The ‘Skill‐oriented’ Strategies of German Trade Unions: Their Impact on Efficiency and Equality Objectives

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Abstract

In the present debate about options for the modernization of trade unions, the predominant argument being propounded is that trade unions and workers' representatives at plant level should take more ‘responsibility’ for the competitiveness of the firms. Among other things, they are advised to enter into ‘alliances’ with management at the level of qualification politics. This paper considers some important collective bargaining arrangements which the German trade unions have negotiated over the last few years in order to improve mutually beneficial further training decisions within German firms. The emphasis is on the potential of different agreements for achieving efficiency and equality objectives in the context of contemporary changes in production and restructuring processes. © 1992 Blackwell Publishing Ltd / London School of Economics

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APA

Mahnkopf, B. (1992). The ‘Skill‐oriented’ Strategies of German Trade Unions: Their Impact on Efficiency and Equality Objectives. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 30(1), 61–81. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8543.1992.tb00764.x

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