Unions, Work-Related Training, Wages: Evidence for British Men
Date
2003
Authors
Booth, Alison
Francesconi, Marco
Zoega, Gylfi
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cornell University Press
Abstract
Using data for the years 1991-96 from the British Household Panel Survey, the authors investigate how union coverage affected work-related training and how the union-training link affected wages and wage growth for a sample of full-time men. Relative to non-covered workers, union-covered workers were more likely to receive training and also received more days of training. Among workers who received training, those with union coverage enjoyed greater returns to training and higher wage growth than did those without. While some of these results have been found in previous studies, others are new. The wage results, in particular, suggest a need for rethinking the conventional view that union wage formation in Britain reduces the incentives to acquire work-related training.
Description
Keywords
Keywords: labor market; trade union; training; wage; Eurasia; Europe; United Kingdom; Western Europe
Citation
Collections
Source
Industrial and Labor Relations Review
Type
Journal article