This study examines the effect of public sector unions on compensation packages. The model of the compensation determination process incorporates distinctive institutional aspects of public sector labor relations, particularly the differences in collective bargaining laws across states. The model is estimated using data on over 800 municipal police departments. Our results indicate that the effect of public sector unions depend critically on these institutional features of the public sector. First, unionism thrives only in those states with protective legislation. Second, in states where unionism has flourished,unionism exerts a strong upward pressure on both union and nonunion compensation packages. Cross section estimates for 1978 indicat...
A stylized fact in the growing literature on public sector labor markets is that estimates of public...
Unions compress the wage distribution among workers covered by union contracts. We ask whether union...
Using the American Community Survey, the first chapter (with Eric Brunner) provides new evidence on ...
This study uses a Cox proportional hazards model to estimate ther elationship between state-level co...
This paper examines the effect of the different legal environments for bargaining faced by public em...
Recently some state and local governments in the United States have sharply reduced or eliminated em...
This study examines union wage premiums by occupation in the public sector in the U.S. for the 2000-...
During the decades between 1950 and 1970, unionization in the United States was at its peak. Private...
While a recent analysis of unionization among Florida county sheriff deputies was informative, that ...
Police unionism in Atlanta has received considerable editorial attention by Atlanta local news media...
Many studies have examined the influence of union density (union members as a percentage of all work...
The Issue of Public Sector Collective Bargaining PERHAPS THE MOST significant single phenomenon III ...
This paper reveals that municipal police departments are much less likely to strike in states that h...
This study examines the effect of unions on job security in the public and private sectors. Despite ...
This study was motivated by existing literature on unions which attempt to understand and measure t...
A stylized fact in the growing literature on public sector labor markets is that estimates of public...
Unions compress the wage distribution among workers covered by union contracts. We ask whether union...
Using the American Community Survey, the first chapter (with Eric Brunner) provides new evidence on ...
This study uses a Cox proportional hazards model to estimate ther elationship between state-level co...
This paper examines the effect of the different legal environments for bargaining faced by public em...
Recently some state and local governments in the United States have sharply reduced or eliminated em...
This study examines union wage premiums by occupation in the public sector in the U.S. for the 2000-...
During the decades between 1950 and 1970, unionization in the United States was at its peak. Private...
While a recent analysis of unionization among Florida county sheriff deputies was informative, that ...
Police unionism in Atlanta has received considerable editorial attention by Atlanta local news media...
Many studies have examined the influence of union density (union members as a percentage of all work...
The Issue of Public Sector Collective Bargaining PERHAPS THE MOST significant single phenomenon III ...
This paper reveals that municipal police departments are much less likely to strike in states that h...
This study examines the effect of unions on job security in the public and private sectors. Despite ...
This study was motivated by existing literature on unions which attempt to understand and measure t...
A stylized fact in the growing literature on public sector labor markets is that estimates of public...
Unions compress the wage distribution among workers covered by union contracts. We ask whether union...
Using the American Community Survey, the first chapter (with Eric Brunner) provides new evidence on ...