The Power Resource Theory Revisited : What Explains the Decline in Industrial Conflicts in Sweden?
(2019) In Lund Papers in Economic History. General Issues- Abstract
- This paper revisits the Power Resource Theory (PRT) by testing one of its more influential claims: the relation between the strength of the labor movement and the reduction of industrial conflicts. Using panel data techniques to analyze more than 2,000 strikes in 103 Swedish towns we test whether a shift in the balance of power towards Social Democratic rule was associated with fewer strikes. The focus is on the formative years between the first general election in 1919 and 1938, when Sweden went from a country of fierce labor conflicts to a state of industrial peace. We find that Social Democratic power reduced strikes, but only in towns where union presence was strong. We do not see any tangible concessions in terms of increased social... (More)
- This paper revisits the Power Resource Theory (PRT) by testing one of its more influential claims: the relation between the strength of the labor movement and the reduction of industrial conflicts. Using panel data techniques to analyze more than 2,000 strikes in 103 Swedish towns we test whether a shift in the balance of power towards Social Democratic rule was associated with fewer strikes. The focus is on the formative years between the first general election in 1919 and 1938, when Sweden went from a country of fierce labor conflicts to a state of industrial peace. We find that Social Democratic power reduced strikes, but only in towns where union presence was strong. We do not see any tangible concessions in terms of increased social spending by local governments after a left-wing victory as predicted by PRT. Instead the mechanism leading to fewer strikes appears to be related to corporatist explanations. (Less)
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/a31ee28c-0bca-4d9d-b823-31cb64a8b6dd
- author
- Molinder, Jakob LU ; Karlsson, Tobias LU and Enflo, Kerstin LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2019
- type
- Working paper/Preprint
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Power Resource Theory, industrial conflicts, strikes, labor markets, local politics, N34, N44, H53, J51
- in
- Lund Papers in Economic History. General Issues
- issue
- 2019:207
- pages
- 41 pages
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- a31ee28c-0bca-4d9d-b823-31cb64a8b6dd
- date added to LUP
- 2019-09-23 10:53:43
- date last changed
- 2021-10-01 02:19:55
@misc{a31ee28c-0bca-4d9d-b823-31cb64a8b6dd, abstract = {{This paper revisits the Power Resource Theory (PRT) by testing one of its more influential claims: the relation between the strength of the labor movement and the reduction of industrial conflicts. Using panel data techniques to analyze more than 2,000 strikes in 103 Swedish towns we test whether a shift in the balance of power towards Social Democratic rule was associated with fewer strikes. The focus is on the formative years between the first general election in 1919 and 1938, when Sweden went from a country of fierce labor conflicts to a state of industrial peace. We find that Social Democratic power reduced strikes, but only in towns where union presence was strong. We do not see any tangible concessions in terms of increased social spending by local governments after a left-wing victory as predicted by PRT. Instead the mechanism leading to fewer strikes appears to be related to corporatist explanations.}}, author = {{Molinder, Jakob and Karlsson, Tobias and Enflo, Kerstin}}, keywords = {{Power Resource Theory; industrial conflicts; strikes; labor markets; local politics; N34; N44; H53; J51}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Working Paper}}, number = {{2019:207}}, series = {{Lund Papers in Economic History. General Issues}}, title = {{The Power Resource Theory Revisited : What Explains the Decline in Industrial Conflicts in Sweden?}}, url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/69811751/LUPEH_207.pdf}}, year = {{2019}}, }