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%T There is power in a union? Union members' preferences and the conditional effect of labour unions on left parties in different welfare state programmes
%A Engler, Fabian
%A Voigt, Linda
%J British Journal of Industrial Relations
%N 1
%P 89-109
%V 61
%D 2023
%K ISSP1985 ; ISSP1990 ; ISSP1996 ; ISSP2006 ; ISSP2016
%@ 1467-8543
%~ FDB
%> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-87996-1
%X This article studies the effect of labour unions on policy-making in six different parts of the welfare state (passive and active labour market policy, employment protection, old-age pensions, health care and education) in OECD countries after 1980 with a two-level strategy: At the micro-level, we investigate union members' preferences. Ordered logit regression analyses indicate that union members favour generous social policies more strongly than non-members. Moreover, this effect is stronger for programmes closely related to the labour market than for programmes without a strong labour market link. At the macro-level, we investigate the conditional effect of unions on left parties expecting the former to push the left towards more generous labour market-related (but not towards less-labour market-related) programmes. Regression analyses essentially provide evidence for such a relationship. Overall, unions have been powerful in promoting their members' social policy preferences via left parties in government but their power is recently vanishing.
%C GBR
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info