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Works council

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A works council is a shop-floor organization representing workers that functions as a local/firm-level complement to trade unions but is independent of these at least in some countries. Works councils exist with different names in a variety of related forms in a number of European countries, including Great Britain (joint consultative committee or employees’ council); Germany and Austria (Betriebsrat);[1][2] Luxembourg (comité mixte, délégation du personnel); the Netherlands (Dienstcommissie, Ondernemingsraad) and Flanders in Belgium (ondernemingsraad); Italy (comitato aziendale); France (comité social et économique); Wallonia in Belgium (conseil d'entreprise), Spain (comité de empresa) and Denmark (Samarbejdsudvalg or SU).

One of the most commonly examined (and arguably most successful) implementations of this institution is found in Germany.[3] The model is basically as follows: general labour agreements are made at the national level by national unions (e.g. IG Metall) and German Employer Associations (e.g. Gesamtmetall), and local plants and firms then meet with works councils to adjust these national agreements to local circumstances. Works council members are elected by the company workforce for a four-year term. They don't have to be union members; works councils can also be formed in companies where neither the employer nor the employees are organized.

Works council representatives may also be appointed to the board of directors.

As with co-determination, there are three main views about why works councils primarily exist: to reduce workplace conflict by improving and systematising communication channels; to increase bargaining power of workers at the expense of owners by means of legislation; and to correct market failures by means of public policy.

Europe

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On 22 September 1994, the Council of the European Union passed a Directive (94/45/EC) on the establishment of a European Works Council (EWC) or similar procedure for the purposes of informing and consulting employees in companies which operate at European Union level.

The EWC Directive applies to companies with at least 1,000 employees within the EU and at least 150 employees in each of at least two EEA countries.

European Works Councils were created partly as a response to increased transnational restructuring brought about by the Single European Act. They give representatives of workers from all European countries in big multinational companies a direct line of communication to top management. They also make sure that workers in different countries are all told the same thing at the same time about transnational policies and plans. Lastly, they give workers’ representatives in unions and national works councils the opportunity to consult with each other and to develop a common European response to employers’ transnational plans, which management must then consider before those plans are implemented.

The EWC Directive was revised by the Council and the European Parliament in May 2009. The changes contained in the new ("Recast") Directive must be transposed into national law by 5 June 2011, and have important implications for all companies in scope of the legislation, both those with an existing European Works Council and those yet to have set one up.

A similar transnational consultative body exists for employees of Societates Europaeae, called SE-Representative-Body or SE Works Council. This went into effect in 2004 with the Employee Involvement Directive (2001/86/EC).[4] SE Works Councils are comparable with European Works Councils according to the European Trade Union Institute.[5]

France

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A comité d’entreprise (C.E. or works council) was mandatory in any company with 50 employees or more. It is being replaced by the Comité social et économique (CSE or Business and Social Council) which must have been rolled out in all companies where applicable for 1 January 2020 the latest. Members of the CE are elected by all the employees, and have 20 hours of delegation per month. The main role of the CE or the CSE is being the interface between the employees and the members of the board which is constituted of the chairman and the HR director, mostly for collective issues, such as work organisation, training policy, benefits. Its consultation is compulsory in case of certain economic events, such as any company strategic moves, The number of members depends on the number of people in the company. All members of the CE or CSE have a monthly meeting with the board, in which very specific points are dealt with.[6]

Germany

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Works councils (singular: Betriebsrat, plural: Betriebsräte) in Germany have a long history, with their origins in the early 1920s in the post World War I Weimar Republic, established by the Works Councils Act (Betriebsrätegesetz), later updated in 1952 with the establishment of the Works Constitution Act in West Germany.[7][8] Initially, unions were very skeptical of works councils, seeing them as a way for management to negotiate with employees without collective bargaining,[9] but eventually they developed clearly defined responsibilities with works councils forbidden from calling for strikes or negotiating wage increase.[10] In recent years with a decline in union membership, works councils have come to be seen as a way for unions to recruit members, specifically by having works councils campaign for people to join them.[11] In 2019, depending on sector, between 16% and 86% of employees worked at an employer with a works council.[12]

While membership in a trade union is explicitly not required, according to the Hans Boeckler Stiftung analysis of year 2014 Works Council elections, depending on sector; between 60 and 80% of Works Councillors elected were members of affiliated trade unions in the German Trade Union Confederation.[13][14] Unions can offer protections to works council members. For example, unions provide training courses to ensure legally compliant works council elections, which can preempt attacks from management bodies who are hostile to the founding of a works council.[15]

In Germany, they serve two functions. The first is called co-determination, through which works councils elect members of the board of directors of German companies. The second is called participation, and means that works councils must be consulted about specific issues and have the right to make proposals to management.[16] One of the most impressive achievements of the councils is producing harmonious relations between management and workers, leading to a situation with strong unions and a low strike rate.[quantify][17]

Works councils in Germany have been correlated with a number of positive effects. They promote higher wages, even more than collective bargaining (although situations with both will promote wages the highest),[18] they make firms more productive (although the degree to which they increase productivity can be hard to measure).[19] and they don't inhibit investment or innovation.[20][21] Works councils have also been shown to help women, East German, and foreign workers.[18] However, they are correlated lower profitability, likely since they tend to bring higher wages, and there may not be as much benefit in smaller companies as there is in larger ones.[20]

Obstruction of the Works Council is a criminal offence.[22]

History

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Workers’ rights to codetermine working conditions in Germany began at least as far back as 1850, when four social-liberal entrepreneurs, led by Carl Degenkolb, joined forces in Eilenburg to introduce workers committees to their factories, in part to mitigate worker unrest and inoculate against socialist and union agitation.[23] Statutory workers' committees (Arbeiterausschüsse) were first introduced in Germany in mining companies in Bavaria in 1900 and in Prussia in 1905. The Auxiliary Service Act of 1916, passed during the First World War, provided for the introduction of permanent workers' committees in all companies important to the war economy with at least 50 employees. These workers' committees only had advisory and consultation rights, but they could appeal to an arbitration committee with equal representation and a neutral chairman, to whose decision the employer had to submit.

The current structure and mandate of works councils can be traced to the soviet movement that swept through Europe in the early twentieth century. In Germany, self-governing workers’ (Arbeiter-) and soldiers’ councils (Soldatenräte) formed in 1918 in the November Revolution. Demands for a soviet-led German republic were eventually neutralized by the Social Democratic Party (SPD), with the Works Constitution Act (Betriebsrätegesetz) of 1920 emerging as a concession to the movement. This Act made works councils compulsory for all companies with over 20 employees. In the Weimar Republic, the ADGB unions discussed expanding the powers of the works councils to include production control in the name of economic democracy, thus initiating socialist transformation.[24] However, this concept failed in the global economic crisis that began in 1929. However, this concept failed during the global economic crisis from 1929 onwards.

The rise of fascism brought a “revised, anti-Marxist version of socialism.”[25] The Nazis launched ambitious “corporatist” policies that “rejected class struggle and replaced it with the idea of cooperation between employers and workers.”[26] Works councils were banned by the 1934 Work Order Act and replaced by so-called councils of confidence (Vertrauensräte).

With the Allied Control Council Law No. 22 of April 10, 1946, works councils were permitted again in Germany. The first Works Constitution Act (BetrVG 1952) was passed on October 11, 1952. It followed the tradition of the Works Council Act of 1920, whose basic ideas were largely adopted. In 1972, after a controversial social debate, the Works Constitution Act (BetrVG 1972) was fundamentally revised, and it was reformed again in 2001.

Among other things, the working and organizational principles of the works councils were changed. The election procedure was simplified, an "equality quota" (minimum seats for the gender in the minority, see electoral regulations Works Constitution Act § 15 WO) was introduced, the separation between blue-collar and white-collar workers was abolished, the exemption thresholds for works council members were lowered and the works council's involvement in the introduction of group work was made possible, as was the involvement of consultants in the event of operational changes.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Information about Betriebsrat in Germany (German)". www.verdi.de.
  2. ^ "Information about Betriebsrat in Austria (in German)". www.arbeiterkammer.at.
  3. ^ "POLYAS Company". 26 June 2017.
  4. ^ "Training and the SE Directive". Worker Participation. Retrieved 2021-02-21.
  5. ^ "Chipping away at workers' participation rights" (PDF). Benchmarking working Europe 2014. Brussels: European Trade Union Institute. 2014. pp. 91–112. ISBN 978-2-87452-308-3. OCLC 888342684.
  6. ^ Bento, F (May 2013). "Interviewing member of C.E in CRO France". Expatriates Magazine. Paris: EP. pp. 10–11.
  7. ^ "Betriebsverfassungsgesetz, BetrVG" [Works Constitution Act]. www.gesetze-im-internet.de. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  8. ^ Ross, Arthur M. (1962-08-01). "Prosperity and Labor Relations in Europe: The Case of West Germany". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 76 (3): 331–359. doi:10.2307/1879625. ISSN 0033-5533. JSTOR 1879625.
  9. ^ Pontusson, Jonas (2005). Inequality and Prosperity: Social Europe vs. Liberal America. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press. pp. Ch. 6. ISBN 978-0-8014-8970-9.
  10. ^ "Das Betriebsverfassungsgesetz (BetrVG) | Nachrichten für Betriebsräte". www.bund-verlag.de. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  11. ^ Behrens, Martin (2009). "Still Married after All These Years? Union Organizing and the Role of Works Councils in German Industrial Relations". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 62 (3): 275–293. doi:10.1177/001979390906200301. S2CID 154205805.
  12. ^ "Durch Betriebsrat vertretene Beschäftigte nach Branchen". Statista (in German). Retrieved 2019-06-13.
  13. ^ Greifenstein, Ralph; Kißler, Leo; Lange, Hendrik (August 2014). "Trendreport Betriebsrätewahlen 2014" (PDF). Hans-Böckler-Stiftung.
  14. ^ "Workplace Representation — Germany". www.worker-participation.eu. Retrieved 2020-10-18.
  15. ^ "Gründung eines Betriebsrates in 6 Schritten". DGB Bildungswerk BUND - Gründung eines Betriebsrates in 6 Schritten (in German). Retrieved 2024-06-02.
  16. ^ Cleverway. "Workplace Representation / Germany / Countries / National Industrial Relations / Home – WORKER PARTICIPATION.eu". www.worker-participation.eu. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  17. ^ "Interest Group History – The Case of Capital and Labor in Germany". xroads.virginia.edu. Archived from the original on January 19, 2000. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
  18. ^ a b Addison, John T.; et al. (2010). "German works councils and the anatomy of wages". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 63 (2): 247–270. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.597.7278. doi:10.1177/001979391006300204. S2CID 153214819.
  19. ^ Mueller, Steffen (2012). "Works councils and establishment productivity". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 65 (4): 880–898. doi:10.1177/001979391206500405. S2CID 153457007.
  20. ^ a b Addison, John T.; et al. (2007). "Do Works Councils Inhibit Investment?". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 60 (2): 187–203. doi:10.1177/001979390706000202. hdl:10419/20772. S2CID 44933569.
  21. ^ Addison, John T.; et al. (2001). "Works Councils in Germany: Their Effects on Establishment Performance". Oxford Economic Papers. 53 (4): 659–694. doi:10.1093/oep/53.4.659.
  22. ^ "Works Constitution Act (Betriebsverfassungsgesetz – BetrVG)". www.gesetze-im-internet.de. Retrieved 2024-01-16.
  23. ^ Teuteberg, Hans Jürgen (1961). Geschichte der industriellen Mitbestimmung in Deutschland Ursprung und Entwicklung ihrer Vorläufer im Denken und in der Wirklichkeit des 19. Jahrhunderts [History of industrial co-determination in Germany: Origin and development of its precursors in the thinking and reality of the 19th century] (in German). Tübingen: J.B.C. Mohr (Paul Siebeck).
  24. ^ Hoffrogge, Ralf (2011). "Vom Sozialismus zur Wirtschaftsdemokratie?". In Bois, Marcel; Hüttner, Bernd (eds.). Beiträge zur Geschichte einer pluralen Linken (in German). Vol. 3. Berlin: Rosa Luxemburg Foundation.
  25. ^ Shoshan, Nitzan (2016). The management of hate: nation, affect, and the governance of right-wing extremism in Germany. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-691-17196-8.
  26. ^ Aguilera-Barchet, Bruno (2018). "The Law of the Welfare State". In Pihlajamäki, Heikki; Dubber, Markus D.; Godfrey, Mark (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of European Legal History. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 1001–1025. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198785521.013.44. ISBN 9780191827426.

Further reading

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  • European Commission (2008) Employee representatives in an enlarged Europe (2 volumes). Luxembourg: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities. ISBN 978-92-79-08928-2 (Volume 1), ISBN 978-92-79-08929-9 (Volume 2).
  • Fitzgerald, I., Stirling, J. 2004. European Works Councils: Pessimism of the Intellect, Optimism of the Will?, London, Routledge.
  • Lecher, W., Platzer, H., Rub, S., Weiner, K. 2002. European Works Councils: Negotiated Europeanisation: Between Statutory Framework and Social Dynamics, London, Ashgate.
  • Thelen, Kathleen. 1993. West European Labor in Transition: Sweden and Germany Compared. World Politics 46, no. 1 (October): 23–49.
  • Turner, Lowell. 1998. Fighting for Partnership: Labor and Politics in Unified Germany. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press.
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