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dc.contributor.authorDodini, Samuel
dc.contributor.authorStansbury, Anna
dc.contributor.authorWillén, Alexander
dc.date.accessioned2024-01-03T11:48:44Z
dc.date.available2024-01-03T11:48:44Z
dc.date.issued2023-12-22
dc.identifier.issn0804-6824
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11250/3109527
dc.description.abstractThis paper provides a comprehensive assessment of the margins along which firms in Norway respond to increased union density, using legislative changes in the tax deductibility of union dues as a quasi-exogenous shock to firm-level unionization rates. Despite higher personnel costs driven by a union wage premium, the average manufacturing firm increases employment and scales up production, charges higher prices in the product market, enjoys higher nominal value added per worker, and experiences no decrease in profits. We show that this result is a direct implication of the labor- and product-market power that the average manufacturing firm possesses, in combination with a reallocation of inputs and industry revenue shares from smaller and less unionized firms to larger and more unionized firms. Larger firms are, therefore, increasing employment and output at the same time their ability to mark up prices is growing, thereby preventing negative profit effects. For the broader private sector in which firms do not hold much price- or wage-setting power, we observe the opposite result: the average firm reduces employment and profit falls. We synthesize these findings through a partial-equilibrium model of firm decision-making that incorporates union bargaining, product-market price-setting power, and labor market monopsony power.en_US
dc.publisherInstitutt for samfunnsøkonomien_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesDP SAM;25/2023
dc.subjectUnionsen_US
dc.subjectPrice pass-throughen_US
dc.subjectFirmsen_US
dc.subjectMarket Poweren_US
dc.subjectLabor Costsen_US
dc.titleHow Do Firms Respond to Unions?en_US
dc.typeWorking paperen_US
dc.subject.nsiSamfunnsvitenskapen_US
dc.source.pagenumber85en_US
dc.relation.projectNorges Forskningsråd: 262675en_US


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