power” and may also mitigate labour conflicts via “voice mechanisms”. This paper’s findings show that the positive correlation between unions and labour conflicts may be explained by the lack of “voice mechanism” rather than “monopoly power”. The findings imply that labour unions should represent the interest of workers to mitigate the increasing labour conflicts.
Details