Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada

This dissertation deals with the changes which have intervened since the inception of deregulation in the US and Canadian airline industry, in the 'effort bargain'. === It deals first with the role of economic, institutional and legislative conditions, in each country, on labour, through a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Botteri, Afra
Other Authors: Smith, M. (advisor)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: McGill University 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=41550
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.41550
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMM.415502014-02-13T03:50:31ZRegulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and CanadaBotteri, AfraAirlines -- Deregulation -- Canada.Airlines -- Deregulation -- United States.Collective bargaining -- Aeronautics -- Canada.Collective bargaining -- Aeronautics -- United States.This dissertation deals with the changes which have intervened since the inception of deregulation in the US and Canadian airline industry, in the 'effort bargain'.It deals first with the role of economic, institutional and legislative conditions, in each country, on labour, through a comparison of aggregate labour outcomes from 1960 to 1990. It subsequently assesses the impact of carriers' strategies to lower costs through an analysis of the collective agreements of pilots, flight attendants, mechanics and agents. This part of the research covers two airlines in each country.Collected data indicate that deregulation decreased average earnings in both countries but the decline was greater in the US than in Canada. The US's greater decline was found to be linked to the economic context and competitive unionism, which had previously helped unions increase earnings above competitive levels. In the period of deregulation, this system caved in to pressures from the carriers and labour market conditions.In Canada, the combined outcome of government monetary controls and labour negotiations, patterned after the conditions negotiated by the state-owned airline, kept earnings at more competitive levels. During deregulation, the decline was modest and approximately the same or slightly larger than in other industries.The comparative analysis across carriers and crafts shows that competitive markets led to an elaborate pattern of contract changes which undermined the previous bargaining pattern as well as the system of labour relations. All airlines sought to cut costs through moderation of wage increases, two-tier wage structure, and work rule and fringe benefit changes. These concessions varied across carriers, work groups, labour market conditions, and the specificity of these jobs. Mechanics, with alternative fields of employment and with a centralized union structure, made the least concessions.Although there were wage variations in the two countries, due to different pay scales, wages for senior workers have remained almost unchanged since deregulation. The small increases were exchanged for substantially lower wages for new employees and employment-productivity gains. In 1990, top wages were 10% to 20% higher, but those at the entry level were significantly lower in the US than in Canada.These findings suggest that while competitive markets exert an important influence on labour relations, their influence is best understood historically and in the context of each country's specific circumstances.McGill UniversitySmith, M. (advisor)1993Electronic Thesis or Dissertationapplication/pdfenalephsysno: 001399999proquestno: NN94592Theses scanned by UMI/ProQuest.All items in eScholarship@McGill are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.Doctor of Philosophy (Department of Sociology.) http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=41550
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Airlines -- Deregulation -- Canada.
Airlines -- Deregulation -- United States.
Collective bargaining -- Aeronautics -- Canada.
Collective bargaining -- Aeronautics -- United States.
spellingShingle Airlines -- Deregulation -- Canada.
Airlines -- Deregulation -- United States.
Collective bargaining -- Aeronautics -- Canada.
Collective bargaining -- Aeronautics -- United States.
Botteri, Afra
Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada
description This dissertation deals with the changes which have intervened since the inception of deregulation in the US and Canadian airline industry, in the 'effort bargain'. === It deals first with the role of economic, institutional and legislative conditions, in each country, on labour, through a comparison of aggregate labour outcomes from 1960 to 1990. It subsequently assesses the impact of carriers' strategies to lower costs through an analysis of the collective agreements of pilots, flight attendants, mechanics and agents. This part of the research covers two airlines in each country. === Collected data indicate that deregulation decreased average earnings in both countries but the decline was greater in the US than in Canada. The US's greater decline was found to be linked to the economic context and competitive unionism, which had previously helped unions increase earnings above competitive levels. In the period of deregulation, this system caved in to pressures from the carriers and labour market conditions. === In Canada, the combined outcome of government monetary controls and labour negotiations, patterned after the conditions negotiated by the state-owned airline, kept earnings at more competitive levels. During deregulation, the decline was modest and approximately the same or slightly larger than in other industries. === The comparative analysis across carriers and crafts shows that competitive markets led to an elaborate pattern of contract changes which undermined the previous bargaining pattern as well as the system of labour relations. All airlines sought to cut costs through moderation of wage increases, two-tier wage structure, and work rule and fringe benefit changes. These concessions varied across carriers, work groups, labour market conditions, and the specificity of these jobs. Mechanics, with alternative fields of employment and with a centralized union structure, made the least concessions. === Although there were wage variations in the two countries, due to different pay scales, wages for senior workers have remained almost unchanged since deregulation. The small increases were exchanged for substantially lower wages for new employees and employment-productivity gains. In 1990, top wages were 10% to 20% higher, but those at the entry level were significantly lower in the US than in Canada. === These findings suggest that while competitive markets exert an important influence on labour relations, their influence is best understood historically and in the context of each country's specific circumstances.
author2 Smith, M. (advisor)
author_facet Smith, M. (advisor)
Botteri, Afra
author Botteri, Afra
author_sort Botteri, Afra
title Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada
title_short Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada
title_full Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada
title_fullStr Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada
title_full_unstemmed Regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the U.S. and Canada
title_sort regulation, deregulation and labour relations in the airline industry : a comparative study of the u.s. and canada
publisher McGill University
publishDate 1993
url http://digitool.Library.McGill.CA:80/R/?func=dbin-jump-full&object_id=41550
work_keys_str_mv AT botteriafra regulationderegulationandlabourrelationsintheairlineindustryacomparativestudyoftheusandcanada
_version_ 1716639968018825216