PUBLIC EXPENDITURE CUTS AND JOB LOSS: A UNION RESPONSE
- 1 April 1984
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Management Studies
- Vol. 21 (2) , 207-227
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6486.1984.tb00232.x
Abstract
This article is based upon the findings of a survey which was directed at assessing the response of a public sector union to job loss amongst its members. The study was prompted by the anticipated effects on the union of cuts in public expenditure announced by Mrs. Thatcher's Government in 1979 and 1980. The purpose of the survey was, first, to investigate the processes through which job loss occurred and, secondly, to examine the ways in which the union contested those managerial decisions that affected the job security of its members. The main conclusion of the paper is that union resistance has been relatively sparse and it is suggested that this may be in part explained by the way in which job loss occurred. Of particular importance in this context is the loss of jobs through what we have called ‘job erosion’.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- ORGANISING A FRAGMENTED WORKFORCE: SHOP STEWARDS IN LOCAL GOVERNMENTBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 1982
- Redundancy and Female EmploymentSociological Review, 1981
- Managerial Reactions to Job Redundancy through Early RetirementsSociological Review, 1980
- The Public Expenditure Cuts: Rationale and ConsequencesFiscal Studies, 1980
- British Trade Unions and the CutsCapital & Class, 1979
- Approaches to the study of redundancyIndustrial Relations Journal, 1977
- Redundancy, Unemployment and Manpower PolicyThe Economic Journal, 1972
- REDUNDANCY AND REDEPLOYMENT FROM U.C.S. 1969-711Scottish Journal of Political Economy, 1972
- AFTER THE ‘SHAKE-OUT’Oxford Economic Papers, 1972
- THE ROLE OF THE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE IN REDEPLOYMENT*British Journal of Industrial Relations, 1971