Austerity and politically motivated changes – wage bargaining in Hungarian municipal services
Neumann, László ; Berki, Erzsébet ; Edelényi, Márk
Transfer. European Review of Labour and Research
2014
20
3
August
431-444
collective bargaining ; labour relations ; local government ; public sector ; social dialogue ; outsourcing ; wages
Business economics
http://dx.doi.org/1024258914538352
English
Bibliogr.
"Salaries of public sector employees have been the number one target of austerity measures applied by successive Hungarian governments since 2006, and trade unions have found it difficult to influence government policies. Until 2008 the outcomes of centralized quasi-bargaining somewhat mitigated the harsh measures, but later governments, especially the right-wing one in place since 2010, abandoned such negotiations, implementing labour law reforms that weakened trade union bargaining power and concluding selective agreements solely with representatives of certain strong groups of employees. Social dialogue institutions have become especially weak at sectoral and municipal levels. Though decentralized collective bargaining is common in larger private sector companies, and though the legal regulation is similar in state-/municipality-owned companies, genuine collective bargaining within the latter is very rare. The article presents two case studies (on geriatric care and public transport) highlighting current developments and their impacts on employment relations."
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