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Accounting for Strikes: Evidence from UK Manufacturing in the 1980s

Daphne Nicolitsas

LABOUR, 2000, vol. 14, issue 3, 417-440

Abstract: The decrease in the number of strikes in the UK during the 1980s has revived the discussion on the explanatory factors of strike frequency. This paper investigates explanations for the time variation of strike frequency in different industries of British manufacturing. The framework used is that of the joint cost model of strikes; strike frequency is inversely related to strike costs. The results from a panel of 90 manufacturing industries for the period 1983–88 show some support for the hypothesis that strikes decreased because they became more expensive. In the main, we find that factors that affect both employers and employees (such as revenue, inventories) are significant in explaining variations in strike frequency. Factors that affect only employees, however, such as the unemployment rate, are not.

Date: 2000
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https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9914.00140

Related works:
Working Paper: Accounting for Strikes; Evidence from UK Manufacturing in the 1980s (1995)
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