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POLITICAL ORIGINS OF FIRM STRATEGIES
A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL
SCIENCE
AND TO THE COMMITTEE ON GRADUATE STUDIES
OF STANFORD UNIVERSITY
IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS
FOR THE DEGREE OF
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
Alexander G. Kuo
September 2010
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/
This dissertation is online at: http://purl.stanford.edu/jj651ff0390
© 2011 by Alexander Guanshin Kuo. All Rights Reserved.
Re-distributed by Stanford University under license with the author.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.
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I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
Jonathan Rodden, Co-Adviser
I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
Isabela Mares, Co-Adviser
I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
Stephen Haber
I certify that I have read this dissertation and that, in my opinion, it is fully adequatein scope and quality as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
David Laitin
Approved for the Stanford University Committee on Graduate Studies.
Patricia J. Gumport, Vice Provost Graduate Education
This signature page was generated electronically upon submission of this dissertation in electronic format. An original signed hard copy of the signature page is on file inUniversity Archives.
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Abstract
What explains the emergence of different kinds of capitalist systems across
advanced industrialized democracies? In particular, why do highly coordinated
employer associations form in some states and not others, and why do such
organizations change over time? Because different kinds of contemporary employer
coordination or varieties of capitalism are linked to long-term outcomes of
unemployment, inequality, social policy generosity, and product innovation, it is
important to understand their historical origins and development. Given the recent
attention to historical economic institutions and their long-term policy consequences,
understanding their origins and divergence is of obvious historical, normative, and
theoretical interest.
In this dissertation I propose an alternative account of the development of
highly coordinated employer associations and their absence in advanced industrialized
states. I provide a new framework for conceptualizing these outcomes as strategic
decisions of firms. I go on to argue that major collaborative employer associations
emerged largely out of major threats to firms posed by workers, during key historical
moments in the early twentieth century and the inter-war period. When the threat
posed by workers was extremely high, firms agreed to form institutionalized
arrangements with unions, such as encompassing collective bargaining institutions.
When firms felt that the threat could be contained, they pursued strategies of collective
repression of workers, in the form of repressive employer associations. However, the
collective strategies that these firms pursued could only succeed if there were not
incentives to defect from such arrangements. Lower industrial heterogeneity in
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economies that facilitated collective action increased the likelihood of collective firm
strategies succeeding. This proposed theory is more consistent with the historical
evidence of the actual development and changes in employer organizations than
existing literature.
To test the theory I provide evidence that confirms the preferences and
strategies of firms, and demonstrate how they change in response to differing levels of
the variables described above. I use a combination of empirical approaches to achieve
these goals. First, to substantiate the predictions about the strategies pursued by firms,
I gathered primary data on the main employer organizations in the United States and
Germany from the late nineteenth to mid twentieth century. The new evidence,
constituting publications, meeting notes, and internal correspondence supports the
main predictions of the theory about the determinants of firms‘ strategies and
formation of early employer associations. Second, I leverage the extensive sub-
national variation in the strategies pursued by firms in both countries to confirm
observable implications of the theory. I statistically test the key mechanisms of the
theory using new sub-national data on membership in different employer
organizations in the US and Germany between 1880 and 1930. Third, to test the
portability of the theory, I present evidence of changes in firm strategies between 1880
and 1950 for other countries, including Australia, Britain, Denmark, France, Japan,
and Sweden.
I conclude the dissertation with discussion of broader implications for
comparative politics, in particular the importance of understanding collective action
among firms and instruments of repression.
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Acknowledgments
I take great pleasure in thanking all the individuals who have helped make this
dissertation possible. I would first like to thank the members of my dissertation
committee. My greatest emotional and intellectual debts go to my advisor, Isabela
Mares. Since the day I walked into her office with a set of barely formed ideas about
the history of varieties of capitalism, she has been a wonderful mentor through my
years as a graduate student. Her critical and helpful intellectual insights, amazing
patience, generosity with her time, sense of humor, and contagious enthusiasm have
encouraged my interest in comparative politics, and vastly improved this manuscript. I
have met with her to talk about the project in a variety of geographical locales, and
each time, she devoted maximum energy and effort to improve what I had written and
to constructively criticize what I was thinking. I feel lucky to have had her as a mentor
and I look forward to learning more from her throughout the rest of my professional
career. I could not have asked for a better or more caring advisor.
I owe a great deal of thanks to Jonathan Rodden. I feel lucky that he joined the
department just as I was coalescing some of the ideas and drafting more of the
manuscript. Jonathan always provided a host of useful suggestions and energetic
encouragement on the project, and had particularly insightful and creative ideas for
gathering new data and for framing the ideas. His generosity with his time, patience,
and obvious interest in the implications of my research are much appreciated.
David Laitin taught my first few courses in comparative politics in graduate
school, and I have learned a tremendous amount from him and his approach to doing
social science; this manuscript is my first real (and hopefully not last) attempt to do
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justice to his teaching. At critical points throughout the writing, he gave important
suggestions about improving the argument, testing, and pushing to make the project
more relevant to a broader audience of comparative politics scholars. I look forward
to continue learning from him the professor who some students affectionately and
admiringly refer to as ―Gandalf.‖
Steve Haber, the final member of the dissertation committee, encouraged my
early interest in comparative political economy and the study of business history and
the role of business organizations in politics. He also pressed me to think about how
the arguments in the manuscript could generalize to developing states, and to apply
insights from other literatures to my own thinking and writing about advanced
industrialized states. I will continue to learn more from him and from his work.
Fieldwork for the dissertation was partially funded by the Littlefield Graduate
Fellowship and the Graduate Research Opportunity Dissertation Grant. Gerald
Feldman kindly met with me before I left for Germany and gave great feedback on the
project, as well as how to get acquainted with German historical research. I spent a
stimulating year as a visiting doctoral student at the Max Planck Institute for the Study
of Societies (Max Planck Institut für Gesellschaftsforschung) in Cologne, Germany,
for which I have Jens Beckert and Wolfgang Streeck to thank. I had a wonderful time
doing research there, due in large part to the community of doctoral students and
scholars, including Michael Blauberger, Helen Callaghan, Steffen Ganghof, Philipp
Klages, Martin Höpner, Olga Maletz, Philip Manow, Cornelia Woll, and Armin
Schäfer. These friends and colleagues made me feel at home while doing research.
Many archivists and librarians in Germany assisted my research and the gathering of
viii
many historical materials there. I would like to thank in particular Christian Hillen at
the Rhineland-Westphalian Economic Archive; Hans-Hermann Pogarell at the Bayer
Archive; and Norbert Uersfeld at the Institute for the German Economy in Cologne.
A host of librarians and archivists in the United States were also extremely
helpful in tracking down sources and data. I would like to thank the staff at the
Indiana Historical Society, the US National Archive, and Hagley Museum and library,
in particular Marge McNinch. At Stanford, Tony Angiletta and Ron Nakao patiently
helped with numerous requests and questions. Patrick Galloway shared data on
Prussia demographics and kindly answered questions about data sources. Gerald
Friedman kindly shared his data on unionization in the United States, used in chapter
7. Edward Anderson shared data on cross-national wages, used in Chapter 8.
Throughout graduate school and in writing this dissertation, the staff at Encina
Hall has been there at every step to help. Chandelle Arambula, Judy Low, Jeanette
Lee-Oderman, Eliana Vasquez, and Jackie Sargent were always willing and eager to
navigate any administrative problem.
This dissertation has benefited greatly from comments on either written or oral
presentations of the manuscript from a number of friends and colleagues. I am
fortunate to have received feedback from so many individuals. Peter Hall wrote an
especially thoughtful set of comments on an early incarnation of the proposal for the
dissertation. I received helpful comments on written portions of the manuscript from
Matt Carnes, Luke Condra, Roy Elis, Victor Shih, Jed Stiglitz, Kathleen Thelen, Julia
Tobias, Jeremy Wallace, and Anne Wren. Many friends and colleagues gave helpful
advice on presentations of the material, including Andrea Abel, Claire Adida, Mike
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Albertus, Yuen Ang, Sarah Anzia, Kendra Bischoff, Thomas Brambor, Jowei Chen,
Dara Cohen, Josh Cohen, Tiberiu Dragu, Jesse Driscoll, Desha Girod, Judy Goldstein,
Laurel Harbridge, Jim Fearon, Danielle Harlan, Stephen Jessee, Karen Long Jusko,
Kimuli Kasara, Candy Ku, Charlotte Lee, Aila Matanock, Sonia Mittal, Maggie
Peters, Connor Raso, Natan Sachs, Emily Shafer, Luke Stein, Rachel Stein, Alex
Tahk, Mike Tomz, and Jessica Weeks.
There are many friends to thank. Luke Condra provided much encouragement
and warm support during the writing of this dissertation. I would like to thank in
particular Neil Malhotra, who has been a wonderful friend and colleague throughout
my graduate school days. I will have many fond memories of our friendship forged at
Stanford. Along the way he has given me generous advice and insightful criticism of
my research ideas. I owe a special debt to Yotam Margalit, who remains an ideal
colleague. Yotam has been an especially kind and compassionate friend through the
years. I look forward to the times ahead with them. It would be difficult to list all the
reasons to thank them, but hopefully, they know most of them.
My parents, Ming and Mei, and my sister, Michelle, have been the most loving
family that one can possibly hope for. Their emotional support and unwavering
confidence in my efforts made this work possible. They encouraged me to pursue my
passion, and for that, I am eternally grateful.
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Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Introduction ............................................................................................... 1
Motivating Observations ............................................................................................. 1
Section 1 Existing perspectives on industrial institutions and firm strategies ........... 9
Section 2 Outline of dissertation ............................................................................... 17
Chapter 2: A New Conception of Firm Strategies ................................................... 25
Section 1 A New Framework ................................................................................... 25
Section 2 Coding the Framework ............................................................................ 36
Section 3 Distinguishing Firm Strategies, Labor Strategies, and Outcomes ........... 41
Chapter 3: A Theory of Firm Strategies .................................................................. 46
Section 1 Main Explanation and Summary of Predictions ....................................... 47
Section 2 Mechanisms of the Threat from the Left and Endogeneity ..................... 50
Section 3 Industrial Heterogeneity, Variance in Cost of Repression ....................... 60
Section 4 Alternative Explanations and Concerns .................................................... 68
Chapter 4: Evidence from Imperial Germany ........................................................ 83
Section 1 The Industrial and Repressive Context .................................................... 88
Section 2 Transition to Collective Strategies ......................................................... 107
Section 3 The Creation of Peak Level Employer Associations .............................. 136
Section 4 Overcoming Differences and Further Collective Strategies ................... 162
Chapter 5: Testing Mechanisms and Implications from Imperial Germany ..... 177
Section 1 Explaining Strategies of Collective Action: Sector Level Evidence ..... 178
Section 2 Association Level Evidence ................................................................... 183
Section 3 Explaining Membership in Collective Repressive Associations ............ 188
Section 4 Conclusions ............................................................................................. 196
Chapter 6: Evidence from Weimar Germany ....................................................... 205
Section 1 From Collective Repression to Collective Collaboration ...................... 207
Section 2 The Collapse of Collective Collaborative Strategies .............................. 229
Section 3 Repressive Strategies in Weimar Germany ............................................ 247
Section 4 Implications and Alternative Views ........................................................ 271
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Chapter 7: Evidence from the United States Inter-War Period .......................... 278
Section 1 Overview of Changes in Firm Strategies ................................................ 281
Section 2 The United States and the ―Open Shop‖ Movement ............................. 284
Section 3 Testing the Theory with Micro Data ....................................................... 293
Section 4 Results from Micro-Tests ...................................................................... 300
Section 5 Qualitative Evidence .............................................................................. 306
Section 6 Conclusions ............................................................................................. 317
Chapter 8: Cross-National Evidence ...................................................................... 323
Section 1 Summary of Cross-national Evidence and Approach ............................ 323
Section 2 Country evidence ................................................................................... 327
Section 3 Conclusions ............................................................................................. 345
Chapter 9: Conclusions ............................................................................................ 353
Bibliography .............................................................................................................. 361
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List of Tables
Table 2-1: Classifying Strategies of Firms .............................................................. 45
Table 2-2: Historical Examples of Firm Strategies ................................................ 45
Table 3-1: Main Theoretical Predictions of Firm Strategies ................................. 81
Table 3-2: Current Hypotheses about Firm Strategies .......................................... 82
Table 4-1: Characteristics of Employer Associations, 1911-1913 ........................ 175
Table 5-1: Explaining Employer Coordination at the Sector Level ................... 198
Table 5-2: Major National Level Employer Associations ..................................... 199
Table 5-3: Explaining Strike Insurance Provisions ............................................... 200
Table 5-4: Explaining institutional connection ...................................................... 200
Table 5-5: Membership of the HDA by Industry and SPD Threat .................... 201
Table 5-6: The Left Threat and HDA ..................................................................... 201
Table 5-7: Membership by vote share .................................................................... 202
Table 5-8: Explaining Collective Repressive Strategies ........................................ 202
Table 7-1: County-Level Repressive Employer Coordination ............................ 320
Table 7-2: Substantive Effects of Union Threat .................................................... 322
Table 8-1: Dates of Firm Strategies and Electoral Systems ................................. 347
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List of Figures
Figure 5-1: 1907 Distribution of SPD Vote Share ................................................. 203
Figure 5-2: Threat from Left and Repressive Activity ......................................... 204
Figure 6-1: Change in Firm Strategies in Germany .............................................. 277
Figure 7-1: Change in US Firm Strategies ............................................................ 319
Figure 8-1: Change in Firm Strategies in Sweden ................................................. 348
Figure 8-2: Change in Firm Strategies in Britain ................................................. 349
Figure 8-3: Change in Firm Strategies in Denmark ............................................. 350
Figure 8-4: Change in Firm Strategies in France .................................................. 351
Figure 8-5: Change in Firm Strategies in Australia ............................................. 352
1
Chapter 1: Introduction
Motivating Observations
In 1907, J.W. Van Cleave, the president of the US National Association of
Manufacturers (NAM), addressed the member firms at a convention of a fellow
employer organization, the National Metal Trades Association (NMTA). The purpose
of the address was to convince firms of the fruits of a formal association of firms
against organized labor. He tried to persuade the audience of company owners and
representatives that they should organize collectively to counter the losses that unions
were imposing on firm owners. Specifically, he argued that a federation of all
employer organizations could be effective in ―head[ing] off all foolish or vicious
propositions before they were introduced on our…legislature,‖ and that a ―great
council‖ of employers would still be able to preserve the independence of its members
(Van Cleave, 1907).
Van Cleave‘s address was one of many efforts made by American regional
employer organizations to form strident ―open shop‖ organizations before and after
World War I. These organizations aimed to prevent unions from organizing across
firms to dictate wages, working conditions, and restrictions on apprenticeships. The
open-shop efforts were quite successful in reducing inter-firm union influence before
the Great Depression (Ingham 1974; Wakstein 1964). Since the end of World War II,
however, no movement like the open shop has taken place in the United States. In the
United States today, negotiations between firms and workers largely occur within the
firm; disputes are handled in courts of labor law. But ―organization men‖ like Van
Cleave have no bearing on the wages and working conditions of the American worker.
2
In 1918, amidst concern about economic chaos that could follow the end of the
First World War, several prominent German business leaders met to form a
collaborative agreement with unions, which would re-organize industrial relations in
Germany and establish the first time national-level collective bargaining institutions.
The leaders managed to present this agreement to the government as a fait accompli.
Hans von Raumer, the business manager of the German electro-technical industry,
headed the negotiations. Raumer was persuaded by his colleagues to quickly start an
―organic collaboration‖ with unions before the ―flood of events [the expected post-war
chaos] overtook us all‘‖ (Feldman 1970). The resulting negotiations led to the 1918
Stinnes-Legien Accord, the first formal definition of the rights of unions at the
national level, and the first German government-sanctioned ―cross-class‖ agreement
between business and labor. This agreement would provide the ideological template
for a similar framework of laws that were implemented in the immediate post-WWII
period. The willingness of business leaders to negotiate the Stinnes-Legien Accord
contrasts sharply with their attitudes towards workers in the early twentieth century.
In the same year as the Stinnes-Legien agreement was being quickly
negotiated, representatives of the most important British employer organization, the
Engineering Employers Federation (EEF), contacted the head of the War Ministry
with an urgent request: they sought from the Ministry additional public enforcement of
a law that was supposed to prohibit firms from poaching workers from each other with
lures of higher wages and benefits. The head of the EEF, Alan Smith, succinctly
stated to Ministry officials the motivation for such action: ―we want to subject
ourselves to discipline as much as anybody else, because we have to protect ourselves
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from ourselves‖ (Zeitlin 1991, 64). These efforts ultimately collapsed as the Ministry
disallowed local employer associations to restrict worker mobility.
In 1938, the Swedish Employers‘ Confederation (Svenska
Arbetsgivareföreningen, or SAF), negotiated a sweeping agreement with its main
union counterpart, the Swedish Confederation of Labor (Landsorganisationen I
Sverige, LO) at Saltsböjaden. This famous ―Basic Agreement‖ stipulated a number of
provisions that would benefit workers and gave unions an institutional voice in wage
setting. The key aspects of the agreement included centralized mediation of wage
disputes between firms and workers. The famous ―cross-class‖ agreement contrasts
sharply with the strategies of harsh lockouts that the SAF and related associations,
particularly the Engineering Employers‘ Association (Verkastadsföreningen, VF), had
engaged in thirty years prior, which had the effect of almost bleeding union treasuries
dry.
These four historical examples of firm decisions to collectively act illustrate
much cross-national variation in the strategies pursued by firms with respect to
workers. What compelled the Van Cleave in the United States and his colleagues to
take hostile action, while Raumer and his colleagues sought a national cross-class
agreement? Why were the German industrialists represented by Raumer concerned
with presenting a fait accompli to the government—essentially trying to minimize the
state‘s initial involvement—while Smith was in the opposite position of begging the
government for enforcement? In all these instances, prominent industrialists made
decisions about whether and how to expand the reach of their nascent collective
institutions, and what actions such organizations should take vis-à-vis organized labor
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and the state. Annals of business history of both developed and developing economies
are replete with similar examples of industrialist calls to action and changes in
fundamental strategies about how to deal with workers.
The historical or temporal variation in such firm strategies is also striking.
Why is someone like Van Cleave relatively unimportant for American industrial
relations today, while the representatives and member associations of the
Confederation of German Employers‘ Associations (Bundesvereinigung der
Deutschen Arbeitgeberverbände, BDA) remain important industrial and political
actors? Why did the SAF apparently radically change its use of lockouts to sign one
of the most labor-friendly accords? Why did people like Smith of the British EEF
engage in different kinds of collective strategies after the inter-war period, while today
the EEF retains only a fraction of its functions from its early twentieth century
origins?
These incidents show that firms have altered strategies greatly in response to
changing labor and economic conditions—both in terms of acting collectively and in
terms of treatment of workers. They also raise broader questions in comparative
political economy. What explains the emergence of different kinds of capitalist
systems across advanced industrialized democracies? In particular, why do highly
coordinated employer associations form in some states and not others, and why do
such organizations change over time? In some countries, many firms in a country are
members of large, encompassing organizations that obligate them to comply with a
range of rules regarding the treatment of workers. In other countries, firms act in a
more laissez-faire economic environment, and even if employer organizations exist,
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they have little impact on the major labor-market actions of firms and serve only as
lobbying associations. Because different kinds of contemporary employer
coordination are linked to outcomes of unemployment, inequality, worker training
regimes, social policy generosity, and product innovation, it is important to understand
their historical origins and development.1
Beyond the normative policy consequences of different forms of employer
coordination, understanding long-term historical change in firm strategies and
treatment of workers is relevant for contemporary institutional dilemmas facing both
advanced industrialized and middle-income states. A central concern of modern
economies that have a reputation for stable collective bargaining institutions is
whether such institutions can survive. Scholars have noted a pattern of increasing
defection of member firms and organizations from national-level employer
confederations in previously ―stable‖ coordinated market economies such as Germany
and Sweden.2 That is, member firms and sector-level employer associations are
voluntarily deciding that they are better off on their own than being subjected to
organizational rules about how they should negotiate with their own workers. There is
now a lively debate about how whether employer confederations will endure, and with
them, whether the welfare state they help support can survive (Hall 2007; Thelen
2000; Swenson and Pontusson 2000). In the developing world today, open questions
include whether nascent business and employer organizations will repress or deal with
1 See the discussion in Hall and Soskice (2001).
2 For discussion of the exit of German firms from national associations, see the discussion in (Hassel
2002, 1999) and (Silvia and Schroeder 2007).
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workers; how influential they will be on the state; and whether they will engage in
corruption or rent-seeking.
Recent scholarship in the field of comparative political economy has begun to
address these questions by trying to determine historical ―root causes‖ and tracing the
development of different forms of capitalist systems within current advanced
industrialized states. Within this field, more attention is being paid to the choice of
industrial institutions and identifying divergence in forms of economic coordination,
and in particular, the relationship between political institutions and corporatist
economic institutions.
Yet the most recent accounts on the subject of the development of industrial
relations institutions in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century remain
curiously disengaged from the kinds of incidents and decisions discussed above in the
four example countries. I discuss these extant theories more extensively in the
following chapters. In particular, they posit an account of long-standing coordination
among firms and between firms and workers that is at odds with the historical record
that highlights the real redistributive threat posed by workers to firms during this time
period, and a set of other incentives firms had to act collectively. In this dissertation I
address the question of the development of different forms of employer coordination
by positing a more historically grounded range of strategies that firms pursued vis-à-
vis workers.
I propose a new way of conceptualizing the outcomes and a theory that can
explain this variation. This conception captures the logic of the decisions of
organizational entrepreneurs that opened this introduction: whether to continue
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repressive strategies against workers or to collaborate with them; and whether to act
individually or collectively. I argue that the major outcomes to explain are not just
―degrees of coordination,‖ but when countries experienced qualitative movement from
repression of workers to allowance of workers to ―have a seat at the bargaining table‖;
and whether countries experienced the development of organizations that obligate
member firms to comply with institutional rules.
I then offer a theory for explaining this range of outcomes that is based on
more historically grounded view of the design and change in industrial institutions
over time, but hypothesize independent variables and mechanisms that can be
generalized to other countries and eras. I argue that major collaborative employer
associations emerged largely out of major redistributive threats to firms posed by
workers, during key historical moments in the early twentieth century and the inter-
war period. When the threat posed by workers was extremely high, firms agreed to
form institutionalized arrangements with unions, such as encompassing collective
bargaining institutions. When firms felt that the threat could be contained, they
pursued strategies of collective repression of workers, in the form of repressive
employer associations that sought to crush unions. However, the collective strategies
that these firms pursued could only succeed if structural conditions prevented firms
from defecting from such arrangements. In particular, lower industrial heterogeneity
in economies that facilitated collective action increased the likelihood of collective
firm strategies succeeding. Lower industrial heterogeneity meant that there was a
lower variance in the costs of repression, which increased the probability of
agreements among firms and sector-level associations. If these structural conditions
8
did not allow for collective action, then individual firm-level strategies with respect to
workers were pursued.
This explanation is more consistent with the historical evidence of the actual
development and changes in employer organizations. The theory incorporates an
explanation for why some firms engaged in repressive coordination or strategies
against workers. This outcome of repression (either by firms or employer
organizations) has been theoretically understudied in the political economy literature
on the development of varieties of capitalism. While the existing accounts focusing
on electoral systems and guild traditions account for some cross-national and temporal
variation in employer coordination, the proposed theory here explains a wider array of
strategies of firms. Given the recent attention to endogenous electoral and economic
institutions and their long-term policy consequences, understanding their origins and
long-term divergence is of obvious normative and theoretical interest.
To test this theory of firm strategies, I use a research design that involves in-
depth comparison of substantively important cases as well as exploitation of sub-
national variation within both cases. Additionally, I use historical evidence that tests
the theory over time. I present evidence that confirms the different preferences and
strategies of firms, and shows how their strategies changed in response to differing
levels of the variables described above. I use a combination of empirical approaches
to achieve these goals.
First, to substantiate the predictions about the strategies pursued by firms, I
gathered extensive original archival data on the main employer organizations in the
United States and Germany from their advent through the inter-war period. The new
9
evidence, constituting publications, meeting notes, and internal correspondence
supports the main predictions of the theory about the determinants of firms‘ strategies.
I present much descriptive evidence that links the hypothesized variables to the
predicted outcomes.
Second, I leverage the extensive sub-national variation in the strategies
pursued by firms in both countries to confirm observable implications of the theory. I
statistically test the key mechanisms of the theory using new sub-national data on
membership in different employer organizations in the US and Germany between
1880 and 1930. This dataset includes original data on firm strategies as well as new
data on covariates at the local level.
Third, to test the portability of the theory, I present short case descriptions of
changes in firm strategies between 1880 and 1950 for other important advanced
industrialized states. This research design is an advance over previous studies that
rely on limited cross-national regressions.
In the rest of the introduction, I briefly discuss the development of the
literature on employer coordination, discuss some of the prominent flaws in the
conceptualization, and then preview the rest of the dissertation.
Section 1: Existing perspectives on industrial institutions and firm strategies
In this section I present a brief overview of how firm strategies with respect to
workers, particularly collective organizations, have been discussed. Much of the
voluminous literature in comparative politics, industrial organization, economic
sociology, and business history examine the redistributive and political consequences
of industrial institutions and the impact that employer associations have on wage-
10
setting or related outcomes. In particular, recent literature in comparative political
economy theorizes why the presence or absence of inter-firm coordination links to
other economic institutions and normatively important social outcomes. The
ascendant ―varieties of capitalism‖ (VOC) research agenda started by (Hall and
Soskice 2001, 2001) takes employer associations a pre-existing part of a set of
coordinated economic institutions. In their framework, countries can be coded as
―coordinated market‖ (CME) or ―liberal market‖ economies (LME), with the former
group having encompassing employer associations that cover a large plurality (or
majority) of major firms in an economy. LMEs are economies where employer
associations play a minimal role in relations with workers. This agenda links the
existence and functions of modern employer organizations and their counterpart
unions to long-term economic outcomes such as unemployment, inequality, social
policy innovation, and responses to globalization. This research agenda also argues
that industrial and financial institutions can be clustered in to CMEs and LMEs, and
that such institutions constitute equilibria.
This literature is an advance with respect to the previous generation of
scholarship that distinguished between corporatist and pluralist economic systems
(Schmitter and Streeck 1991; Katzenstein 1985; Schmitter 1974). This influential
categorization of different economic systems implies that in corporatist systems, firms
pursue a collective strategy, as opposed to an individual strategy, to maximize profits.
By contrast, in ―pluralist systems,‖ firms either choose not to pursue collective
strategies, or are unable to. One of the key contributions of the VOC body of research
is that it takes the firm as the key actor, and introduces their preferences and strategies
11
vis-à-vis other economic actors such as banks and unions. Previous literature on
industrial institutions which focused only on union preferences and demands ignored
the varying preferences of firms in designing or joining industrial institutions.
Recent arguments consistent with the assumptions of the VOC approach takes
firm preferences and strategies as key factors in explaining variation in social policy
and labor market institutions (Mares 2003; Swenson 2002). These studies
convincingly demonstrate that variation in firm preferences and strategies are crucial
to understand why social insurance provisions and labor market institutions across
countries differ. Mares argues that differences in skill profiles of firms affect
preferences for any social protection for workers; in addition, such profiles explain
support for targeted as opposed to publicly funded national social policy (2003).
Swenson argues that structural conditions can explain why employers favor solidarist
versus segmentalist labor market strategies. These studies have convincingly critiqued
the previous arguments that welfare states and labor legal arrangements are a
consequence of labor ―power‖ alone (Korpi 2006).
Both the VOC literature and these recent accounts which share some of its
assumptions assume the existence of employer organizations at the sector or national
level. The point of departure for these arguments is that firms have somehow
overcome the collective action problem to lobby for or act to achieve social policy or
labor-market objectives. However, this recent literature does not consider the choice
of firms and their resulting institutions as an outcome variable. The question of
whether firms would prefer or be able to form such institutions, and what actions such
organizations would undergo, was an older but still unresolved question in the
12
academic fields noted above. A critical component of the discussion of industrial
institutions is whether firms would be able to collectively act to form such
organizations and institutions that would be sustainable beyond just being pure
lobbying associations. One perspective was that formal organization of firms would
be unnecessary. Friedrich Engels implicitly argued that we should not observe
anything like formal associations: ―Capitalists…are always organized. Their small
number, the fact that they constitute a particular class, [and] their social and
commercial relations, make formal organizations superfluous‖ (cited in (Friedman
1991)). This argument is based on an assumption of the basic commonality of
interests of capitalists, obviating the need for any kind of formal coordination. By
contrast, Olson argued that in the absence of selective incentives or agents willing to
pay the costs of public good provision, there should be a similar outcome of relative
absence of collective organizations of firms (1968). The research agenda that Olson
spawned was about the failure of collective action: even if individual firms all desired
a collective organization, a set of structural conditions would prevent its formation.
In response to these predictions of relatively little collective action of firms,
Offe and Wiesenthal, in a re-opening of this debate, argued that firms should find it
relatively easier than workers to organize, due to ontological ease in communicating
interests (firms do not have to have profit motives ―redefined‖ for them; firms possess
higher organizational capacity than workers; and they have lower heterogeneity of
inputs (Offe and Wiesenthal 1980). One of the main implications of this agenda of
―two logics of collective class action‖ was that economies should experience a limited
but powerful degree of capitalist action, in contrast to the predictions of Engels and
13
Olson. Streeck and Schmitter countered that the same theoretical framework proposed
by Offe and Wiesenthal implied that we should observe firms acting on a interests in
both product and labor markets, and so economies should be composed of many
different kinds of business associations with different functions (Streeck 1992;
Schmitter and Streeck 1991).
This lively debate about the collective action of firms is in some ways more
precise than the previous literature on the consequences of corporatist versus pluralist
economic systems and varieties of capitalism, with regards to measurement of the
outcome variable, as the debate in economic sociology became preoccupied with the
number and degree of employer associations (Traxler 2000). But these literatures still
do not adequately distinguish the different types of collective strategies of firms to be
explained. Both the more historical and recent literatures conflate scopes and
purposes of organizations of firms. Scholars discuss many different kinds of inter-
firm coordination—employer associations (dealing with labor market obligations of
member firms); trade associations (dealing with information sharing and lobbying);
and cartels (highly coordinated product market control of either quotas or prices).
Descriptive literatures in different fields focus on one narrow type of collective
organization, while the theoretical literature in political science has lagged in failing to
account for different kinds of collective action of firms. Much of the vast empirical
literature on trade associations, employer associations, and cartels takes the
organization (or institution of inter-firm coordination) as the unit of analysis, while the
comparative political economy literature naturally takes the country-time period as the
unit of analysis.
14
The descriptive literature in the fields of industrial sociology and business
history do give useful descriptions of different kinds of business organizations (at the
industry or peak level. However, there remains confusion about coding and clarifying
the dependent variable and unit of analysis, and accounts do not describe testable
general propositions about their formation (Gladstone and Windmuller 1984; Sisson
1991; Tolliday and Zeitlin 1991). In addition to the conflation of different kinds of
firm strategies, the literature has failed to provide a clear set of scope conditions under
which we should predict collective action of firms to be successful at the national level
and when such activities would change over time.
The problems of a focus on explaining corporatist versus pluralist economic
systems, and the conception of employer coordination assumed in this classification,
become clearer when we consider recent explanations for employer collective action.
Scholars in comparative politics have begun to address the question of the formation
of specific kinds of employer associations, though, as discussed below, their
characterization of such associations remains incomplete. This literature dwells on the
link between economic coordination and electoral systems. They focus on two
variables: the electoral system and pre-existing guild institutions.
Recent important and influential literature has begun systematically exploring
the origins and mechanisms of historical forms of employer associations and
coordination. This literature links systems of employer coordination to political
institutions (and vice versa), focusing on the importance of the electoral system and
pre-existing guild traditions. Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice (henceforth CIS) argue that
different forms of pre-existing economic coordination affect the choice of electoral
15
system. Martin and Swank (henceforth MS) argue that the relationship is in the
opposite direction; PR electoral systems are more likely to cause the development of
highly coordinated employer organizations. Both accounts argue that employer
organizations historically secured or protected investments in specific skills for
workers (Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice 2007; Martin and Swank 2008; Kreuzer 2010;
Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice 2010).
While CIS are not concerned with the development of this forms of economic
coordination per se, it is important to outline their mechanisms linking economic to
political institutions, as those same mechanisms are used to explain both historical and
modern employer coordination by other scholars. They argue that higher degrees of
economic coordination among firms, and between firms and labor unions, lead to
adoption of proportional representation (PR) electoral systems; lower degrees of such
coordination lead to the maintenance of majoritarian single-member district (SMD)
electoral systems. Martin and Swank (MS) propose a similar causal logic but
advocate the opposite direction: in their account, proportional electoral systems
promote and solidify corporatist employer associations while majoritarian systems
inhibit them.3 In both accounts, the kind of economic coordination that exists is
assumed to be the result of longstanding or historical guild traditions as described by
Thelen (2004).4 These accounts both argue there is a correlation between the
proportionality of electoral systems and the development of coordination among firms.
Such coordination institutions help sustain joint investment in specific skills, and
3 The mechanisms linking electoral systems to economic coordination differ somewhat between these
two accounts, which I address in the first section. 4 See as well as Hansen (1998) for explication on the origins and functions of different guild systems in
terms of provision of skills.
16
incentives for firms to establish cooperative institutions with workers. I discuss these
accounts in much greater detail in chapter 3 of the dissertation.
Both the recent and older accounts of employer coordination suffer from
several deficiencies, particularly regarding their conceptualization of the outcome
variable. First, existing frameworks of firm strategies fail to explain why some
countries have firms that pursue labor-market goals individually, or why inter-firm
coordination occurs only in select sectors. The preoccupation has been with variance
within employer associations, and not in explaining the predominance of large firms
not participating in such associations. The literature generally ignores the possible
outcome that firms can individually pursue outcomes.
Second, studies of employer coordination have assumed only on a
collaborative coordination that focuses on the presence of centralized or coordinated
wage-setting and the industry-level provision of goods like vocational training for
skilled workers. The collective bargaining outcome is the most frequently studied one
by comparative scholars, as evidenced by datasets capturing differences within peak
associations. Most of these datasets focus on Western Europe and the English-
speaking OECD states (Golden, Lange, and Wallerstein 2006; Kenworthy 2001;
Traxler 2000), although there has been recent attention to coding the degree of
collective employer coordination before WWII in Western Europe (Cusack, Iversen,
and Soskice 2007; Martin and Swank 2008). Both recent pre-WWII and post-war
datasets try to capture ―how collective‖ or ―degree of coordination‖ of firms and
unions in their datasets. Kenworthy (2001) and Ebbinghaus and Visser (2000)
measure at what level (firm, industry, or national-level) wages are set, as a proxy for
17
centralization of wage bargaining. Golden, Lange, and Wallerstein (henceforth GLW)
measure a number of indicators for employer associations across twenty OECD states
for the post-war period. These binary indicators of associations include: whether the
employer confederation has appointment power of its board; whether it has veto over
wage agreements and veto over lockouts; whether its own conflict funds; and whether
a peak (national-level) confederation exists.
The indicators collected in these kinds of datasets take the existence of
collective collaborative strategies as a given. As I discuss more extensively in Chapter
2, they do not consider repressive strategies in the choice set of firms. Moreover, they
conflate self-fulfilling strategies of cooperation (the existence of collective bargaining,
for example) with other indicators that could also denote the existence of repressive
strategies (such the existence of lockout funds and control over affiliate members).
This problem is not as theoretically severe for the post-war data coding. But given the
increased attention to understanding causes and consequences of early employer
coordination (Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice 2007; Thelen 2004; Martin and Swank
2008), the assumption of a uni-dimensional ―collective cooperative‖ dimension to firm
strategies going back to the late nineteenth century is problematic. I return to discuss
these issues extensively in the next two chapters of the dissertation.
Section 2: Outline of dissertation
Chapter 2 presents a new framework of firm strategies that incorporates the
choice of firms to repress workers. The first part of the chapter describes the
framework. In brief, I argue that two dimensions characterize variation in the
strategies of firms. First, employers can act individually or collectively; they can either
18
address the concerns of workers individually, or join a formal employer association.
Second, firms can battle repressively against workers, or they can collaborate with
workers, by recognizing the latter as a formal negotiating partner with attendant
responsibilities in the wage-setting process and establishment of basic working
conditions. These strategies characterize different forms of inter-firm coordination,
such as employer associations that seek to crush or promote the role of organized
labor, or choices by firms to pursue these goals alone. This mapping of firm strategies
contrasts with existing literature which only views them as either collectively
collaborative or not collectively collaborative at all (Hall and Soskice 2001). The
second part of the chapter discusses the coding procedure for this new outcome, and
relates the conceptualization to existing approaches.
Chapter 3 describes the theory and predictions. The variation in firm strategies
depends on two variables: the redistributive threat of workers posed to firms, and the
degree of industrial heterogeneity. The former affects the incentives to pursue a
collaborative or repressive approach; the latter shapes incentives to act collectively or
individually. The two main insights to the theory involve the response of firms to the
threat posed by the politicization of labor, and the enforceability of any institutions
they agree to design to address the threat. I then discuss specific mechanisms that link
the independent variables to variation in firm strategies. The threat from workers
affects the level of the costs of repression that firms must engage in. Industrial
heterogeneity affects the variance in the costs of repression, which captures the
difficulty in maintaining self-enforcing collective strategies. I discuss some potential
extensions to the theory, including joint operation of both mechanisms, and the
19
incentives for firms to share the costs of repression or enforcement with the state.
This parsimonious explanation accounts for a wide range of temporal and cross-
national variation in strategies pursued by employers.
The next section of the chapter contrasts the theory with existing theories that
emphasize other variables, including the role of electoral systems, legacies of guilds,
initial structural conditions, and degree of unionization. I demonstrate how the new
theory contrasts with these accounts because it clarifies a strategic logic from the key
actors—firms and nascent organizations—regarding their response to changes in
political and economic conditions, and the theory explains a much larger range of firm
behavior. The theory gives predictions for when firms would engage in repressive
practices that both inhibit democratization and reduce the welfare of workers. The
chapter concludes by discussing and addressing potential objections to the theory.
The next five chapters describe various tests of the theory. I perform extensive
testing of the theory with detailed evidence from Germany. The theory accounts for
change in the political strategies of German firms, from a strong collective and
repressive stance against organized labor to a willingness to recognize unions.
Chapters 4 and 5 test the theory with evidence from Imperial Germany. In Chapter 4 I
document the transition from individual to collectively repressive strategies against
workers. I use original archival evidence from correspondence and reports from
important firms and employer organizations to confirm the predictions of the theory:
the initially low political threat posed by the workers‘ parties and low heterogeneity
facilitated a collective repressive set of strategies against workers. However, the
20
moderate increase in the political threat posed by the Social Democratic Party (SPD)
before World War I prompted a shift to a more collaborative strategy among firms.
In Chapter 5 I exploit sub-national variation in the adoption of firm strategies
in Imperial Germany to test mechanisms and observable implications of the theory. I
do so by using new data on such strategies at the sector, associational, and voting
district level. I demonstrate that higher degrees of industrial heterogeneity affect the
enforceability of agreements. I constructed an original dataset of repressive firm
strategies, by using data from national yearbooks, and membership data by economic
region and city of repressive employer associations, most prominently the members of
the Administration of German Employer Associations (Hauptstelle deutscher
Arbeitgeberverbaende, HA). Using another original dataset on Prussian voting
districts, I find that support for the Social Democratic Party leads to more repressive
firm strategies at the sub-national level. But, such collective repressive strategies were
only possible in areas with lower industrial heterogeneity. This micro-evidence
supports the main predictions of the theory. This evidence contrasts with standard
accounts of firm strategies, which argue that firms in Germany were generally
collaborative and had static incentives to protect specific assets with the assistance of
unions (Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice 2007; Thelen 2004; Martin and Swank 2008).
In Chapter 6 I further test the theory with evidence from war-time and Weimar
Germany. I demonstrate that exogenous changes in the costs of repression of workers
explain the change in firms‘ collective repressive strategies to much more
collaborative strategies after 1918, and back again to repressive strategies after 1925.
The primary evidence on firm strategies indicates that higher enforcement costs
21
undermined the returns to strategic collective action because such agreements among
firms. Firm strategies in the aftermath of World War I were strongly conditioned by
the sudden rise in the political threat posed by organized labor. This accounts for the
change to collaborative action through the important Central Working Community
Agreement (Zentralarbeit-gemeinschaft; ZAG). Internal evidence, including personal
correspondence and organizational reports by the firms and organizations that were
pursuing this strategy indicates that the changes in the reduced threat posed by the
Social Democratic Party facilitated a shift in firm strategies to repressive approaches,
as evidenced by the defection from the collaborative ZAG. Changes in heterogeneity
during the latter part of this decade then provided firms with higher incentives to adopt
individual repressive strategies during the rest of the Weimar period. I then document
the different ways in which repressive strategies were pursued in the latter half of the
Weimar era.
In Chapter 7 I test the theory with evidence from a vastly differently country
time period, the United States in the inter-war Period. In this chapter I show how the
theory can explain why American employers have chosen to act individually, or
established repressive institutions that repressed workers. I begin by demonstrating
that the United States shifted from largely individual repressive strategies in the late
nineteenth century to a more collective repressive strategy right after WWI and during
the inter-war war period. I also show that prior to the Great Depression, firms made
strategic choices in their response to changing conditions to begin to revert back to
individual repressive strategies. The variation in strategies was caused largely by
22
exogenous changes in industrial heterogeneity and the perceived political threat of
organized labor.
I first test the importance of the threat and industrial heterogeneity variables
using an original dataset on membership in collective repressive strategies during the
inter-war period. I gathered original sub-national data on firm strategies from
membership data for the ―Open Shop‖ movement, and membership from the most
important manufacturing associations during this period, including the National Metal
Trades Association (NMTA), National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), and
National Erectors‘ Association (NEA), as well as reports from the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC). The statistical tests confirm the hypothesis that a lower threat
from workers increased the pursuit of collective repressive strategies (the adoption of
anti-labor employer organizations) at the county level.
As a second empirical test of the theory, I use archival evidence from key
employer organizations to show how firm strategies at the national level responded to
changes in the enforceability of agreements, and the redistributive threat posed by the
workers. The records of these organizations indicate that firms chose to take advantage
of lower enforcement costs to form influential anti-labor institutions. But towards the
end of this period, these firms made a strategic choice not to develop (and partially
dismantle) a more coordinated and sustained institution at the national level. In fact,
the success of this repressive strategy removed incentives for its continuation. I trace
this outcome during this period to specific firm concerns about the enforceability of
inter-firm institutions. This chapter provides a more nuanced explanation of temporal
23
changes in American ―exceptionalism‖ in industrial relations, and challenges the
conventional view of the US as an always ―liberal‖ regime.
In Chapter 8, the final empirical chapter of the dissertation, I test the portability
of the theory with cross-national evidence from Sweden, Denmark, Britain, France,
Australia, and Japan. I compiled data on firm strategies and employer associations for
other cases between 1870 and 1950. The case discussion includes the adoption and
changes of firm strategies, as well as data on the two main independent variables:
political threat posed by workers and heterogeneity. I demonstrate that these variables
are correlated with the changes in predicted firm strategies, through the posited
mechanisms. The descriptive data here indicate that the theory can explain patterns of
firm strategies during much of the twentieth century. Where possible I demonstrate
the validity of the proposed theory over competing explanations, in particular those
that focus on longstanding ―cooperative‖ worker training systems and electoral
systems.
The final section of the dissertation concludes by summarizing the findings,
discussing possible extensions to the research agenda, and implications for
comparative politics. This manuscript about the causes of different firm strategies and
how they choose various institutions is embedded in a larger research agenda on
instruments that businesses can use to affect democratization and redistribution. The
strategy to form and maintain institutions, in response to structural conditions and
political threats, is a historically important example. These strategies and institutions
also plausibly inhibited democratization and income inequality as well. These research
avenues indicate that the historical and contemporary political activities of firms are
24
relevant to the study of inequality, redistribution, and comparative political economy
more generally.
25
Chapter 2: A Conception of Firm Strategies
In this chapter I provide a new conception of variation in the strategies of firms
described in the previous chapter, and then an explanation for such variation. Section
1 presents the logic and framework of the dependent variable. Section 2 discusses
issues regarding coding the variable. Section 3 concludes by relating the outcome of
firm strategies to other outcomes of interest.
I offer a new conceptualization of firm strategies that allows for firms to act
collectively versus individually as well as repressive against workers or
collaboratively with them. In this section I propose a new framework that captures a
greater range in the outcome variable. As Chapter 1 discussed, existing cross-national
indices rely only on a ―cooperative‖ conception of employer coordination. Due to this
limited conceptualization, extant theories can account for some cross-national
variation in the co-emergence of political institutions and industrial institutions. But
in their conception of in the dependent variable, they neglect important theoretical and
historical variation in the possible functions of employer organizations. In this chapter
I argue that these indices can be thought of as a subset of the possible universe of
strategies that firms can pursue in response to labor market conditions to maximize
profits.
Section 1: A New Framework
Conditional on a set of firms that decides not to deal with concerns about
workers or products individually, how do we think about their collective action?
Independent of collective action, what are the most important strategies they can take
with respect to workers? Regarding collective action, the most intuitive way to code
26
collective strategies of firms is to code the existence of a formal organization.5 At the
most basic level the organization is comprised of member firms. Organizations that
operate at the national level (peak-level associations) can have sector or regional
organizations as members. The organization of firms can also have institutional rules
that constrain and encourage firm behavior to achieve collective goals in product or
labor markets. Some of the rules are meant to facilitate pursuit of collective goals.
Other rules are designed to enforce such activity, such as by punishing member firms
who do not comply. These organizations can have institutions that deal with
representation of firms and administration of rules, such as voting boards, committees,
and executive decision-making bodies. These collective strategies of firms can have
features similar to those of interest groups (as posited by Olson), but also institutional
features that constrain and guide member behavior (as posited in the modern VOC
literature). But, the features of an organization of firms described above are fairly
general and can apply to organizations that in practice are quite different.
Cursory examination of industries in the early twentieth century shows much
variation in the kinds of firms strategies adopted within each industry. For example,
in the United States, machine construction, publishing/printing, marble cutting,
clothing manufacturing industries adopted early on collective strategies where unions
were recognized and played an integral role in the wage-setting process (Willoughby
1905). But later on, machine manufacturing industries, as discussed in next empirical
chapter, switched to repressive strategies and were involved in bitter industrial
conflicts with workers. In Germany, skilled manufacturing industries in chemicals
5 This definition ignores informal ―gentlemen‘s agreements.‖
27
and high-end manufacturing were relatively organized and collaborative early on.
Other early organized industries included timber, printing, and shipyard workers
(Geary 1989). But heavy industry and raw materials organizations from early on, by
contrast, fought against unionization.
The current conception of the dependent variable of employer coordination
wrongly presumes that higher levels of coordination necessarily imply higher levels of
cooperation with labor. In particular, existing theorizing of ―high‖ degrees of
employer coordination obscures the fact that such firms could also be highly
coordinated for purposes of repressing workers (both skilled and unskilled). Firms can
choose to repress workers as a strategy, as well as cooperate with them. Moreover,
repression can occur by individual firms, but also be done collectively, or with
assistance from the state. In particular, collective repression played a critical in
inhibiting organized labor, but it is under theorized as a possible outcome in existing
literature. As I argue below, there was much discussion among firms within states
about which strategy—repression of or collaboration with workers—firms should
pursue. The resulting national-level firm strategies can be thought of as choices of
firms to pursue repression or not, and as bargains between different industrial sectors.
The outcome of ―positive/cooperative employer coordination‖ with unions that
is currently discussed in the literature can thus be viewed as a subset of the possible
strategies of firms to either respond to demands of workers, or to preemptively deal
with workers. The formation and tasks of an employer organization can be conceived
as one possible strategic decision of firms in response to demands from workers, but
28
firms can choose from a set of other strategies. We can think of this as a specific kind
of employer organization that negotiates with unions.
The outcome of strategic decision of firms can be characterized by two
dimensions: First, employers can act individually or collectively. This means that
firms can either address the concerns of workers independently, or they can join a
formal employer association. Second, firms can choose to repress workers, or they
can collaborate with workers. Collaborating with workers is defined as recognizing
unions as a formal negotiating partner with attendant responsibilities in the wage-
setting process and establishment of basic working conditions. This set of strategies
characterizes different forms of inter-firm coordination, such as employer associations
that seek to crush or promote the role of organized labor, or choices by firms to pursue
these goals alone. The existing literature presumes that employer coordination is
mainly collective collaborative strategies, ignoring the fact that employer
organizations can also repress workers, or not be able to form such organizations, or
have no incentives to form them. These choices of firm strategies are characterized as
outcomes displayed in Table 2-1. In chapter 4 I discuss specifically a theory to
explain these outcomes.
Collective versus Individual Collaborative Strategies
Firms can collectively decide to collaborate with workers, displayed in the
lower right quadrant of Table 2-1. I term this a ―collective collaborative‖ strategy,
which is characterized by an employer association that recognizes and negotiates with
a counterpart union. This strategy is a formal term for the oft-studied ―corporatist‖ or
―class compromise‖ institutions, or modern coordinated market economies. The
29
features of such employer associations have been well-documented in the literature on
corporatist institutions and varieties of capitalism. Under this strategy, firms agree to
the rules of an employer association and recognize unions as a legitimate counterpart
in the administering and enforcing of rules that constrain both firm and worker
behavior. This kind of strategy is what is often assumed with current studies of the
origins of employer coordination.
The employer association can negotiate a variety of issues with unions.
Member firms (or member associations, if the employer association is a peak level
organization) must comply with the negotiated outcomes and institutional rules
enforced by the association. Issues of negotiation can include wages, working
conditions, insurance provision, training, and other worker concerns. Employer
associations that oversee peak or sector-level collective bargaining frameworks, such
as the modern BDA in Germany and the Swedish Employers‘ Federation (Svenska
arbetsgivareföreningen, SAF), are examples of collective collaborative strategies.
Examples from the literature on employer coordination in continental Europe also
focus on the major ―class compromises‖ such as the 1938 Swedish Saltsbajoden
Agreement between the and the SAF and the Swedish Trade Union Confederation
(Landsorganisationen, LO), and the 1899 ―September Agreement‖ in Denmark
(Galenson 1952; Swenson 2002; Martin and Swank 2008).
Under collaborative employer associations, firms and unions jointly administer
and enforce rules that subject member firms and workers. These rules can include
regularly scheduled collective-bargaining agreements, and measures to prevent and
settle industrial disputes like strikes and lockouts. Additional tasks of collaborative
30
employer organizations can vary, such as the provision of worker training, or
management of relations with relevant business lobbying associations. Overall,
collaborative employer associations and unions constitute the building blocks of the
―class compromise‖ and industrial relations institutions in coordinated-market
economies.
The enforcement of collectively negotiated wage agreements is an important
part of the collective collaborative strategy (unless otherwise noted, I use the terms
―collective collaborative strategy‖ and ―collaborative employer association‖
interchangeably). The association can enforce agreements regarding minimum wages,
maximum wages, or both. Modern post-war collective agreements often stipulate
both, but initial employer organizations at the sector level often focused on either a
wage floor or ceiling. As Swenson describes, firms might agree to set a minimum
wage to remove wages as a source of competition (2002). Some firms would agree to
this because other firms have a comparative advantage in producing goods at low
wages (this may come from being better at resisting workers‘ demands). If all firms
can abide by a strategy to pay below a certain wage, and that strategy is enforceable by
the organization, they would all be better off. Other kinds of policies that are
analogous to this issue include minimum working conditions.
A collective collaborative strategy might also entail an employer association in
which firms agree to set a maximum wage. In a model of wage bargaining,
Wallerstein and Moene (2003) argue that conditions of labor scarcity of labor,
particularly regarding workers with high skills, facilitate coordination to constrain
wages. Unions that prefer reducing equilibrium unemployment would consent to such
31
inter-firm coordination over wage ceilings (Wallerstein 1990). The ZAG in Germany
and SAF in Sweden in the 1930s and, discussed in chapters 6 and 8 respectively, are
examples of such strategies of wage compression. A key objective of an employer
association‘s wage ceiling is to prevent poaching of workers from firms; this
assumption guides recent research about the historical development of collaborative
employer associations. The consequences of the strategic dilemmas posed by
imposing wage floors and ceilings are fully explicated in the next chapter.
As displayed in the lower left quadrant of Table 2-1, firms might decide to
pursue a strategy of individual collaboration. They might decide to recognize a union
within a firm, but not join any organization that would obligate it to do and comply by
the organization‘s rules. This means they would not have to pay the cost of joining
any organization in terms of dues, obligations involved with compliance, and wage
premia above or below the designated collectively set wage. Still, the individual firm
would negotiate terms with a recognized counterpart union. The firm would have no
obligations to any associational rules.
Collective versus Individual Repressive Strategies
Firms can also choose to be highly coordinated to repress workers. I define
employer associations that seek to undermine unionism and prevent workers from
organizing as collective repressive strategies. This outcome is displayed in the upper
right quadrant of Table 2-1. These repressive organizations contrast with the
collaborative employer associations that recognize unions as bargaining counterparts.
Both collaborative and repressive organizations are collective strategies that firms can
pursue in response to demands of workers and unions. While both kinds of employer
32
organizations constrain member firms with rules regarding the treatment of workers,
they fundamentally differ in their view of the rights and responsibilities of organized
labor. 6
Such employer associations were prominent during the late nineteenth and
early twentieth century, and are an important part of industrial relations in many
developing economies.
What are the objectives of repressive employer organizations? Repressive
strategies are designed to reduce organizational capacities of workers. Firms in
repressive employer organizations coordinate to prevent or minimize union presence
and influence within individual firms and plants. They exist to prevent firms from
committing to agreements with unions that would impinge upon firms‘ flexibility in
setting wages. Other goals of such organizations can include the reduction of wages
and working conditions, and autonomy in management of the labor market.
Repressive employer associations provide services to help firms to prevent or
undermine union activity and preserve the employer‘s ―right to mange.‖7
What do repressive employer organizations do, and how do they function? As
with collaborative employer organizations, firms can pay membership dues and agree
to comply with the rules of the organization, in exchange for services that the
organization provides. Rules of the organization include constraints on member firms
from recognizing unions (though organizations can vary in the enforcement capacity
of such rules). These repressive associations can use similar institutional apparatus as
collaborative associations, but for different objectives. As with collaborative
6 Through the dissertation I use the terms ―collective repression‖ or ―repressive coordination‖
synonymously. 7 The term comes from the title of Harris‘ book, which discusses the history of attempts of firms to
preserve autonomy before World War II (Harris 1982)
33
institutions, the most common arrangement is for member firms to pay membership
dues into a central organizational fund. The organization has rules that constrain
member firms from recognizing or making unapproved agreements with or
concessions to unions. These repressive associations use similar ―institutional
apparatus‖ as collaborative associations, but for different ends. The organization has
rules that constrain member firms from recognizing or making unapproved agreements
with or concessions to unions. In return, member firms have access to funds,
strikebreakers, or replacement labor in the event of industrial conflict. The American
―open shop‖ movement during the early twentieth century and inter-war period, in
particular the National Metal Trades Association (NMTA) in the United States, and
the Central Office of German Employers‘ Associations (Hauptstelle deutscher
Arbeitgeberverbaend, HA) in Imperial Germany, are examples of a collective
repressive strategy.
The repressive collective strategy entails a number of instruments to achieve
their objectives. The repressive strategy can involve a number of different instruments
with different costs, but the prominent one has been the use of lockouts and
strikebreakers, with the effect of bleeding union funds and preventing further
unionization. A common one as discussed above is the use collective funds to support
firms when the organization decides to lock out workers in response to, or in
anticipation of, labor strikes. The use of this instrument had an important goal of
draining union funds and preventing further unionization. The employer association
could target unions and union treasuries, with the aim of compelling workers to
withdraw from unions or preventing them from joining. The lockouts can also be
34
targeted at firms or workers not involved in the initial industrial conflict to prevent
further unionization. Other instruments include the use of strikebreakers and
importation of substitute labor during labor industrial disputes; use of blacklists to
alert firms to employees‘ previous affiliations with unions or political organizations;
and lobbying the state for use of coercive personnel to enforce lockouts or repress
workers. More extreme instruments include collective agreement to infiltrate unions
and explicitly exclude union workers from employment. They can also include violent
tactics, such as physical repression of strikers and forced support of strikebreakers and
other forms of intimidation or coercion.
How would the collective repressive strategy of the lockout work? A common
example is that repressive employer associations would form to respond to or prevent
―whipsaw‖ strikes from unions. These are strikes where unions can collectively
isolate and target an individual firm and compel it to abide by union conditions. Such
conditions might be higher wages, improved working conditions, and union authority
over managerial decisions involving hiring and firing. Workers in the targeted firm or
locality can strike, and its workers can survive without wages based on support from
the collective union. If the firm is not part of an association and has difficulty finding
replacement labor (or if unions are capable of preventing such replacement workers
from appearing), than it would have to accede to demands made from the union in
order to survive. If unions target firms one by one (thus the ―whipsaw‖ analogy), then
they can impose on each individual firm union conditions. A collective repressive
strategy could prevent unions from imposing inter-firm union agreements by
responding to the union strategy with industry, region, or nation-wide lockouts. This
35
strategy of the ―punitive‖ lockout would drain union treasuries and prevent workers
from making demands or organizing.8 The repressive strategic lockout can include
targeting unions and union treasuries, with the aim of compelling workers to withdraw
from unions or preventing them from joining. The lockouts can also be targeted at
firms or workers not involved in the initial industrial conflict, or so-called ―innocent‖
third parties.
More extreme repressive strategies include infiltration of unions and explicit
exclusion of union workers from employment. They can also include violent tactics,
such as physical repression of strikers and forced support of strikebreakers and other
forms of intimidation or coercion. Existing comparative politics literature ignores
these kinds of strategies, despite their historical importance.
As with collaborative strategies, firms might decide to pursue such repressive
strategies individually. They can choose to repress workers without joining an
employer organization to do so. This might be because they do not want to be
obligated to follow the organization‘s rules in case of industrial conflict. This
outcome is depicted in the upper left quadrant of Table 2-1. Under this strategy, firms
can use many of the same instruments as an employer association would, including
lockouts, strikebreaking, importing substitute labor, lobbying for coercive measures,
and intimidation. However, they do not pay any membership dues to an organization.
The critical distinction regarding lockouts is that firms can still lock out workers but
play no role in the lockout decisions of other firms. Similarly, they do not receive any
external assistance from other firms. Firms would choose an individual-level strategy
8 See Swenson (2002)and Fitch (1924) for discussion of this function of employer organizations.
36
if the costs are lower; the costs of a collective strategy include the membership dues as
well as the obligation to participate in a collective lockout in the event of a labor
dispute that may not involve that particular firm. The specifics of the theory of
strategy choice are discussed below.
Section 2: Coding the Framework
In this section I address issues of coding the above firm strategies, and the
appropriate units of analysis. The more complex framework proposed Table 2-1
contrasts with existing views which only classify firm strategies as either collectively
collaborative or not collaborative. The proposed framework incorporates the choice of
firms to organize to work against unions, and highlights the fact that firms or sectors
with differing abilities to repress workers may not be able to collaborate with each
other. Both the collective collaborative and collective repressive strategies include
employer organizations that seek to constrain firms‘ freedoms to deal with workers.
But, they differ fundamentally in their view of how firms should treat their workers.
The theoretical framework also considers the possibility that firms may act
collectively or individually. Firms may prefer, not to, or not be able to, form
organizations as a strategy. This broader coding of business coordination is important
for several reasons. The oft-cited examples in contemporary Western Europe in fact
constitute only a portion (albeit an incredibly important one) of the possible strategy
and coordination space. The early twentieth century as well as the post-war era has
had employer institutions that varied widely in the sectors they encompassed and their
stances on recognizing and policing agreements with unions. As Table 2-1 also
displays, to differentiate countries simply along the dimension of ―high‖ and ―low‖
37
business coordination (as is common practice in current studies) comes at the expense
of obscuring qualitatively different kinds of employer coordination.9 Further, this
framework can be extended to current middle-income or developing economies.
How should these outcomes of different firm strategies be conceptualized
temporally? A more practical and historically accurate approach is to consider what
the most important firm strategy was for a country-time period. This is because with a
few exceptions, as the empirical chapters demonstrate, there was relatively little
annual fluctuation in the levels of firm coordination. Ultimately we should be
interested in the most substantive qualitative changes in industrial relations
institutions, which occur over longer periods of time. The theoretical task then is to
account for these major changes in firm strategies.
The typology allows one to map temporal changes in business coordination—
one can better measure what it means when business in a polity becomes ―more
coordinated‖ over time, because firms can move to one part of the coordination space
to another. As Table 2-2 illustrates (and is discussed in the empirical sections), the
United States transitioned from a collective repressive equilibrium to a liberal-market
one, in which employer organizations play a minimal role in industrial relations.
Japan transitioned from a repressive equilibrium to a more collaborative one where
industry and national-level employer associations cooperate with enterprise unions.
Germany and Sweden also transitioned from a repressive regime to a much more
9 The scale measures three indicators of degree of employer organization: scope of employers‘
organization (share of employers organized in one or coordinated multiple peak national association);
centralization of power of employer organizations and unions; and integration of national peak
associations into national policymaking forums. Each score sums on a 1-3 index; the sum of these
indicators is the degree of employer organization (so the index runs 1-9). They do this for 1900, 1914,
1925, and 1938 for 16 states.
38
collaborative one; as is discussed in Chapter 6, the second half of the Weimar republic
saw repressive employer associations try to undo collaborative institutions.
Repressive institutions continue to flourish, particularly in developing societies, and
accounting for their emergence is necessary for understanding how the beneficial
collaborative equilibrium in some states emerged.
Of course, within each country time period variation exists at the sub-national
level in terms of the strategies firms pursued. Firms in different sectors may pursue
different strategies (some sectors may have employer associations; others can have
firms acting individually). Firms within a sector may pursue different strategies; for
example, some firms in a sector can form an employer association while others choose
not to join it. And across countries, some sector-level organizations can form inter-
sector or peak-level employer associations that could be repressive or collaborative.
We can think of one of the four main outcomes as the strategy pursued by the
modal large firm in a country. We can code what strategy that firm adopts in a
particular year, or time period. We can then place that modal strategy and time-period
into one of the four stylized categories in Table 2-2. This rule is clear and
advantageous because it captures firm strategies that are affecting a plurality of a
country‘s workers. We should want to code firm strategies in a way that captures the
most important firm activity in labor markets. Table 2-2 presents examples of how
specific country time-periods fit in this new framework; the examples in the table are
discussed in the empirical chapters. This coding scheme allows us to map more
specific changes in firm strategies over time as well. In the subsequent empirical
chapters that test the validity of the new coding scheme and theoretical explanation, I
39
use detailed historical documentation of the actual strategies to justify the
characterization of each country time-period.
Substantively, the outcome of interest is the formation of employer
associations in major industrial sectors, and whether they collaborate with or repress
workers. A country can be characterized by a firm strategy that is collective repressive
even if it does not have an inter-sector or peak-level employer organization that
represses workers. For example, if a country has a series of sector-level employer
associations that each pursue a repressive strategy, then by definition the modal
strategy is collective repressive (but it exists only at the sector or regional level). This
might be because the state shares the costs of repression (see the theoretical and
empirical discussion in the rest of the text). This logic applies analogously to
collaborative employer associations. As the empirical section demonstrates, much of
the substantive outcomes of interest involve major sector-level employer associations
deciding to switch strategies or solidify them by coordinate with other sector
associations. The most interesting variation cross-nationally and over time,
particularly before WWII, are the major industrial institutions that characterize
whether firms have engaged in a strategy of ―class war‖ and whether they can pursue
such a strategy collectively.
It is important to note that just because an economy has some sectors that do
recognize workers, it does not necessarily follow that the modal strategy is collective
collaborative; if the economy has major sectors that still repress workers, we would
code it as a repressive strategy. Conversely, many collective strategies in states take
the form of agreements among industrial sectors (and by extension, among firms in
40
those sectors). To explain this inter-sector outcome, we need to account for the fact
that some firms can collectively act to form sector-level associations, while others
firms cannot form such associations. I argue that the ultimate national-level outcomes
are the result of failures or success of sectors to bargain with each other. In some
cases, outcomes are the result because one set of firms is unable to collectively act and
form a faction, giving other firms that have collectively acted an advantage in
attaining their preferences. I return to this coding point when discussing the theoretical
predictions.
The coding rule I present does suffer from some deficiencies shared by other
existing coding schemes. The main problem is that the blunt coding rules ignores to
some extent heterogeneity within an economy, in that it reduces each country-time
period to one ―modal firm strategy,‖ which, as discussed below, I argue constitutes on
form of institutional equilibrium. As discussed above, multiple sectors in an economy
could be pursuing different strategies. Even within one industry, firm strategies could
differ. For example, large firms in a raw-materials industry may find it easier to
repress workers, whereas firms in highly skilled manufacturing industries in the same
economy could engage in collaborative strategies. Coding the country time period as
one out of four possible strategies in Table 2-1potentially neglects other strategies
enacted at the sector level. Moreover, coding the modal firm strategy will involve
some qualitative judgment if data are not easily available. However, the modal firm
strategy, classified as one of the four, is still informative about the general state of
industrial relations in a state. In the next chapter, I elaborate on how each of the four
categories of firm strategies can arise as a consequence of different strategies pursued
41
between industrial sectors. The theoretical mechanisms posited can partially deal with
the problem of coding a singular ―national-level‖ firm strategy in heterogeneous
economies.
Section 3: Distinguishing Firm Strategies, Labor Strategies, and Industrial Outcomes
The above characterization of the dependent variable focuses on the actions or
strategies of firms, and characterizes such collective strategies an industrial institution
which can be repressive or collaborative. I do so to allow for parsimonious and easy
coding of country time-periods as described above. Of course, though, the existence
of such strategies cannot be studied independently of the strategies of workers, the
state, and the actual implied outcomes of such strategies. I deal with these concerns
more fully when I describe the theory for variation in firm strategies, but in this sub-
section I address how labor strategies and actual industrial outcomes fit into the
proposed coding framework.
Labor strategies and equilibrium outcomes
We can characterize the outcomes as equilibrium labor market and equilibrium
institutional outcomes. The guiding assumption of the above is that firms are
choosing strategies in response to workers‘ demands; the nature of those demands is
fully explicated below in the next chapter. Each outcome of firm strategy choice
entails a counterpart action on the part of workers. Workers, anticipating the firm
strategies pursue set of strategies that are the ―counterpart‖ to those described in Table
2-1. Consider first the outcomes of firm strategies to pursue objectives individually.
If the modal strategy of firms is at the individual level, then by construction workers
are not organized in encompassing unions as well; there may be sector or firm-level
42
unions, but negotiations between firms and workers are done without an institutional
framework of an association. Now consider the group of collective strategies. Under
a collective repressive strategy, there may be a counterpart union that is organized or
is trying to organize that the employer association is acting against. Under a collective
collaborative strategy, by extension there is a counterpart organized union that
obligates workers by the similar guidelines as firms. The goal of the theory then is to
predict a set of different equilibrium outcomes that characterize industrial relations,
wherein firms and unions are engaged in ―best reply‖ strategies. In chapter 3 I
describe the underlying variables that explain the resulting matrix of such strategies in
a polity.
Relation to industrial outcomes
The outcomes in Table 2-1 describe the different of industrial institutions we
are likely to observe. However, these strategies and institutions are distinct from other
measurable outcomes such as degree of industrial conflict. The choice of firm
strategies displayed in Table 2-1 does not necessarily imply that those strategies are
successful from the firms‘ perspective. As the theoretical section below clarifies,
firms choose based on relative net benefits of each strategy. Thus, choice of a
particular strategy does not necessarily mean we observe the ideal outcome of that
strategy. As a result, the actual observed industrial outcomes—such as degree of wage
equality or industrial conflict—can differ from the observed choice of firm strategy.
As an example of this divergence between strategy choice and industrial
outcome, the choice of firms to engage in collective repression does not necessarily
mean they will be successful in crushing of the unions. The only observable outcome
43
is the existence of an association that pursues such a strategy. Unions can still be
organized or try to organize against a repressive employer association: the result is a
form of familiar class conflict. Alternatively, repressive collective strategies can be
successful, and we can observe reduced union density and the success of such
organizations. Another example of divergence between strategy choice and observed
outcomes is that industrial conflict in the form of actual strikes and lockouts, or violent
activity, can occur in an economy if a firm chooses repressive individual or repressive
collective strategy.10
Repressive strategies and elite coordination
The above distinctions are also important because the distinction between
repressive and collaborative strategies of firms also informs a growing literature in
comparative politics that examines conditions under which democratization occurs and
when democracy is sustainable (Boix 2003; Acemoglu and Robinson 2006). One of
the claims of the literature is that structural conditions—predominantly initial
inequality in wealth—creates incentives for elites to either repress or redistribute via
extension of democratic (franchise) rights to the poor. The incentives to redistribute
exist because elites want to prevent a revolution which would be costlier to them then
democracy. In Boix‘s account, higher initial inequality coupled with lower asset
mobility gives elites a larger incentive to engage in repressive strategies.
Missing from these accounts of inequality and democratization is a discussion
of the role that firms and other important elites played in retaining status quo
institutions. Importantly, the mechanisms they posit regarding establishment of
10
An analogous example of this divergence is in the study of international relations. Theories can
predict decisions to go to war or not, without necessarily predicting the victor, or number of casualties.
44
democratic institutions relates to strategy choice of firms regarding treatment of
workers. Firms and their respective business organizations played an important role in
repressing workers directly or in lobbying the government to do so. The availability
of repressive strategies to firms—either individually or collectively—is an important
aspect of variation that current scholars of both contemporary industrial relations and
historical causes and consequences of ―varieties of capitalism‖ have ignored.
One of the implications of the models about incentives for elites to
democratize is that firm owners might face similar incentives to grant labor rights to
workers. These models are attentive to the collective action problem faced by the poor
(or by workers). They assume first that industrialists are inherently pro-labor (with
very different preferences from large landholders, for example). Second, they assume
that the industrialists and other elites are capable of collectively acting. Both
assumptions are problematic. As the preceding discussion shows, collective action
among elites—specifically important firms—varies greatly as well. In this recent
influential framework for understanding democratization and inequality, problems of
collective action of elites and firms are ignored. By contrast, scholars of varieties of
capitalism and the historical origins of economic institutions have ignored the
existence of repressive strategies. The conceptualization of firm strategies presented
here addresses both kinds of outcomes and addresses these omissions. In the
following chapter, I turn to the task of explicating a theory that can help explain this
richer set of outcomes and changes in industrial outcomes in countries over time.
45
Table 2-1: Classifying Strategies of Firms at the National Level
Individual Collective
Repressive Firm represses
workers
Organization that
represses workers
Collaborative Firm recognizes
union
Collective bargaining
agreements
Table 2-2: Historical Examples of Firm Strategies
Individual Collective
Repressive United States,
1880-1914; 1973 –
United States,
1918-1929
Germany,
1895-1914
Collaborative United States,
1950-1973
Germany, 1918-1924,
Germany, 1948 –
United States, 1935-
1950
46
Chapter 3: A Theory of Firm Strategies
In this chapter I outline a new theory of firm strategies that can explain cross-
national and temporal variation in the choice of firm strategies displayed in Table 2-2.
As the new coding of the outcome variable in Table 2-2 implies, the existing accounts
of variation in industrial regimes underemphasize two historical and strategic
dilemmas which form the basis of my alternative theory. First, they underemphasize
the redistributive threats posed by unions and workers‘ parties to firms in the early
twentieth century and inter-war period, and how such threats relate to repressive
actions of firms. Second, the existing accounts do not theorize about the dilemmas of
collective action that faced nascent employer organizations at the sector and inter-
sector level. Specifically, there was heterogeneity of interests among firms and
sectors that affected the viability of long-term collective action among firms. As
subsequent chapters demonstrate, the evidence on the development of the largest
employer organizations, and institutions of economic coordination between firms and
workers, is more consistent with this proposed theory.
In this chapter I present a theory that addresses these flaws and that can
account for the variation described above. The first section describes two key
variables that affected decisions of firms to form different kinds of employer
organizations and gives predictions based on levels of those variables. Sections two
and three discuss the most important mechanisms linking the changes in the variables
to changes firm strategies. These sections also address concerns about endogeneity
and conditions under which the theory holds. Section four contrasts the theory with
existing approaches to employer coordination.
47
Section 1: Main Explanation and Summary of Predictions
In examining the decisions of firms in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
century across most democracies in that period, the most important considerations
were about the responses to the threats posed by socialist or labor-supported parties
and growing unions that had made varying demands regarding managerial control in
the workplace, working conditions, wage schedules, and in some cases, changes to the
social order. Firms and business organizations faced varying uncertainty and
magnitudes of threats from workers, as well as the degree of economic and political
mobilization of workers. Firms confronted the questions: should they battle against or
cooperate with workers? Should individual firms band to do so. If they agreed to
collectively act, or to bargain with unions, what would make either agreement self-
enforcing? This set of dilemmas much more cogently captures the formation and
dynamics of initial employer organizations and industrial institutions.
Two key variables account for the variation in firm strategies cross-nationally
and temporally. The first is the redistributive threat to firms posed by workers. This
is characterized by the amount of expropriation that workers‘ organizations (unions
and political parties) sought. The threat to firms posed by workers affects the
incentives of firms to pursue collaborative or repressive strategies. This threat
captures the costs of repression that firms would need to undertake in response to
demands from workers, to reduce that threat. The second variable is industrial
heterogeneity which captures the mechanism of ease of collective action among firms.
This structural variable affects incentives of firms to act collectively or individually.
48
Table 3-1displays the predictions of this theory based on low and high levels of
the two main independent variables. I first preview the predictions of the theory, and
then describe the logic of each prediction. It is important to note that of course these
outcomes are probabilistic—we are interested in outcomes that are most likely, given
changes to the independent variables. Consider first the upper right cell. If industrial
heterogeneity is high and the threat posed by workers‘ parties is low, firms are more
likely to pursue an individualized repressive strategy. Given the same low level of
labor threat, lower heterogeneity allows for easier enforcement of agreements among
firms in different industrial sectors. This will make collective repressive strategies
more likely (the outcome displayed in upper left cell).
If industrial heterogeneity is low, and if the threat to firms posed by political
threat of labor is low, firms have less of an incentive to collaborate with workers. At
the lowest levels of these variables, industry-specific structural variables (such as
industrial concentration within a sector) will have the greatest role in determining
whether firms engage in individual or collective strategies against workers.
But, if the threat from workers increases to moderate levels (and if
heterogeneity remains low), firms will have a greater incentive to resisting worker
demands by forming collective and repressive organizations. When the threat from
workers becomes high, though, firms have incentives to pursue a strategy of inter-
class collaboration (the bottom left cell). Under conditions of higher industrial
heterogeneity, collective action is more difficult; as a result, individual firm strategies
of collaboration with workers would be more likely (the lower right cell). This theory
can explain much of the cross-national and historical variation in the industrial
49
institutions and strategies of firms. It explains why in some country time-periods
individual firms or sectors act without a collective organization, while in others
industrial relations are characterized by an inter-sector, cross-class agreement. As I
illustrate in the empirical chapters, the transitions from these initial equilibria better
capture the important events and patterns in industrial relations throughout the late
nineteenth and early twentieth century.
At historical junctures where workers mobilized, firms faced higher costs of
expropriation and higher costs of repression; as a result, they had incentives to switch
strategies and engage in collaborative agreements with workers. In some instances
such agreements pre-empted intervention from the state or further radicalism from
workers. This explains the timing of key industrial agreements and why they were
cooperative with workers. In economies with lower industrial heterogeneity, prevalent
in many small European states, collective action was easier. But even in these states,
the initial strategies pursued by firms against demands from workers were repressive.
The threats posed by workers‘ parties and the fears of social revolution, both when
labor parties began contesting elections and their increased influence after WWI,
induced adoption of more collaborative strategies. By contrast, in country-time
periods where such threats were much lower, firms preferred to adopt individual or
collective strategies of repression. The main insights to the theory involve the
response of firms to the potential distributional threat posed by the politicization and
mobilization of workers, and the enforceability of any collective response of firms to
the threat.
This parsimonious explanation accounts for a wide range of temporal and
50
cross-national variation in strategies pursued by employers. It explains why American
employers have established antagonistic institutions that repressed workers. The
theory also accounts for change in the political strategies of German firms, from a
strong collective and repressive stance against organized labor to a willingness to
recognize unions. Additionally, the theory predicts when we would be more likely to
observe collective strategies at the national level as a consequence of bargains
between different factions of capital, and when we should observe strategies that
emerge because one faction can imposes its preferences.
There are three contributions of this theory over existing explanations. First, it
specifies conditions under which firms repress workers and undermine labor
organizations. Second, it specifies when firms decide and are able to act collectively
to achieve labor-market goals. Firms might prefer to act collectively to either repress
or cooperate with workers, but be unable to do so. Third, the theory incorporates the
role of the state more directly by integrating the costs of repression—it demonstrates
how firm strategies relate to the actions of the state, and can be designed to influence
state activity.11
Section 2: Mechanisms of the Threat from the Left and Endogeneity
I now turn to a fuller explication of each of the independent variables and
describe the most important mechanisms and observable implications of the theory.
While there are many reasons why the threat to firms posed by workers and the degree
of industrial heterogeneity would affect firm strategies at the sector and country level,
I focus on the most important mechanisms that link the two variables to decisions of
11
In particular, the state and firms can share the costs of repression.
51
firms. I focus on the costs of repression, which affects choice of repressive strategies,
and difficulties in enforcing agreements, which affects collective strategies.
The threat from the left and the level of cost of repression
The threat posed by workers affects the choice of collaborative or repressive
strategies through the mechanism of the level of the cost of repression. I argue that
firms must incur some cost for repressing these workers. This can be thought of as
lost capital stock, lobbying the state for intervention, or reduced profit stream from
expending resources to repress workers.12
Substantively important examples of those
costs include costs of administering and forgone profit from lockouts, use of
strikebreakers, and search costs for substitute (and possibly lower quality) labor during
industrial conflict. If the threat posed by workers remains low, firms prefer to repress
workers. If the threat posed by them increases, and costs of repression increase, at
some threshold firms will prefer to pursue collaborative strategies with workers.
These collaborative strategies meant formal agreements with unions. Rather
than bear higher costs of repression as well as the probability of higher conflict with
workers, firms in some countries chose a moderate strategy of accommodation. This
strategic logic best explains the ―class compromises‖ that emerged before WWII. This
mechanism also implies that some employer associations collaborated with moderate
unions and their political parties against radical workers, but also against radical firms
that still pushed for repression; this element of collaborative strategies is discussed
below.
12
Boix (2006) models repression as a parameter ρ ; firms‘ profits are after it has paid out wages and
beared this cost. Acemoglu and Robinson (1986; Acemoglu and Robinson 2006) model the costs of
elite repression as lost capital stock K or loss output from conflict.
52
What was the threat to firms posed by unions and workers‘ parties? The threat
posed by workers can be decomposed into a union wage threat posed by workers and
taxation threat posed by a workers‘ party. Direct strategies of redistribution included
imposing costs on firms through strikes, and making demands regarding wages,
working conditions, and policies. As discussed in the previous section, unions could
target individual firms and impose costs.13
An important aspect of this ―threat from
the left‖ was strikes that could threaten the industrial order. The discussions of the
initial unions spanning geographical or industrial boundaries, as well as those of the
early left-wing political tacticians, are replete with contemplation of mass versus local
strikes, and the most effective means of securing working conditions and wages for
workers. During the late nineteenth and early twentieth century as well as during the
inter-war period, the use and threat of strikes were a way to extract concessions. This
forced firms to confront the two dimensions of action: collective versus individual
action and repression versus collaboration. Even though some social democratic or
labor party leaders thought that mass strikes would not necessarily lead to revolution,
and of course much disagreement existed within leaders of unions and left-wing
parties as to which tactics would best achieve goals of redistribution, firms reacted to
the threat posed by such strikes.14
13
Kennan (1989) provides an overview on the costs of strikes to firms to unions. In a model by
Wallerstein (1991), this parameter of repression costs is taken as exogenous. He models profits during a
strike as S = S(µ, x); the key parameter is x, which is a vector representing all factors besides
unionization that affects profits during a strike, such as ―level offered by an employers' association, the
likely reaction of the government, legislation covering industrial conflict, etc‖ (Wallerstein 1989), 123).
This section more explicitly theorizes about the sources of variation in x and links it to individual firm
strategies. 14
Rosa Luxembourg in fact had observed industrial unrest in Belgium and concluded that a mass strike
(or threat of such a strike) would not work to bring about socialist revolution in Germany. She reached
this conclusion based on dispersion of industrial centers, and the lack of immediate threat that such a
53
The debates among the German SPD leaders in the early twentieth century are
indicative of the threat posed by unions and labor parties to firms, as well as the
strategic decisions that unions faced. Regarding the crippling strikes in Belgium in the
early 1900s, Rosa Luxemburg noted the proximity of Belgian industrial centers to one
another as a factor that would increase the chances of success for a mass strike.
Luxemburg thought that that strikes would be most effective in geographically
concentrated states, but that Germany had too much distance among its industrial
centers for a mass strike to be successful.15
Rudolf Hilferding countered that the threat
of a mass strike could be used to fight for universal suffrage. Even the more
conservative party leaders like Eduard Bernstein ―advocated consideration of the mass
strike to defend or acquire universal, equal suffrage.‖16
Similar kinds of debate about
the viability of mass strikes and actions of unions to bring about redistribution or
revolution existed of course in other states.
In response to varying levels of demands from workers, if the firm wants to
individually repress workers, its profits Π are what is left over after it pays wages of
workers and bears the costs of repression.17
Let this cost of repression for each firm
be ρ. The higher the cost the firm bears to repress workers, the lower wages it will
have to pay. But, of course such costs of repression detract from the firm‘s total
profit. If the firm wants to individually repress workers, its profits Π are what is left
strike would pose to political authorities in the center. But, the mass strike was still debated in 1912
and again after World War I (Schorske 1955). 15
See Schorske 1955, 34, excerpted from Luxemburg, Werke, 3, 356-357. 16
These discussions are from the SPD publication, the Neue Zeit 22 (1), 137-141. Of course unions
and workers‘ parties are strategic actors as well, and can have different preferences about the amount of
redistribution they seek. The implications of this are discussed in the next section. 17
This notation is meant to be consistent with Boix (2003). Acemoglu and Robinson (2006) model the
cost of repression as some loss of capital stock K. The cost can be normalized as a cost per worker, for
purposes of simplicity I ignore such notation. Formally, let the firm‘s profit be Π = r – w(l) - ρ
54
over after it pays wages of workers w, and bears the costs of repression. Costs of
repression can include a range of activities, including funds for internal strikebreaking
or monitoring union activity. If a firm expends a higher cost to repress workers, it will
get to pay lower wage to workers. But, of course such costs of repression detract from
the firm‘s total profit. For example, large firms like US Steel in the late eighteenth
century and Krupp in Germany in the early twentieth (among many other large
manufacturing firms) simply dismissed workers if they attempted any inter-plant
unionization. If the firm individually collaborates with workers, they pay a higher
wage to workers, but do not pay costs of repression. If the costs of repression fall,
then firms have a greater incentive to switch from collaborative to repressive
strategies. The problem for individual firms in this scenario is straightforward: once ρ
< w, there is an incentive for firms to individually repress.18
Clarifying the redistributive threat and workers’ strategies
Before I turn to the mechanisms that link heterogeneity to collective strategies,
I address concerns about endogeneity and clarifying elements of the independent
variables. In particular, how do we know that the proposed causality and sequencing
of actions runs between the redistributive threat posed by workers and left-wing
parties to firm strategies, and not the other way around? This theory takes as
exogenous the redistributive threat and the structural conditions affecting enforcement
among firms. But repressive strategies were designed to inhibit worker organization
18
Larger firms should have a comparative advantage with lower costs of repression (per worker); it
should be easier for them to inhibit union organization as they may have higher initial funds and
capacity for internal strikebreaking or monitoring union activity; this lower cost of repression. Small
firms by contrast would have to expend a lot, and therefore could find it less costly to accede to some
union demands; or, they may simply be unable to bear any costs.
55
and respond to and prevent the emergence of such threats, and so firms may have
engaged in such strategies to pre-empt such threats, as discussed above. A fuller
version of the theory would have to account for a dynamic process in which firms and
workers engage in multi-period responses to each other‘s actions. As Chapter 2
describes, though, within a certain time period, the modal firm strategy can be
characterized as one of those from Table 2-1.
To address these concerns I describe the set of strategies that allows for the
outcomes to be considered equilibrium firm and worker strategies in Table 2-1. I
focus on the strategy set of workers needed to defend the assumptions to obtain the
predictions in Table 3-1. In particular, I focus on the strategic problem of workers‘
organizations in deciding how much of a redistributive threat to pose. I argue that
workers can choose a moderate degree of redistributive threat that would still produce
a repressive (collective or individual) response from firms, but ex ante the expected
value of that outcome could still be preferable to choosing a high redistributive threat
to try and impose on firms. Recall from section 2 in the description of the outcome
variable, that outcomes such as repression do not necessarily imply complete success
of such repression (such as complete victory in class war or complete submission of
workers); it is only that firms prefer such strategies to collaboration.
Strategies of workers
In order for the theoretical predictions in section 1 to be coherent, some
discussion of workers‘ incentives in making demands for redistribution is warranted. I
theorize that workers can choose different levels of redistributive threats to pose. In
order for a pronounced amount of redistribution or policy goal such as implementation
56
of a socialist program to be more than a minimal threat, workers must have some cost
to bear in demanding redistribution, and workers can choose this level. This cost can
also signal the resolve of workers to attain their redistributive demands.19
An
important example of this cost that workers bear would be the choice to participate in
local, sector, or national-level strikes that can be supported by other unions and
nascent workers‘ parties. This explains why workers would not be able to pose a
credible threat to firms at all times, as workers must pay the costs for an increased
threat.
The discussions within the German SPD about the utility and costs of a mass
strike noted above, which divided leadership among unions and within the party
between 1905 and 1912, are illustrative about the costs workers bear in posing a
redistributive threat to firms. In some cases, the willingness to bear such costs might
be because of extreme political orientations from workers, whose demands could
include total expropriation of firms and worker cooperatives in the place of private
ownership. These unions could have syndicalist, communist, or variants of socialist
demands. Such radical unions existed in some mining sectors in France, and
dockworkers and some manufacturing sectors in Germany before WWI and in the
immediate post-WWI period. But in other cases it could be due to highly skilled
workers seeking more control over local labor supply, training, and wages—higher
infringements into managerial autonomy then firms desire. This is characterized for
example by the Swedish construction industry in the late 1800s and early 1900s and in
the craft-based US manufacturing industries. As discussed more in the empirical
19
As the industrial relations literature in economics discusses, workers can signal resolve by bearing
costs. See the discussion of models by Kennan (1986) and Ashenfelter and Johnson (1969).
57
evidence from the US Open Shop period, craft-based unions, in particular the
International Molders Union (IMU), and affiliate unions of the American Federation
of Labor (AFL), triggered a series of industrial conflicts with member firms of the
NMTA and NEA due to conflict over compliance with rules about wages and control
over apprenticeships (Harris 2000; Fine 1995). These were higher skilled workers
participating in an intense class war (by American standards) with firms. This last
example is the classical kind of class conflict described by Korpi and standard
descriptive histories of local employer associations (Leckebusch 1966; Korpi 1978).
In order for the theoretical predictions to hold, the outcomes for workers under
each set of firm strategies displayed in Table 2-1 have to be preferable to some other
set of strategies that workers could choose which might induce a different response
from firms. In other words, as described above, the theory needs to predict outcomes
that are indeed workers‘ and firms‘ best responses (Przeworski and Wallerstein 1982).
For example, if firms choose either individual or collective repression as a strategy, in
response to worker demands, the outcome for workers must be preferable for them
than the outcome had they not made such demands. Analogously, if firms choose to
collaborate with workers, the outcome implies that workers agreed to this set of
institutions and preferred it to some other outcome (such as imposing a higher degree
of taxation on firms, without such institutions, or outright ownership). As discussed
below, each of the outcomes represents an equilibrium set of strategies pursued by
firms and workers.
I describe the theory symmetrically from the workers‘ perspective. The key to
this aspect of the theory is that firm strategies have a limited impact on the level of
58
redistributive threat that workers ―choose‖ to pose. Workers can make high demands
(where they bear higher costs for redistribution) or low to moderate demands (where
they bear lower costs of redistribution). High threat demands are those that involve
bearing some costs, such as a major strike. That is, making demands without
imposing a cost is not very credible (demanding higher redistribution in a party
platform, for example). In effect, then, workers are choosing how much costs to bear
and impose on firms, to induce a set of firm strategies.
Workers do not know with certainty ex ante what level of threat of
redistribution—what costs they would bear—would induce firms to engage in
collaborative strategies. If workers make high demands for redistribution and bear the
high costs of doing so, that means the cost of repression for firms is too high and
collaboration with workers is preferred. The result is collaboration, though this might
occur after some protracted conflict. Again, only sufficiently high demands from
workers can induce such collaboration, though workers do not know that ex ante.
But because workers do not know what level of threat will induce collaborative
strategies from firms, if workers make insufficiently large demands for redistribution
and bear those costs of those threats, firms may respond with repression as long as it is
less costly on their end (as long as ρ<w). The resulting outcome results in a large loss
for workers, which is exacerbated by the fact that workers made a larger claim for
redistribution and additionally failed to induce a shift in firm strategies. The fact that,
conditional on not inducing firms to switch to collaborative strategies, workers that
threaten more and fail end up losing more than if they had threatened less and failed,
explains why workers may ex ante choose lower threats of redistribution. From the
59
firms‘ perspective, such moderate workers‘ demands mean firms have less to lose if
they do not repress, but repressing is still less costly for firms than acceding to such
demands.
Finally, if workers make small demands (presenting a lower threat for
redistribution and incurring themselves limited costs), the cost to repression for firms
is lower. Under this scenario, workers suffer from repression, but the expected loss if
they had demanded more and suffered more costs of repression is greater; thus,
workers could choose a lower threat in terms of redistribution.
This logic helps explain why the assumption that firm strategies respond to the
threat from workers is defensible, and addresses the question of why workers would
not pursue a strategy such as mass strikes more often. This is because such a
strategy—posing a credible threat of redistribution—is costly for workers and entails a
gamble that bearing such costs will be sufficient to induce firms to engage in
collaboration. The strategy is worth it if workers can force collaboration. If they
cannot force collaboration, then the more extreme the demand is, the worse
consequences they suffer from firm repression. For workers, suffering these costs of
repression would be preferable to bearing the costs in demanding more redistribution
and failing. Because they cannot be sure that bearing the costs of demands for
redistribution would result in collaboration, for some workers, moderating demands is
preferable. This assumption is consistent with the historical pattern of a general
monotonic increase from very low degrees of worker mobilization and demands for
improved working conditions, to moderate levels and calls for more state protections
of working conditions and higher wages. It is at this point where firms have
60
historically engaged in repression. Generally, workers and labor parties increased
their efforts at organization and electoral contestation, even in the face of repressive
strategies from firms and the state.
Empirically, this assumption is partially confirmed by the noted ―lag‖ between
unionization and the employer response to such threats. The exogenous shifts in the
threat posed by workers‘ parties and worker mobilization, as well as changes in
structural conditions, are more consequential than the dynamic effect that firm
strategies have. The sudden intervention of the state before and after both World Wars
suggests that parameters changed suddenly, inducing radical changes in firm
strategies. The return of working soldiers in Germany after WWI, for example, posed
a much higher cost of repression for firms. Additionally, state imposed wage
agreements during the war suddenly became less enforced, giving firms who had pre-
existing incentives to defect the opportunity to do so. Naturally, future research
designs, beyond the scope of this dissertation, should orient themselves toward a more
rigorous identification strategy to isolate causal effects of the independent variables
posited here.
Section 3: Industrial Heterogeneity, Variance in Cost of Repression, and Costs of
Enforceability.
I now turn to the mechanism linking structural conditions of heterogeneity to
collective responses. The variable of industrial heterogeneity affects the outcome of
whether strategies are individual or collective through the mechanism of enforceability
of agreements among firms. In particular, higher heterogeneity means there is higher
variance in the costs of repression and costs of enforcement ρ among firms and
61
sectors, making it less likely that sectors will collectively act.20
Consider an economy
with a distribution of costs to repression across different industries. If there is a
lower/higher variance in the costs of repression ρ within the economy (due to
lower/higher economic heterogeneity across sectors), both firms and sector-level
associations will be more/less likely to share preferences to collectively act, and the
costs of sanctioning or deterring potential defectors from any agreement would be
lower/higher. Similarly, whether such organizations occur at the sector level depends
on heterogeneity within the sector. Lower heterogeneity increases the likelihood of
collective action and the formation of employer organizations. This mechanism of
enforceability affects whether employer associations—collaborative or repressive—
remain viable. Heterogeneity then predicts the difficulty of enforcing agreements
among firms and the difficulty of inter-sector cooperation.21
To make the theory tractable I assume that ρ characterizes the individual cost
of repression pays, the share of the total collective repressive strategy P, as well as the
individual cost to the firm of enforcing a collective collaborative strategy. Consider
the cost side of this collective repressive strategy. Firms have to contribute some
20
For tractability of the theory, I let ρ row refer to both the costs of repression, and for an individual
firm, the individual cost of a firm to participate in enforcing in collective collaborative strategy. 21
Other structural factors within an industry affect whether collective action in the form of an
employer association for firms within a sector is possible. Much of the literature in the field of
industrial organization argues that industrial concentration within a sector should affect the probability
of cooperation within a sector. The proliferation of sector-level associations is evidence that more
homogeneous firms within a sector (increasing substitutability of products and similarity in firm sizes)
are most likely to form associations. This is consistent with the exhaustive literature of cartel
formation. Empirically, most initial employer associations (as well as trade associations) are formed at
the sector level (often within a sub-national, such as regional or city-level unit). Organizations of firms
that have product homogeneity (in fact, the same product) have been historically more likely to form.
(The classical literature on firm theory also predicts that firms that produce goods that are perfect
complements have incentives to merge or vertically integrate). An alternative argument is that in
industries with high levels of HHI, costs of collective action should be lower. The largest firm is more
willing to bear costs of collective action to provide the public good for all firms, and maximize profits.
See McCaffree (1962) for discussion of this point.
62
portion of the total cost P required to set up a central association that can repress
workers. Part of this cost is simply annual dues (based on number of workers or
production). These dues allow the association to use a wider range of instruments of
repression than the firm can individually. In fact, some of the instruments—such as
targeting third parties and providing strikebreakers—may not be possible for
individual firms to pursue. In return, firms obtain a benefit of getting to pay lower
wages to workers. If each firm contributes enough portion of the total cost ρ, the net
effect of lower wages means a collective strategy is preferable. This cost ρ also
includes the costs required to set up the employer association‘s monitoring and
enforcement apparatus. For some firms, the individual cost of ρ is analogous to an
insurance premium, in the event of industrial conflict.
However, another component of ρ is that membership in the association
obligates a firm to participate in a lockout or industrial conflict even if the firm is not
experiencing higher wage demands from workers. The firm must bear foregone
profits from work stoppages due to industrial conflict. For firms that are not facing
problems from workers demanding higher wages, this of course can be viewed as
unfairly costly. This is the power of the collective strategy: by punishing workers who
have not made demands, the association creates internal pressure within unions and
pressure from other workers for unions to end the strike. Funds from the employer
association can support firms who engage in the lockout. Without an employer
association, an individual firm could have to accede to union demands. So the cost
includes this premium and expected cost of lost profits from having to lock out
workers who may not be involved in a strike. The issue is how much this varies
63
across sectors. This in fact is the standard view in the older descriptive literature on
local or sector-level employer associations, as aggressive responders to union efforts
(Bonnett 1956; Gladstone 1984).
Note that even if the variance in ρ across sectors is lower, this only means there
is a higher likelihood that collective action is possible. Even with a moderate number
of firms, and lower variance in the costs of repression, the classic free rider problem
still holds. This problem exists even if all firms want to pay workers‘ minimal wages,
and even in the face of a threat from unions targeting firms individually. How is free-
riding under this scenario possible? Even with a small number of firms, enforcement
and monitoring can be imperfect. At first glance, this would seem implausible—in an
employer association, the central office keeps records of members, what purposes
funds are used for, who has contributed, and various attributes of the firm. In times of
industrial conflict a firm can appeal to the central office for assistance (or the office
itself is proactive), and on the basis of its previous contributions, the office can decide
whether the firm merits support from the association. But a logical form of free-riding
involves firms covertly not participating in the association mandated lockout.22
If
enough firms choose not to participate in the association‘s mandated strategies, the
lockout will not have the desired effect of reducing union mobilization and wages.
The structure of the collective action problem for each firm can be represented
as follows. Let Πu be the expected total long-run cost to an individual firm of
acceding to demands from an industrial union. Let Πnu be the profits from not having
22
Of course, unions face a symmetrical problem. As is told frequently from the industrial sociology
literature, workers may not want to participate in a strike called if they do not have a particular demand
for higher wages or other demands of the unions. Workers might also have an incentive to free ride off
the strike if firms have symmetrical preferences in keeping them producing.
64
to accede to demands. For these kinds of firms, Πu < Πnu . We can measures the net
benefit of a collective strategy by the difference in profits it generates, represented by
the quantity (Πnu - Πu). Again, let P < Πu be the total expected cost to form a
collective association to deal with the labor threat. The value of P can be thought of
as the sum of individual firm contributions to an employer association, or the
employer association‘s central budget. If there are n firms in a sector for whom the
cost of repression is less than the lower profits from acceding to union demands, they
would all be better off to strike a deal in which they jointly contribute a total of P to
the organization, with each one contributing no more than the reservation wage bill
that they would have to accede to, in the absence of an organization. The problem is
that P is divided among the n firms, and firms may disagree over how much of the
total cost of the association each should contribute. The higher variance in ρ across
sectors still lowers the probability of agreement upon a collective strategy, whether it
the strategy is repressive or collaborative. The point is that when ρ differs greatly
across sectors, collective enforcement of a strategy becomes more difficult.23
The
conclusion from this simple description is that even if firms would be collectively
better off with a collective strategy, they might not be able to act due to differing costs
of repression, as well as free rider problems. Unions might have their way, as
happened in the early textile industries in the United States (Carpenter and Thomas
23
For example, if the cost to each individual firm of the threat from organized labor is 100 (Πu = 100),
and if the sector has 10 firms, the total cost of the threat is 1000. As long as the cost of pooling
resources to form an employer organization is less than 1000 (P = 1000), the firms would be better off
forming such an organization. But no firm would like to contribute more than 10 each to the
organization. If each firm contributed an equal amount, they would contribute Πu /n to form the
organization. We can think of n as the number of effective firms or the degree of industrial
concentration. If n is high, collective action is difficult. As n decreases collective action among firms
should be more likely. At lowest of levels of n, collective action should be most probable.
65
1972). But, if large firms can provide selective incentives, or are willing to bear a
disproportionate cost of the collective strategy, firms may have an incentive to pay the
cost for such a strategy. And as described later in the chapter, if the state is willing to
assume some cost of repression, collective action might also be possible.
Generalizing the collective action to other cases
The stylized example and logic was described for a particular industry where
all firms preferred to pay workers minimal wages. But the notable and useful insight
of this example is that it applies to almost all instances of firms attempting to achieve
jointly higher profits, by regulating the labor markets. Regardless if the collective
strategy among firms is repressive or collaborative, firms face incentives to defect
from the organization. As discussed in chapter 2, collaborative action among firms
that recognize and work with unions can have the following functions:
Establishing minimum wages. Suppose firms want to take wages out of
competition and wish to organize to monitor each other to prevent ―chiselers.‖ Unions
can play a role in helping to enforce such agreements. Consistent with the above
logic, individual firms have an incentive to under-cut the agreement and pay workers
less; this is the same logic for why producers have incentives to cheat on price or
quota cartels. Note that this kind of collective strategy means that firms agree to help
prevent ―bad‖ firms from reverting to individual level repressive strategies.
Establishing maximum wages. Firms may wish to set a maximum wage to
prevent poaching of workers. Again unions can play a role in helping to enforce such
agreements. Particularly if unions value lower unemployment in equilibrium, they
help enforce wage restraint. Again, though, individual firms have incentives to defect
66
from wage ceilings and pay efficiency wages to lure workers. The example from the
British EEF at the start of chapter 1 was an example of firms‘ admitting that their
organization was incapable of preventing defection from this kind of collaborative
strategy after WWI.
For both collective repressive and collective collaborative strategies, then,
firms have incentives to defect. This incentive has two implications. First it means
under certain conditions firms will not be able to form collective strategies. This
could be because they recognize such incentives of defection and decide it is not worth
it, as is the case for standard commitment problems. As with any commitment
problem, even if firms recognize that they jointly they would be better off if they
could comply with the organization‘s rules, the temptation to defect means they could
decide not to join. Entrepreneurial firms, perhaps those who suffer more from union
penetration, for example, can try to form an organization by recruiting members, but
fail in establishing a formal organization. Allen‘s address to the American NMTA at
the start of Chapter 1 was an example of successful persuasion to get firms to
recognize the benefits of collective action, at least at the sector level.
Second, firms could successfully form a collective organization, but shifts in
economic or political conditions, coupled with the baseline incentive to defect, mean
that the organization unravels. Even if firms are able to overcome initial problems
(whether through provision of selective incentives, expending extra costs on
monitoring and prevention from defection, or having the state assume partial costs of
enforcement and repression), changes in initial conditions (for example, higher costs
in repression or exogenous economic shocks) might give firms an incentive to defect.
67
Joint Operation of Both Mechanisms: Sanctioning Defectors
The implication of the above theory is that the challenge facing nascent
employer associations involves sanctioning member firms or sector-level associations
which may be more ―militant,‖ to ensure the viability of the collective strategy. A
plurality of employers could prefer to engage in collaborative strategies when its costs
of repression become too high relative to collaborating with workers. This can be
done through agreements with moderate unions which consent to agreement with
employer associations, because they prefer gains from redistribution through
agreements with firms as opposed to more extreme tactics (such as mass strikes or
revolution). Moderate employer associations and unions have a mutual interest in
sanctioning or deterring extremist workers (who prefer to expropriate more) and
extremist firms (who are against any kind of collaborative strategy, and have lower
costs of repression). Moderate employer associations, or those that have less to lose
from collaboration due to lower costs of repression, have an incentive to similarly
deter radical actors. Moderate unions have a similar incentive to prevent radical
unions from sabotaging cross-class agreements.24
The empirical chapters document this kind of joint logic in the change of
strategies in response to failures to sanction militants. The NMTA‘s switch to
24
A potentially complementary logic on the union side for explaining unionization is offered by
Wallerstein (1990) and Horn and Wilensky (1988). In these accounts, a key parameter is the elasticity
of substitution of the products different unions produce (whether those goods are complements or
substitutes). In these models, the prediction is that workers who are substitutes have an incentive to
organize in a single bargaining unit to maximize ability to strike effectively; amalgamation decreases
the strike threat of workers who are complements. The optimal strategy for unions would be for unions
to unite workers who are substitutes in production, and remain separate from unions that represent
workers who are complements in production. In these models, it is a ―union maximizer‖ that
exogenously sets the relative decision-making weights of unions that produce substitute and
complementary goods. In my account, it is possible that firms or sectors with very different costs of
repression can produce complementary or substitute goods.
68
repressing unions and punishing firms that did not sign union agreements in the
twentieth century captures this logic. The organization had initially signed agreements
with the IMU. But because the IMU was unable to punish unions from defecting, the
NMTA projected (correctly) increased wage demands. The cost of repression had
stayed the same but the expected wage bill (in the form of IMU demands) would
increase; thus the NMTA switched from a collaborative to a repressive strategy.
An observable implication of this is employers can sometimes pre-emptively
negotiate with unions to prevent further state intervention. They might do so to
prevent state management of institutions. Or, employers could agree to a pre-emptive
collaborative agreement with workers to prevent further state expropriation (as in the
case of Swedish SAF action to prevent further anti-lockout legislation, which is
discussed below). In both cases, pre-emptive action by firms to switch to
collaboration occurs because of lower costs of repression and preventing of additional
intervention by the state. Once costs of repression escalate, for unions, the costs of
sanctioning radicals become too high for unions. Pre-emptive collective collaborative
can be preferable for firms because it prevents them from incurring costs of repression
of workers, and state can share in costs of enforcing this kind of bargain.25
Section 4: Alternative Explanations and Concerns
25
The mechanisms advanced by CIS and MS could apply more directly for a subset of industries within
a country. One interpretation is that these are the industries that have higher costs of repression. But,
this approach addresses less the existence of repressive strategies and organizations, and, how bargains
between collaborative and repressive organizations were key to producing the most important industrial
institutions. Also, in some cases the variables of skill specificity may not explain the initial formation
of collaborative employer organizations in some sectors. For example, in Germany, it was the case that
some industries which were highly skilled were also disproportionately represented by radical workers
and areas that did not support the SPD after WWI. Industries that emerged with higher wages and that
grew quickly during World War I, for example, had many skilled workers who did not have previous
ties to craft unions before World War I, and thus had much more extreme redistributionist goals. See
Geary 1978 for discussion of this point.
69
In this section I discuss why the theory is an improvement over existing
explanations, and address potential flaws in the argument. The main advantage of the
theory over existing explanations, as discussed in chapter 2, is that it explains a much
wider range of outcomes. Most theories in comparative political economy that deal
with industrial institutions as a dependent variable are concerned with explaining
variation within a given category (such as collective collaboration), or are only
interested in explaining the emergence of collective bargaining period, without
attention to the fuller range of outcomes. My theory accounts for why firms are able
to collectively act to form employer organizations, and sometimes why we observe the
failure or collapse of such collective action. Specifically, it can account for why we
observe firms collectively acting only in certain industrial sectors, and not across
sectors. Such outcomes of elite coordination are not addressed in the models by Boix
(2003) and Acemoglu and Robinson (2006).
Second, the theory more explicit incorporates a strategic logic to firms‘
decisions and a mutual strategic logic for both workers‘ organizations and firms. It
explains why firms sometimes engage in repressive strategies against workers. These
outcomes are not theorized in recent accounts of historical corporatist institutions
(Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice 2007; Thelen 2004; Martin and Swank 2008). Previous
arguments make assumptions that firm reactions to labor mobilization are going to be
uniformly positive (for those who focus on the problem of labor scarcity) or negative
(for those who focus on the traditional ―taxation by workers‖ argument). The theory
does not arbitrate between the older ―traditionalist‖ view of industrial relations as a
product of pure class conflict (Korpi 1983) and the newer perspective which
70
recognizes incentives of firms to work with unions in the provision of social policy or
labor market outcomes (Mares 2003; Swenson 2002). Rather, it provides an
explanation for why we would observe both within a state (at the regional or sector
level), and why we would observe bargains that explain the modal firm strategy.
The theory articulates a key mechanism that incorporates the structural
conditions of industrial heterogeneity to explain variation in enforceability of
collective agreements. The literature that focuses on explaining just the emergence of
collaborative strategies emphasizes other variables, including the role of electoral
systems, legacies of guilds, initial structural conditions, and degree of unionization—
but these accounts are less precise on how the mechanism of each variable operates.
Of course, some of these alternative explanations predict the same outcomes, and so
historical evidence discussed in the empirical chapters will help arbitrate between
competing explanations. For now I focus on how my theory provides mechanisms
that other theories do not, and how broad historical evidence does not comport with
the predictions of competing theories. I also discuss some internal flaws to the logic
of each theory, which mine attempts to correct for. Table 3-2 compares the theory to
existing accounts.
Electoral systems, co-specific assets, and firm strategies. The most recent
arguments about the causes and consequences of industrial institutions link historical
employer coordination to electoral systems, summarized in chapter 1. Cusack,
Iversen, and Soskice (2007; Cusack, Iversen, and Soskice 2010) argue that under
certain pre-existing economic systems, specifically long-standing guilds, firms and
conservative parties have incentives to advocate and adopt PR electoral systems. They
71
argue that a PR electoral system allows for protection of investments in specific skills
or assets that firms and unions have jointly maintained. These investments are
characterized by pre-existing cross-class coalitions which sometimes arose out of
patterns of regional economic coordination. Building upon Thelen‘s important
characterization of pre-industrial forms of economic coordination, CIS argue that in
some economies, historical guild traditions created incentives for firms and unions to
co-invest in skills, which facilitated cross-class alliances. Such alliances between
workers and firms increased the probability of adoption of PR, because they argue that
PR systems better protect the interests of these cross-class alliances. In other
economies, due to the absence of guild traditions, craft-based unions formed that
inhibited industrial unionization. This created little incentive for co-investment
between firms and workers in skill development. The consequence of this was more
general conflict between workers and firms; because there were no specific assets to
protect, there was an incentive for firms to maintain existing majoritarian SMD
electoral systems.26
CIS argue that firms and right-wing political parties positively
supported and adopted PR to ―lock in‖ benefits of pre-existing economic coordination.
The authors test the theory with cross-national estimations using data on indices of
employer coordination and proportionality of electoral systems.27
26
They argue that as a consequence, PR systems redistribute more and SMD majoritarian systems
redistribute less. This theory of PR adoption is a direct response to Boix (1999), who argues that ―fear
of the left‖ led right-wing parties to adopt PR to maintain some degree of representation. 27
The dataset uses a 5-point scale of economic coordination that consists of binary measures of the
following: strong guild traditions; widespread rural cooperatives; high employer coordination; industry-
based or nationally centralized unions (as opposed to craft or fragmented unions); large skill-based
export sector (which they argue is an indicator of the necessity for compromises over wages and
training) (CIS 2007, 385).
72
This account suffers from several flaws. First, they take as pre-existing the
existence of some kind of collaborative employer coordination. But the theory
proposed above does not take such coordination as exogenous, and hypothesizes why
we might observe initial variation at the national level. Second, as the preceding
discussion demonstrates, though, there has been much intra-country, cross-national,
and temporal variation in the kinds of firm strategies countries experience. In
particular, their theorizing of ―high‖ degrees of employer coordination obscures the
fact that such firms were highly coordinated for purposes of repressing workers (both
skilled and unskilled), not for protecting investments in specific assets.
The most important mechanism that this competing theory posits is that
workers and firms have incentives to jointly collaborate for asset-specific reasons;
employers have incentives engage in coordinating systems to protect such assets.
These arguments rely on an insurance model. In chapters 4, 6, and 7 I present
evidence challenging these claims. The evidence demonstrates that the choice of
collaboration was because it was viewed as less costly for employers than repression,
as opposed to the mutual benefits from asset specific logic posited by existing
scholarship. The latter logic can exist, but its empirical application is limited to a few
sectors, and is relatively less important than the actual forms of coordination that
existed in other prominent sectors. An important different empirical implication that is
born out is that associations switched to collaboration once the costs of repression
increase.
Another theoretical objection is that existing authors specify a production
regime where incentives to jointly invest in specific skills entail what I code as
73
collective collaborative reason. Yet embedded within this logic is one of ―joint hold
up costs‖—that is, once workers incur some cost to demand redistribution, it is quite
costly for firms to repress. However, this mechanism of joint hold up costs does not
imply some mutual gain in asset specificity: rather, it can be that firms prefer not to
pay the costs of repression. This is an important distinction because it implies that
under a different labor-market equilibrium, firms would prefer to repress. The
observable implication is that firms should initially express a preference to repress,
and only deviate when it becomes too costly. The evidence from Germany and the
United States also confirms this prediction.
Martin and Swank (MS) argue the causal logic runs in the opposite direction:
the presence of a PR electoral system increased the probability of highly coordinated
employer organizations. They focus in particular on the multi-party systems that
develop under PR versus two-party systems that emerge under majoritarian SMD
rules. Under multi-party systems, they argue that parties can ―credibly commit‖ to
party supporters on benefits that they will receive while the parties participate in
government; this creates incentives for parties to form alliances with other parties that
represent other interests, such as workers or farmers. MS go on to argue that this
cooperative political system ―transfer[s] this spirit of cooperation among employers‘
associations.‖28
Under a PR system, ―…mangers calculate that their changes of
capturing a party likely to win an electoral majority are minimal; therefore, they have
an interest in the creation of policymaking channels that work outside the government
28
Specifically Martin and Swank state that ―…dedicated business parties have incentives to form
alliances with parties representing workers, farmers, and other interests in order to join ruling coalitions,
and one might expect these parties to transfer this spirit of cooperation to employers‘ associations‖
(Martin and Swank 2008, 184).
74
by delegating considerable power to social actors. Highly organized employers‘
associations may emerge to coordinate labor and industrial relations systems and to
help with state development strategies; yet, these groups should be less involved in
electoral politics (the party‘s prerogative).‖29
They also argue that under two-party systems, political parties are more likely
to cut across class lines. As a result, employers are dispersed across parties, and
therefore act mainly as interest groups to fill a ―representation gap‖ of firms. ―When
employers are dispersed across parties, a common corporate voice may be more
difficult to establish. …When employers in two-party systems do capture one of the
parties, they still have no reasons to compromise with the other party.‖30
The authors
also test their theory with cross-national evidence, using a similar scale of
coordination in conception to that of CIS.31
In the MS account, strong preindustrial
guilds are treated as part of a collection of features of industrial relations which
explain employer organizations.32
The alternative theories of interest in this account
are the degree of industrialization, federalism, and party systems. The authors also
describe some of the activities of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) in
29
Martin and Swank 2008, 184. 30
Martin and Swank 2008, 184. 31
The scale measures three indicators of degree of employer organization: scope of employers‘
organization (share of employers organized in one or coordinated multiple peak national association);
centralization of power of employer organizations and unions; and integration of national peak
associations into national policymaking forums. Each score sums on a 1-3 index; the sum of these
indicators is the degree of employer organization (so the index runs 1-9). They do this for 1900, 1914,
1925, and 1938 for 16 states. 32
Martin and Swank 2008, 183.
75
the United States and the Danish Employers‘ Federation in Denmark as support for
their theory.33
This account also suffers from the latter two flaws of the CIS argument: they
conflate different kinds of employer coordination, and assume that because parties
have an interest in economic cooperation, that that by extension means industrial
actors will cooperate. By contrast, my proposed theory argues that it is the degree of
threat posed by workers that gives firms differing incentives to collaborate with
workers, depending on underlying structural conditions. It accounts for the ability of
firms to collaborate, as well as their varying preferences. Finally, as an empirical
matter (shown in the German and cross-national evidence chapters), many different
kinds of employer coordination pre-date the adoption of PR in most states. Crucial
intra and cross-national variation in employer coordination systems pre-dates WWI.
Structural explanations. Another hypothesis is that structural conditions in the
labor market alone can account for variation in labor-market institutions. Swenson
presents the most historically detailed version of this theory (2002). The argument is
that initial differences in market structural conditions explains why the United States
has a more labor unfriendly set of institutions since the post-war era, while Sweden
adopted solidarist policies. The implication is that changes in such conditions explain
changes in firm strategies over time. Swenson‘s theory was one of the first to
articulate why firms would prefer to organize in collaboration with centralized unions.
33
The political institutions are hypothesized to have an impact beyond standard variables such as
degree of industrialization and size of state. There are obviously other explanations that both sets of
authors consider. But I focus on these explanations related to electoral systems and pre-existing guilds
because they are the most prominent in their work and because such works also draw on other
influential discussions of the importance of skill development among firms and workers (Thelen 2004;
Herrigel 2000).
76
It presents a theory of unions almost welcoming lockouts so that more militant unions
can be effectively disciplined, with the outcome of a broad cross-class set of industrial
institutions; this explanation is partially modeled by Moene and Wallerstein (2003).
The most important condition for Swenson is the initial scarcity of skilled
labor.34
He defines solidarist policies that emerged in Sweden in the 1930s as a cross-
class coalition where key sectors had firms and unions agree to wage restraint to lower
unemployment (this account is elaborated on in the cross-national chapter). A major
strength of Swenson‘s account is that it carefully traces historical change in firm
strategies through the twentieth century—he documents the change in firm and
employer organizations strategies from repressive to collaborative, or vice versa.
Swenson‘s account, as detailed as it is, suffers from some theoretical lack of
clarity, which the above account tries to provide. First, Swenson does not really
theorize the role of the state and the costs of repression, and how they affect firm
strategies. (The previous accounts by CIS 2007 and MS 2008 do not either, but
Swenson provides some examples in that validate the importance of employer
repression as a strategy).
Second, his focus on structural explanations undoubtedly accounts for some of
the variation, but he is unclear as to what the particular mechanisms linking the
conditions to the outcomes are. For example, it is unclear, for example, why the LO to
―rein in‖ militant construction unions, and the parallel ability of the SAF to do so with
the building employers). I propose a simple theory of heterogeneity that affects the
probability of collective action, via the mechanism of variance in the costs of
34
There are of course other conditions, but this is the most important one. In the cross-national chapter,
I address more directly how my theory better
77
repression. I argue that structural conditions (which, like Swenson, I take to be
exogenous) affect the variation in the costs of repression within an economy, which in
turn affects the enforceability and ease of collective action—this mechanism is clearer
and more testable. More broadly, my theory does not discount older perspectives that
the threat posed by a radicalized labor force does matter.35
I argue that the key
mechanism of enforceability is what makes structural conditions important.
Left power and unionization. Korpi and Shalev (1979) argue that corporatist
institutions were simply attributable to the power of the left, measured by either union
density or socialist party vote share. Therefore, we should only observe collective
collaborative strategies when some pre-existing support for the ―left‖ exists. The main
mechanism was that collective institutions were supported by unions, and the more
power they had, the more likely they could be implemented.
The main problem with the original ―left power‖ hypothesis is that it ignored
heterogeneity of firm preferences—it ignores the theoretical possibility of firms
preferring to cooperate with workers to help take wages out of competition or prevent
wage drift. It mistakenly attributed outcomes to the ability of workers to impose their
preferences without considering that some firms might have wanted such policies.
Second, this theory does not account for the wider variation in firm strategies shown in
Table 2-1—in particular, it neither theorizes individual firm strategies, nor does it
consider firm repression as an outcome. By contrast, my theory accounts for this
variation across sectors; the theory acknowledges that the ―left threat‖ argument holds
only for some sectors. I propose a specific mechanism—the preference of firms to
35
Wallerstein (1991) argues that size of labor force should be correlated with union density due to
lower costs in recruitment and expected benefits of each additional recruit. See
78
pre-empt state involvement and not incur the higher costs of repression—to explain
why we observe collaborative strategies.
Cartelization. An alternative argument is that initial degrees of cartelization
and high degrees of financial sector concentration explain variation in firm strategies.
The cartelization argument has not been thoroughly articulated in the literature, but it
is intuitive: if firms have higher coordination institutions in the product market
(represented by cartels), they should find it easier to coordinate in labor markets. An
example of this intuition is that if unions are allowed to help police cartels and
institutions designed to remove wages out of competition (essentially wage and price
controls) then collective collaborative institutions should be more likely. If such
behavior is not allowed due to early anti-trust restrictions (as was the case in the
United States after the passage of the Sherman anti-trust legislation), then firms may
not be able to commit to such collaborative institutions because they do not have
enough enforcement capacity to monitor them. Therefore, either variables that explain
cartelization, or cartelization itself, should account for firm strategies in labor markets.
This theory is a powerful alternative, but my explanation partially subsumes it.
First, degree of cartelization alone cannot explain repressive versus collaborative
strategies. In the United States, for example, the anti-cartel legal environment
indirectly facilitated repressive strategies in several respects. First, it caused a wave in
mergers which resulted in many large individual firms that practiced labor repression
(Bittlingmayer 1985). Second, legal precedents often meant anti-trust law could be
used against unions (which were in some cases deemed as cartels of labor). Firms‘
use of injunctions against workers to prevent strikes is an example of firms and states
79
sharing in the costs of repression (made relatively lower for firms by the willingness
of the state to bear them, and the lack of a widespread industrial union movement).
This meant also, as stated above, that unions were barred in many industries from
helping to police wage agreements among firms. By contrast, in Germany and
Sweden, cartels were encouraged, and cartels in heavy industry became the vanguard
of repressing organized labor, particularly in Germany. Thus ex ante, cartels alone
cannot predict repressive versus collaborative strategies. Cartels themselves though
can be a component of collective strategies, or exist for specific sectors in a country
where the modal strategy is still repressive.
The other response to the cartelization argument is that structural variable of
industrial heterogeneity should help account for cross-national variation in
cartelization, as well as intra-country variation. In particular, the theory explains
inter-sector as opposed to single sector collective action. Industrial organization
research is replete with examples and models of why cartels fail due to incentives to
defect and under-price; a similar logic explains why employer organizations
sometimes unravel or fail to form at the inter-sector level. Thus, structural differences
in the costs of repression across sectors should explain cross-national differences in
the longevity of cartels as well as employer organizations.
Having set up the theoretical expectations and outlined the mechanisms, the
rest of the dissertation tests the theory with exhaustive evidence from Imperial
Germany, war-time and Weimar Germany, the inter-war period in the United States,
and cross-national evidence. I deviate from the main approaches used in the literature
of cross-national regressions of a limited number of observations on a small number of
80
predictors. These regressions are often sensitive to specifications, although they
generally establish that degree of unionization, left-wing vote share, and higher
degrees of employer coordination tend to be correlated. As noted, however, such
measures of coordination conflate repressive strategies, or miscode strategies.
Chapter 4 provides detailed evidence of the advent of individual repressive
strategies in Imperial Germany and the transition to collective strategies. Chapter 5
statistically tests mechanisms of the theory at the micro-level, using new sub-national
data on membership in different employer organizations and firm strategies in this
time period Germany. Chapter 6 documents how changes in the proposed variables
affected firm strategies in the Weimar era. The evidence, constituting publications,
meeting notes, and internal correspondence, supports the main predictions of the
theory about the determinants of firms‘ strategies. Chapter 7 uses a mix of archival
evidence from the United States and new data on employer repression to test the
theory. The idea is that such evidence should show firms responding to redistributive
threats from workers, and take into consideration costs of repression and
enforceability of agreements when deciding whether to collectively act. The final
chapter shows that changes in firm strategies do follow changes in heterogeneity and
costs of enforcement and the threat posed by workers for other states. The concluding
chapter takes up some of the objections raised in this chapter.
81
Table 3-1: Main Theoretical Predictions of Firm Strategies
Industrial heterogeneity
Redistributive
threat posed
by workers
Low High
Low Collective or Individual
Repressive Strategy
Individual Repressive
Strategy
Medium Collective
Repressive Strategy
Individual Repressive
Strategy
High Collective Collaborative
Strategy
Individual
Collaborative Strategy
82
Table 3-2: Current hypotheses about firm strategies
Main Predictor Mechanism Outcome
Proportional representation
political system
(Martin and Swank, 2008)
Allows for
institutionalized
coordination between
firms and labor
Coordinated
industrial
relations versus
not
Early guild systems
(Thelen, 2004)
Initial coordination;
path dependence
Coordinated
industrial
relations &
skill-specific
training
institutions
Unionization alone
(Historical labor literature)
Employers ―must
respond‖
Initial
employer
associations
Level of industrialization /
Structural scarcity
(Swenson, 2002)
Scarcity of labor creates
incentives for certain
institutions
―Solidarist‖ vs.
―non-solidarist‖
coordination
Threat of political
representation of workers x
industrial heterogeneity at t0,
t1,…
Incentives to forestall
expropriation;
enforcement of inter-
firm and inter-sector
agreements
Different firm
strategies
(individual
versus
collective;
repressive
versus
collaborative)
83
Chapter 4: Evidence from Imperial Germany
―Scratch one of these gentlemen, and you get the police.‖ – Max Weber
―The spirit of solidarity among employers needed to be aroused and
continually strengthened, until individual interest came to accept the principle of
voluntary submission to the common interest‖ – Henry Axel Bueck, head of the
Central Office of German Employers‘ Federation36
The sentiments expressed by Max Weber and Henry Axel Bueck in the early
twentieth century encapsulate the arguments described in the previous chapter about
the adoption by firms of repressive or collaborative strategies vis-à-vis workers, and
when such strategies were executed individually or collectively as part of employer
associations. Weber‘s statement about ―gentlemen‖ referred to the owners and
managers of the largest firms in Germany, who he argued were aligned with the state
authorities in preventing workers from mobilizing. Bueck‘s statement refers to a plea
to organize firms to combat what he viewed to be the growing threat of social
democratic trade unionism. The two men had radically differing political views and
prognostications about the future of the German capitalism, but their impressions of
how firms were responding and should react to political and industrial events on the
ground indicate the importance of the variables described in the previous chapter.
They indicate that the threat from workers and the problem of collective action were
the most important challenges facing enterprises at the turn of the twentieth century.
In this chapter I use evidence from Imperial Germany to show that firms‘
responses to organized labor were conditioned on the threat posed by workers and a
36
Weber‘s quote is from Anderson (2000), 226. Bueck‘s statement is from Krüger (1926), 331.
84
set of structural conditions, namely the industrial heterogeneity that allowed for
effective collective action. The evidence documents the transition from the use of
individual to initial collective level strategies of repression, and the transition from
initial regional collective associations to peak-level associations. The evidence on the
evolution of German employer associations overwhelmingly indicates that the initial
response of the most important firms in the largest industries of Germany was
repressive, because the firms could incur the costs of such actions. Collective
strategies in the forms of influential sector, regional, and national-level employer
associations could be adopted because the variance of costs of enforcing agreements
among different firms and sectors were low. This was particularly true in industries
which had a previous history of heavy cartelization and geographic concentration.
The evidence also confirms the importance of heterogeneity in undermining the
expansive and ambitious goals to form a peak association that would obligate member
firms to abide by a central office‘s regulations. Tensions existed among different
industries in terms of costs of maintaining employer associations. Even though firms
were able to initially overcome the collective action problem, there were inter-industry
differences about who should bear the costs of peak associations indicates‘ duties.
I use different pieces of qualitative and quantitative historical evidence from
specific sectors and within major organizations to test the theory. In addition to
showing how historical trends, events, and descriptive statistics are consistent with the
theoretical predictions, I also use primary evidence from the main industrial and
political actors to illustrate the mechanisms of the theory. This chapter focuses on the
development of the largest employer associations and relates their incentives of
85
formation to the redistributive threat they faced from mobilizing workers. Chapter 5
uses specific quantitative data on the development, activities, and membership of
important employer associations to test the theory.
The evidence from this time period also poses a difficult test for the theory,
because the SPD never won a majority of electoral districts and was known as a
perennial opposition party; in addition, unionization rates were comparatively lower
than other industrialized economies. Thus the magnitude of its threat to major firms
can be viewed as relatively small compared to that of Weimar Germany or in other
Western European states. That is, the empirical tests leverage smaller changes in the
redistributive threat posed by workers to show that they matter for repressive versus
collaborative strategies. The quantitative and qualitative evidence indicates that
contrary to the existing theories about the origins of capitalist institutions, firms in
Germany before WWI pursued repressive strategies, continuing after the lifting of the
ban of Socialist activity in 1890. Understanding why these anti-labor and repressive
strategies were so predominant before World War I can help explain their subsequent
historically important to shift to collaborative strategies at the start of Weimar
Germany which I address in Chapter 5, and again in the post-WWII era.
The evidence presented that supports the theory helps rectify a curious
disjuncture in the study of the development of industrial-relations institutions by social
scientists, as described in Chapter 2. The literature that focuses on the incentives of
firms as actors, and their incentives to form associations, has recently emphasized the
supposed ―cooperative‖ nature of such institutions, by focusing on examples from
Denmark, Sweden, and inter-war Germany. The recent political science literature has
86
focused on the existence and operation of firms in handicraft or craft-based skills
sectors to confirm theories about electoral systems or employer coordination. But in
examining these cases, this literature ignores some of the important examples of
employer repression. By contrast, the earlier influential literature on power resources
of the left, as noted in the previous chapter, ignored the strategic choices of firms and
the costs of repression that the incumbent conservative elite had to make. Nor did this
literature engage in the problem of collective action that faced these firms. Although
this slightly older literature did not draw much on evidenced from Imperial Germany,
the attitudes of influential heavy industry firms would support this older theory of pure
class conflict.
The discussion here demonstrates that much of the existing attention in
political science on the joint-incentives of firms and workers to form collaborative
associations incompletely characterizes the development of capitalist systems: the
repressive logic of employer coordination was more important in this time period.
The existing theoretical accounts that use German evidence as a test of the ―asset
specificity‖ or positive employer coordination focus on the development of handicraft
industries in the late 1800s and the Weimar period. But the development of
associations in the early twentieth century in heavy industry and skilled
manufacturing, described below, is at odds with these accounts. Further, I
demonstrate that the development of handicraft employer associations is more
consistent with the composed theory.
Thus the existing literature has focused on different pieces of the puzzle. From
a theoretical perspective, it is puzzling why firms in different product markets in
87
different regions should be willing to subjugate some of their managerial autonomy to
a central office in Berlin or elsewhere. In the theoretical account from chapter 2 and
the evidence from Imperial Germany, I argue that firms in different sectors that are the
subject of different traditions of social science inquiry did express such reluctance to
cooperate, but it was initially overcome in the face of a prominent redistributive threat
that made repressive collective action a preferable response. Such collective
institutions experienced their own internal tensions; this chapter documents them as
support of the proposed theory.
The chapter proceeds as follows. Section 1 describes the political and
economic background that puts the strategies of political and individual firm
repression in historical context. I provide evidence of the initial use of individual level
strategies to repress workers. Section 2 provides evidence on the transition to
collective strategies at the regional and sector level and their importance. I
demonstrate the transition to such strategies in light of changes to the economy and the
increase in use of repression in response to worker mobilization; I also show how
structural variables that facilitated collective strategies. Sections 3 and 4 show how
the logic of formation of important peak-level associations in the early 1900s—the
further adoption of collective strategies—confirms the theory. Section 3 of shows
how the emergence of two separate peak associations is consistent with the theory.
Section 4 shows how the eventual merger of these two associations, despite its limited
in time is existence, is similarly consistent with the theory. Both sections: a) link the
threat posed by workers to collective repression as a strategy; b) demonstrate how
industrial heterogeneity affected the fragility of such institutions.
88
Section 1: The Industrial and Repressive Context
1.1 The political repressive context
In this overview I describe the political climate in which firm repression
operated. During the two decades before the outbreak of World War I, the SPD and
general trade unions did make significant inroads in terms of popular support and
labor force that was unionized. There was a tenfold increase in unionization between
the years 1890 and 1913, and increasing contestation of the SPD in national
constituencies during the early twentieth century. Still, despite these trends and the
lapsing of the anti-Socialist laws in 1890, the adoption of the secret ballot in 1903, and
the SPD‘s increasing political contestation and representation in the national
legislature (Reichstag), the overall legal environment in Imperial Germany was quite
hostile for workers (Hall 1974). Besides the restricted three-class franchise system in
the dominant and large Land Prussia, workers faced a legal environment that allowed
the state to disrupt and punish attempts at organizing into unions and making demands
upon firms. In 1887 the German Supreme Court (Reichsgericht) upheld the legality of
measures to prevent the association of workers. According to an 1889 ruling, freedom
of combination among workers was not a basic social right, and therefore firms were
allowed to prohibit employees from joining unions or using union membership as
grounds for dismissal (Saul 1985). The Prussian Ministry of the Interior enforced
these measures. In 1904 a court in Kiel ruled that dismissal of an employee due to his
membership in a union was permissible; in 1905 a regional Dresden court recognized
the ―self-evident right‖ of the employer over employees (Saul 1974).
89
Additionally, during Bismarck‘s ―Kartell Reichstag,‖ which was governed by a
coalition between the National Liberal and Conservatives parties between 1887 and
1890, the official election commission often ruled against workers in contestations
about electoral fraud. The Reichstag refused to discard votes that had been alleged to
be extorted by employer pressures. The state apparatus helped bear some of the costs
of repression, as this gave firms freedom to continue practices of voter intimidation.
This practice changed only when the SPD won a plurality of seats in 1912; the
Commission then considered cases of fraud regarding the employer‘s extortion or
intimidation of employee voting intentions (Anderson 2000).37
The result of this legal
environment and its general enforcement by the state was that unions faced the risk of
and actual police harassment; they could not depend upon state support during
industrial disputes. As an anonymous drafter of the German Civil Code articulated in
government decisions against liberalizing association laws, the goal was to ―wrench
the working population from the utopia of social democracy and win them over for the
existing state and social order‖ (Kögler 1974).38
Overall, the state apparatus was geared toward the containment of the socialist
threat and maintenance of the existing political order, and helped blunt the mass
mobilization of workers. As Saul writes, ―The bias against the working class in the
judicial system and the war of the police against all socialist organizations including
the Free Trade Unions were part and parcel of the social reality of the time‖ (1985,
349). Repression was a means of ―defending civil order‖ from the ―onslaught of
37
It is difficult to estimate, of course, how much electoral fraud there was in this period. For an
alternative view of the Election Commission, see Ziblatt (2009). 38
The quotation is from an anonymous proposal from the second Civil Code committee from 1891.
90
social democracy‖ (Saul 1985, 347).39
In the next sections, I show how firms uniquely
contributed to this environment, and shared the costs of repression by adopting
individual and then collective repression against workers. Firms and the state shared
the costs of repression. However, when such costs became too high for state
authorities to bear, individual firms took on a greater proportion of such costs.
1.2 Industrial repression—individual level strategies and context
The costs of repression in the late nineteenth century were also shared by
individual firms. The repressive climate meant that large portions of the workforce in
key industries in Germany operated at the whims of German firms, and had a smaller
role in determining equilibrium wages and working conditions. In this section I
discuss the initial importance of individual firms in helping make these dismal
outcomes for workers possible. For most of Germany‘s important industries during
this time period, repression was the default strategy for large firms and their employer
associations. In this section I discuss some of the techniques, many of which were
also pursued, despite a change in labor law, during the Weimar era. In the next section
I link the strategies of this environment to the threat posed by workers and show the
transition to collective strategies in the form of repressive employer associations. The
evidence presented here is in contrast to the current hypotheses which argue that
―cooperative‖ relations emerged out of joint investments in skills.
As of 1914, in most major industries including agriculture, mining, heavy
industry, the large chemical industries, the electrical and engineering industries,
commerce, transport, insurance and banking, sector-level collective bargaining was
39
See further documentation in Knips (1996).
91
absent. From 1905, in some large metalworking, electrical and engineering factories,
firm-specific or company-level unions existed, but these were distinct from and in
some cases helped undermine social democratic trade unions. In industries with
largely skilled workforces, employment bureaus were still run by firms that dictated
outcomes and punished union affiliation. In much of the mining industries, for some
of the largest companies (such as the Prussian-Hessian State Railway Company, which
was then the world‘s largest firm), and certainly on large agricultural estates, unionism
and enforced formal protections for workers were non-existent.
Other industries that had lower industrial concentration, more intensive labor
competition, and were composed of small firms—such as printers, construction
workers, carpenters, painters, and tailors—did have some collective wage agreements.
However, these industries, which are the substantive focus of existing political science
research on the development of different employer coordination regimes, composed a
smaller portion of output. Further, as discussed in section 3 below, the advent of these
more collaborative strategies in specific sectors, in these less important industries, is
consistent with the theoretical predictions discussed in chapter 2. They emerged
because the costs of repression in such industries were higher, and the variance of such
costs was lower.
As described in chapter 3, the individual firms that initially pursued repressive
strategies faced two sources of distributive threats from workers. The first was the
rising demands from workers about workplace conditions and wages. The second was
increasing attempts from the state to intervene on such matters. Some firms were
disappointed that franchise restrictions and other repressive means were off the table;
92
this meant that firms would have to incur a higher share of the costs of repression.
Incidents of conflict and attempted intervention from the state were important in
giving firms an incentive to collectively act—in some cases, to take existing product
market coordinating institutions and extend them into the labor sphere. Until the early
1900s, large firms felt that formal employer associations were unnecessary to handle
labor disputes. For example, in the Ruhr area, the mining industry was not heavily
unionized, and thus large firms, concerns, and cartels felt that formal employer
associations for much of the late 1800s were not necessary.
The major industries of the German economy toward the end of the nineteenth
century were in the raw production and processing of coal, steel, and iron and related
industries; railways and transportation; and to a lesser extent, chemicals and
construction. The explosion of production in heavy industry and manufacturing was
characterized by high degrees of concentration, cartelization, and a proliferation of
large firms.40
Between 1890 and 1910, 30 of the largest 50 firms in Germany in terms
of production and number of employees were involved in heavy industry, coal, or the
manufacturing of related goods (Feldenkirchen 1988; Fiedler 1999); many of the other
large manufacturing firms outside of these top 30 were connected through cartel
arrangements and trade associations. The economic influence of the ―chimney
barons‖ thus stretched to multiple industries. For example, 20 percent of all coal
production in the Ruhr by 1900 was controlled by steel firms. Heavy industry
accounted for over 60 percent of all ―giant‖ employers in Germany (those that
employed more than 1,000 workers). As early as 1882, one-third of firms in heavy
40
See also Groh (1978) and Kinghorn and Nye (1996).
93
industry fell into that category.41 Six syndicates were responsible for 90 percent of all
hard-coal production and 58 percent of the mining labor force worked in pits
employing over 1,000 men in 1907. There was a similar dominance of large firms in
the chemical and electric-technical industries (Geary 1991, 149-150).
The influence of these large firms extended beyond Germany‘s economic
production: these firms and their associated cartels and organizations extended formal
and informal repressive control into the lives of workers. Many of these large firms in
manufacturing and raw materials repressed workers who either participated in
organized labor movements or supported the SPD, or were suspected of either activity.
As the economist and social reformer Lujo Brentano wrote in 1905: ―The power the
giant firms attain over those they employ extends even beyond the work situation; it
extends to their entire social, religious, and political being. Even the shopkeepers who
do business with the workers can come under the dominion of the managers of these
firms. Regions are emerging within the Reich where it is not the will of the legislator,
but that of the owner, that is law‖ (Anderson 2000, 199).42
These firms had lower
costs of repression, and could pursue a variety of strategies to prevent worker
participation in social democratic trade unions by repressing or dividing workers; they
could also afford to ―sit out disputes‖ and refuse to negotiate with them (Geary 1991).
Of course, there was much variation across and within regions in Germany in this
41
By 1914, the Krupp concern employed more than 70,000 workers; Deutscher Kaiser and Harpener
Bergbau-AG employed 20,000 each; the Bochumer Verein, Hibernia, Hoesch, and Rhenisch Steelworks
each had more than 10,000 workers. 42
Max Weber thought class differences were ingrained in employer sense of hierarchy. At a speech for
the Verein für Sozialpolitik, he debated Alexander Tille, who was a spokesman for Saar industrialists;
Tille justified the behavior of these large firms on the grounds that ―they must be also be able to
document outwardly the subordination of others‖ (Anderson 2000, 227). As Weber described these
firms, ―Scratch one of these gentlemen [i.e., the bosses], and you get the police‖ (Anderson 2000, 227).
Tille corresponded with Bueck about the ideological propaganda of the SPD and its effectiveness.
94
period, but the dominant areas of production were home to firms in these basic raw
materials, manufacturing, and transport industries.
In the reminder of this section I first discuss strategies of individual firm
strategies vis-à-vis the state, and then briefly turn to repressive strategies that
intervened in the labor market. With respect to the state, the costs of repression can be
understood as costs that individual firms expended to lobby the state. These can be for
strategies for which the costs are shared between individual firms and the state. With
respect to direct intervention in the labor market, these costs can be viewed as those
that incurred from dismissing workers or maintaining other forms of repression
described below. These two categories of strategies are obviously not mutually
exclusive, nor is there always a clean division between the labor-market strategy and
the state strategy. In section two, I show how changes in industrial heterogeneity and
a rapid increase in the threat posed by the SPD and growth in unionization increased
the incentives for firms to take these individual-level strategies and execute them
collectively.
1.2.1 Direct repression from firms – punishment for affiliation with left-wing
institutions
One set of strategies involved direct punishment and prevention of workers
who supported the SPD. Anderson (2000) and Saul (1974) document a number of
such examples. This strategy of punishment for political affiliation had several
potentially overlapping elements. First, firms could fire or fine workers who were
affiliated with the SPD. They could gather this information from ―informal‖ hearing
of alleged support from informant workers. For example, participation in SPD related
95
cultural or social clubs could be grounds for dismissal. Second, firms could credibly
threaten workers with the above penalties, but with the goal of deterring them from
turning out to vote. Third, firms could intimidate workers into voting for the firm
owners‘ preferred parties, such as the National Liberal or conservative parties. A final
strategy in this set was that firms might have simply prevented workers from leaving
the factory or workplace on the day of the election.
Where did worker intimidation occur? Anecdotal evidence indicates that these
strategies of intimidation of workers who supported the SPD could be found in almost
all major industries. Intimidation that utilized this ―social control‖ of worker space
was used in firms in paper and glass manufacturing; coal and iron; craft, bench, and
assembly line industries. At the Baden Aniline and Soda Company of Ludwigshafen,
where the managers also comprised local leadership of the Liberal Party, the foremen
informed factory workers that anyone who voted for the Center or SPD parties against
the Liberal incumbent would be immediately dismissed. Firm owners could extract
oral or written promises, and threaten dismissal or foreclosure in the case of firm-
provides housing. The anti-SPD pressure was particularly strong in forestry, railways,
and heavy industry (including coal mines, processing of iron and steel, and production
of goods made of iron and steel). These industries had large workforces and strong
ties to the state. Even with the privatization of mining and forestry industry, managers
of these enterprises had often begun careers working for the bureaucracy. (As
discussed above, average firm size in these industries was much larger).
Major companies that explicitly threatened workers if they supported the SPD
included the largest heavy industry firms, such as Phoenix Steelworks,
96
Guttehoffnungshütte, the Krupp concern, firms in the Bochumer Verein, Hoesch,
Rhenisch Steelworks, and Burbacher Steel works in Saarbrücken. In a representative
example, after 1890 Krupp made his workers sign a pledge not to vote for the SPD,
and extracted similar promises from workers to not support the Christian Social
Verein, which was affiliated with the Center party (Möllers 1955). The Breslau
factory owner Hermann Seidel supported Conservative candidates for national
elections and coerced his workers into turning out to vote for them (Anderson 2000).43
In a revealing statement, the porcelain manufacturer Egmont Tielsch told Reichstag
investigators: ―The men named had been pointed out to me by a competent authority
as belonging to a Social democratic organization. I have posters in my factory making
it known that I will not keep Social Democrats in my employ, but will dismiss them
immediately…I expressed the wish that they then give me proof of their assurances by
abstaining them from the election on 17 February 1887. This they voluntarily
promised to do‖ (Anderson 2000, 200).
Another example of firm intimidation and revealed preference if workers voted
for the SPD came from Preuss and Company, a factory in Leipzig. The owner, in a
speech to his workers, stated: ―Each may vote freely…but consider the following
consequences: If the government party wins, then industry will flourish again, peace
will be maintained. If the opposition wins, then we will surely have war, and
immediately after such an election result we will dismiss half of the workers and have
43
Anderson discusses the case of Egmont Tielsch, a porcelain manufacturer. Before 1887 election, the
head painter in Tielsch‘s factory called painters to resign from Social Democratic glee clubs (2000,
199). Tielsch made clear that workers should vote for National Liberal industrialist candidate Egmont
Websky (200), and intimidated workers to do so, while getting them to see that to vote for Websky was
their own ―enlightened self-interest‖ (201). Tielsch said explicitly, ―Either each individual one of ye
gives me the promise that he will abstain from this election, or I‘ll sack the lot of ye immediately.Later
though canst vote for whomever thou willt, only not Socialist.‖
97
to introduce the eight-hour day [i.e., short hours]. All the other factories will find
themselves in the same situation. Therefore, workers, be well warned‖ (Anderson
2000, 203; Müller 1963). As discussed in section 1.1, the political authorities did not
view such efforts as illegal. Employer authority over workers was asserted through
supervisors: firms screened workers for union loyalty, SPD affiliation, political
Catholicism, and affiliation with left-liberal movements. Some firms only hired
Protestant workers because they were viewed to be less likely to affiliate with activist
unions (Spencer 1984, 84). The use of these screening processes as a separate
technique of repression is discussed below on labor-market intervention as a
repressive strategy.
The example of German railways illustrates the use of firm attempts to
intimidate voters into voting for preferred business interests. Politicians from the
Center Party and Progressive Party had opposed nationalization of German railways
because it would concentrate the voting blocs that these companies could generate in
the hands of the government. By 1888 the Prussian state had employed nearly
250,000 personnel; this company was the largest in Germany. The state-owned
companies performed extensive surveillance of the political views of workers and
forbade formation of trade unions in public sectors; as late as 1907 the German rail
companies outlawed festivals and public celebrations for Catholic or labor
organizations. Railway companies required employees to present on demand work
certificates (Arbeiter Nachweise), similar to what employer associations did, as
discussed in section two. This procedure facilitated screening out workers with
previous union histories. By 1890 the rapidly growing industry had 350,000
98
individuals, and 700,000 by 1910. Such intimidation of workers who affiliated with
unions or the SPD was prominent in Hanover, Silesia, Saxony, and Bavaria (Müller
1963).
Some firm owners questioned the cost of such repression. Krupp, before
turning to repression, mused, ―It costs thousands…and is it worth that much?‖ He
suggested that wholesale firing of SPD-affiliated with workers would naturally
drastically reduce the available labor supply. But Krupp‘s view changed. He put his
workers under surveillance, and sent stenographers to cover SPD rallies, arguing that
informants were necessary to uncover the extent of formal support of the SPD among
his workers.44
Krupp went from not caring, to adopting a repressive stance. ―If one
wanted to chuck the Social Democrats out…then all the people would have to be sent
away‖ (Anderson 2000, 221). His comment demonstrates awareness of the labor
market equilibrium conditions: the supply of workers available allowed him to
practice such repressive strategies.
Incidents of industrial conflict, discussed more extensively below, led directly
to repressive responses from firms that punished workers affiliated with unions
involved in the conflict. This was partially because such conflict could make SPD
electoral campaigns salient. For example, the large May1889 Ruhr miners‘ strike
involved 87,000 men and spread to Saar, Upper Silesia, and Saxony. SPD activists
used the strike as a rallying point for the 1890 national election; the SPD forced the
44
―Without secret police…we will not get shut out of the thing…‖; he posted political proclamations
in his factory and had them guarded (Anderson 2000, 222). Of course, there were scope conditions on
such repression. In 1877, Germany suffered a severe economic downturn, resulting in the mining
industry letting to 10 percent of the workforce. But Krupp‘s operations were expanding. The problem
is that with high worker demand, he found it more difficult to punish or fire workers for their SPD
allegiance. In fact in Krupp personally traveled to Berlin to plead the case of an SPD-affiliated worker
to allow him to keep his job (Anderson 2000, 222-23).
99
National Liberal incumbent, the landowner Ferdinand von Reden, into a runoff. Chief
Mining Director von Detten, who maintained the state‘s mining operations in the
Hameln district, argued that repression was a necessary response to the strike. The
miners‘ rebellion had reached Hameln‖ (Franz 1951). Von Detten reacted directly to
the 1890 electoral results: ―Be warned at this last minute, ye miners, thy work, thy
wage, thy pensions, thy support funds are all at stake if the Social Democrats move in
through thy support‖ (Anderson 2000, 205). Workers in mills, brickworks, and
glassworks, were threatened with dismissal if an SPD candidate won.
1.2.2 Connections between individual firms and the state
The previous section discussed prima facie evidence of state and individual
firm repression of workers and the general hostile legislative and judicial environment,
despite occasional victories. I now present more specific ways in which these
strategies dovetailed. The empirical implications in terms of testing the theory are
threefold. First, important representatives often also served in the state, either in a
bureaucratic capacity, or were in the legislature. Thus there was definitional
alignment of incentives—as representatives of firms and as part of the state, they
desired the same outcome. Second, through such an overlap in responsibilities, they
shared the costs of repression; such costs for the individual firm were lower if they
either in fact were or had informal affiliations with public officials who had direct
business representation. I provide evidence of this alignment in terms of the
connection between state repression and employer associations; firm support of
repressive political parties; and businessmen who also acted as agents of the state.
100
There were informal and formal affiliations between industrialists who led key
repressive employer associations, and politicians and bureaucrats who assisted
employer associations in their repressive activities. Sometimes prominent
industrialists or managers of employer associations also served as politicians.
Members of these associations allied mostly with the conservative wing of the
National Liberal Party, and supported Bismarck in the 1870s; this was not just because
of the anti-socialist laws in place but also due to his advocacy of naval expansion.
Prominent industrialists supported the Prussian Landtag National Liberal faction, and
voiced opposition to the SPD and Progressive parties. The Conservative party was
also considered useful to these firms and employer associations, but it was more
electorally weak in the Ruhr area and dominated by agrarian interests.45
Carl Lueg of
the GHH and Krupp had linkages to the Free Conservative (Frei Conservativ, FC)
party (Spencer 1984, 54).
The Ruhr business elite lobbied and established connections with the Prussian
Landtag House of Lords. In fact, some industrialists were appointed to House of
Lords; this was a way for ministerial bureaucracy to guarantee goodwill of
entrepreneurial elite. Krupp was appointed in 1901; Lueg in 1903, and Franz Haniel
in 1905. Krupp was the ―personal choice of the emperor‖ (Spencer 1984, 49). The
House of Deputies in Prussian Landtag also had a majority hostile to organized labor,
aided by the three-class voting structure.46
Coal, iron, and steel industrialists opposed
45
As Spencer writes, ―…close identification with the conservative party at the other end of the political
spectrum was impeded by the dominant role within it of eastern agrarian interests…‖ (1984, 54). 46
Voters in Prussia were divided into three classes according to amount in taxes they paid– each class
chose the same number of electors, who makes final choice of district‘s deputy—this heavily favored
101
any reform of the franchise of this body (Spencer 1984, 58). Of the 38 members of the
business elites in the Ruhr area, three were representatives in the Reichstag: August
Servaes of Phoenix (1880-85) and Eduard Kleine (1887-89) were representatives of
the National Liberal party, and Krupp (1893-98) was a member of the Free
Conservative party. Overall, the business elite that led repressive employer
associations during this time period generally resented any attempts of the state to
extend regulation of working conditions. They opposed universal suffrage and
adoption of the secret ballot in 1903.
There were important connections between these major firms and the state, in
particular local and national-level political elites. For example, Krupp in Essen
directly dictated the entire slate of voters in the first class in municipal elections in
Essen in 1874, 1896, and 1894. Krupp personally named one-third of Essen‘s
aldermen until 1918. The Krupp concern in Essen also had a company union that
explicitly supported NL candidates; such industrial authoritarianism happened at the
BASF in Ludwigshafen and the Howald concern in Kiel. BASF chemical workers
were expected to support the NL candidates. As another prominent example,
managers at the Bochum employer association (Bochumer Verein, BV) constituted
Bochum‘s entire first class; aldermen seats became the discretion of the BV‘s
directors. Even the second and third classes were dominated by Bochum
management. These same men were on the campaign committees for National Liberal
or Free Conservative Parties in national elections (Tenfelde and Volkmann 1981). 16
out of the 38 region‘s leading industrialists served on city councils (Anderson 2000,
the interest of wealthy industrialists. Until 1908 not a single Social Democrat was elected in the
Prussian Landtag (Spencer 1984, 58).
102
228).47
Louis Baare, the BV managing director from 1855 to1895, had connections to
other key political organizations: he was a deputy to the provincial diet and Prussian
Landtag; head of Bochum‘s Election Association; and was involved in financing of
National Liberal electoral campaigns. In fact, Baare helped script his district‘s Liberal
candidate‘s campaign policy views on social and economic questions: he threatened to
remove the BV‘s funding for the campaign and divert resources to the Free
Conservative party if his (Baare‘s) demands were not met.
1.2.3 Individual lobbying for anti-worker legislation
Firms also adopted individual-level repression by seeking state legislation that
would make it more difficult for workers to organize. As discussed in section one, the
legal environment in the early twentieth century was hostile to such organizations.
Repressive firms also managed to successfully defeat legislation that would have
increased the cost of such strategies. In 1885, the Center party sponsored legislation
to protect voter‘s freedom from threats to his employment. The bill was drafted by
Viktor Rinteln, a judge (Geheimer Oberjustizrat) in Berlin. Rinteln wanted to amend
civil code number 109; his proposed legislation would punish any employer who fired
or threatened with penalties a worker because of the exercise or non-exercise of
political opinions. Conservative and NL party representatives objected to the bill.
Anderson (2000) quotes a summary of conservative opposition to the legislation:
―Under what principle could the Reichstag deny a man‘s right to remove from his
47
When Karl Ferdinand Stumm in the Saar did not get his way in terms of fighting SPD, he withdrew
as a candidate, throwing pro-government region into disarray. Stumm allowed the Center party to win
the first round of election, forcing the right-wing party candidate into a runoff; after Stumm‘s transition
to serve in the Prussia‘ House of Lords, the Saar area reverted to normal Free Conservative/National
Liberal electoral pattern (Anderson 2000, 229).
103
payroll a person whose party characterized employers as bloodsuckers, parasites,
thieves, and called for their expropriation?‖ (Anderson 2000, 233; Möllers 1955).
Representatives of the Center party and SPD contended that this bill would protect the
principle of free elections. The Rinteln bill eventually failed, and the Reichstag would
not attempt to legislate directly against employer influence until World War I.
Another important debate over state-sanctioned repression was the
―penitentiary bill‖ (Zuchthausvorlage) which officially protected the actions of
strikebreakers, and allowed for firms to engage in anti-striker violence. This law
reduced the effectiveness of the strikes (Spencer 1984, 69).48
But prominent
industrialists including Bueck, Emil Kirdorf, and Hanns Jencke made a point of
emphasizing the threat of working classes in their support of the bill (Spencer 1984,
69, note 32). This legislation that would ultimately have benefited repressive
employers ultimately failed in the Reichstag, as the majority of National Liberals,
SPD, Center, and Progressive political party deputies voted against it. This legislative
failure caused Jencke to want the Ruhr elite to sever ties with National Liberal Party
(Spencer 1984, 70, note 34).49
This episode demonstrates that there were limits to state repression because of
electoral considerations and costs of repression. The situation was not a completely
one-sided class war were workers lost every battle: the state was willing to share in
some costs of repression, but not a sufficient amount. Industrialists were concerned
48
Some firms outside of the Ruhr heavy industry circles did not favor proposal, even firms that
operated within the ZDI. The chief opposition to the anti-worker bill came from German textile
manufacturers; their spokesman Karl Krafft claimed that the law was unnecessary. 49
This indicates that the National Liberals only real support of anti-worker initiatives came from the
right-wing faction of that party.
104
about this: in the 1908 meetings of the board of directors of a major business lobbying
association (discussed below), industry representatives fretted that the NL party had
drifted too leftwards for firms. After the failure of this legislation in 1899, these
repressive employer associations demonstrated less desire to be dependent on
government initiatives to share in the costs of repression. They turned to strategies
that member firms could pursue. Consistent with the theory presented chapter 3, firms
turned to bearing their own costs of repression (Niederschrift der Sitzung des
Direktoriums des Zentralverbandes deutscher Industrieller 1908; Spencer 1984)
1.2.4 Labor market strategies: blacklists and undermining workers
Section 1.2.1 documented directly how individual firms shared costs of
repression with the state to repress workers. This strategy was consistent with, and
facilitated by, the hostile attitude of the state apparatus towards the SPD. A direct
labor market strategy that dovetailed with this strategy was the use of the blacklist—
not employing workers who had previous union or SPD affiliation. Note that a
blacklist could be managed individually or collectively; the latter approach is
discussed in section 2. Their application was not restricted to heavy industry; textile
firms in Augsburg and chemical firms in Ludwigshafen used them as well.
Large firms in Imperial Germany also could engage in strategies to divide
workers, with the intent of preventing workers from joining an inter-firm union, or
union that would receive support from the SPD. This ―divide and conquer‖ strategy
involved giving some workers incentives not to join trade unions (Geary 1991, 143).
Some firms offered bonuses to workers who informed on their colleagues. Other
instruments of worker differentiation included different incentives for blue and white-
105
collar workers; physical separation of workers from different regions; exploitation of
ethnic tensions (between German and Polish workers for example); high
differentiation based on skills; and importantly, creation of company unions that
agreed to join broader inter-firm unions.
These firms also enjoyed an advantage in competing for workers—they had
lower labor costs per unit of production, and could offer higher pay and more benefits
to induce workers not to support unions. The costs of this strategy were low because
Krupp and other giant firms had less to worry about regarding labor supply, and had
more applicants (as opposed to SMEs). These company-specific ―yellow unions,‖ did
sometimes engender genuine loyalty among its members. They were useful for
detecting abuses of lower supervisory personnel, and grew after the massive strike
wave of 1903-06. By 1914 they had about 279,000 members and were strong in the
Ruhr and in mining, iron, steel, electrical, and chemical industries—industries that
comprised the vast portion of German output. For example, in BASF in
Ludwigshafen in 1913, company unions were supported by over half the labor force.
Over 80 percent of the Siemens workforce in Berlin in 1913 belonged to a company
union. These unions were important in administering company welfare schemes.
These company payments served as efficient wages according to the classical
economics literature. But an alternate purpose of these institutions was that they
helped large firms divide workers and prevent unions from gaining strength; they
reduced incentives of workers to go on strike or join alternative, more threatening
unions. The greatest extension of company welfare schemes and yellow unions came
after 1904 and were simultaneously implemented with repressive measures.
106
How replicable were the company-welfare schemes of BASF, Siemens, and
Krupp? They were not copied by the smaller concerns because such schemes were too
costly. Smaller firms, by contrast, were forced to conclude deals with strikers and
trade unions. Of the 1.4 million workers covered by collective wage agreements in
1913, two-thirds were in firms employing fewer than 20 workers. These were
generally in printing and construction (and related building trades); there were fewer
in metal work and textiles and none in mining (Geary 1991, 145). The printing
industry was dominated by small enterprises with higher skilled workers, and high
competition. These variables made collective collaborative strategies more viable
(Geary 1991, 146). The key difficulty though is distinguishing between the decisions
of firms to ascent to collective collaborative strategies because of the high costs of
repression, versus desiring such strategies because of joint incentives with workers to
invest in skills. In section 3.2, I discuss how the participation of these employer
associations that had made ―union concessions‖ supports the first explanation more.
This evidence demonstrates the use of repression by individual firms in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth century. In Section 2, I show how homogeneity within
sectors, characterized by higher levels of industrial concentration, as well as lower
heterogeneity across sectors—characterized by lower variance in the costs of
repression—facilitated the rise of collective organizations that eventually became
employer associations. Dissatisfaction with the unwillingness of the state to further
roll back workers‘ rights led to a substitution of collective for individual strategies.
These employer associations often performed similar strategies as described above,
and were seen as a more effective way to achieve labor market ends.
107
Section 2: Transition to Collective Strategies
In this section I first provide data on the spread of employer associations by
sector; I then turn to explaining the emergence of specific trade associations and their
transition to dealing with labor market issues and repressive strategies. I link the
emergence of such strategies to the threat posed by workers and the structural
conditions that enabled collective action. Throughout, I demonstrate the strategies of
these employer associations were similar to those at the individual level, only the
threat posed by workers allowed for such strategies to be more efficiently pursued
collectively.
2.1 Prevalence of collective strategies
In this section I document the advent and proliferation of collective strategies
among firms, in product and labor markets. This provides evidence of the
proliferation of collective strategies in different industries. The period
industrialization of Germany from 1871 was synonymous with an increase in trade
and then employer associations, many of which initially operated as cartels. The pre-
existing degree of coordination in product markets in the form of cartels facilitated the
transition and creation of organizations to coordinate responses to labor concerns.
Many initial trade associations gathered information from member firms to use for
lobbying purposes and managed quotas and prices in specific regions. These
associations formed at the local, regional (Länder), and national levels, and generally
operated with a specific territorial scope and/or over a specific industry.
In March 1903, Bueck presciently argued that in geographical or industrial
areas that did not have strong SPD support, the formation of pre-emptive employer
108
associations could actually provoke workers into joining trade unions and the SPD
(Saul 1974, 99). But firms could not ignore the fact that unions were much more
politically oriented; SPD gains in the Reichstag threatened employers. The question
was which instruments now could be used to counter this threat. As Geary describes,
before WWI, industrialists ―became increasingly shrill in their demands for state
intervention against pickets and unions‖ (Geary 1991, 151). The strategies discussed
above, including locking out workers, using blacklists, punishing workers for
supporting the SPD, and lobbying the state, could also be pursued collectively. As the
theory presented in chapter 2 discussed, firms are more likely to pursue collective
strategies as long as heterogeneity within the sector is low. This is because the cost of
joining the association and costs of enforcing the collective agreements are lower than
paying the cost individually.
The first recorded employer associations to form were the Association of
German Master Printers (Deutsche Buchdruckerverein) in 1868, in response to strikes
from the more centralized printers‘ union.50 Employer associations generally first
formed in these small-scale handicraft industries in the 1870s (Spencer 1984, 319).51
The earliest incarnations of coordinated market activity occurred in industries that
were less economically and politically influential. I discuss below, though, that even
for these industries, their development is consistent with the theoretical predictions.
In 1889, 14 employer associations formed; the following year there were 29
documented. Before the early twentieth century, much of the coordinated activity
among firms was occurring at the regional and local levels within important industrials
50
See Swenson (1989) and Kessler (1907). 51
These types of associations are emphasized in the account by Thelen (2004).
109
sector. I discuss in section 3.3 below, though, that even for these industries, their
development is consistent with the theoretical predictions.
However, eventually more important, associations formed later in the
industries of raw materials and manufactured goods. The development of employer
associations in industries that would run the German economy (heavy industry,
manufacturing of products based on such raw materials, chemicals) did not occur until
later, until the early 1900s. In these industries in the late 1890s and early 1900s, they
were dominated by large firms or concerns with mostly unorganized and unskilled
workforces. This was true as well for industries in metallurgy and chemicals. As
discussed, up until the early1900s, these large firms were capable of individually
paying the costs of repression in preventing skilled and unskilled workers from
organizing. Or, as in the Saar and Silesian areas, in concentrated industries like
mining, specific regional-industrial associations were sufficient to contain labor
disputes.
The main purposes of these employer associations that developed later in
major industries was protecting the supposed ―right to work‖ of workers and to assist
workers who were willing to work. As I discuss in Chapter 7, early associational
leaders in the United States used similar rhetoric against a much weaker labor
movement). This purpose applied to associations organized as well as the local and
industry levels (Saul 1974, 101). Before 1904, employer associations existed mainly
in areas of volatile union agitation, as well as in the Hansestädten in large German
cities in the north and south. In southern Germany, including the Saar area, Alsass-
Lorraine, and in Silesia, eastern Prussian provinces, where union density was
110
relatively lower, there were fewer institutionalized employer associations (Saul 1974,
101). For example, the Association of German Metal Industry (Gesamtverband der
Deutschen Metallindustriellen, GDM) and the Employer Association of Hamburg-
Altona (Arbeitgeberverband der Hamburger-Altona, AHA) were important industrial
and regional employer associations that responded to increasing union efforts. These
two associations also had ties with each other; the Hamburg Association of Iron
Industry (Hamburger Verband der Eisenindsutrie, HVE) was institutionally tied to the
GDM, and was the most important member association of the AHA.
I now turn to systematic data on the employer associations and their functions,
which only are available for a number of industries after 1909. What was the initial
scope and coverage of employer associations? Systematic data on the number of
employer associations and their functions only became available in 1909. Related data
on the diffusion and variation in employer associations, and their relevance to firms‘
interests, are discussed in the annual memoranda of a prominent trade association, the
Association for the Protection of Common Economic Interests in Rheinland and
Westphalia (Verein zur Wahrung der gemeinsamen wirtschaftlichen Interessen in
Rheinland und Westfalen). I discuss this organization, dubbed by Bismarck the
Langnam Verein (―Long-named Association‖) more extensively in this section below.
For ease of abbreviation, I refer to it by the acronym LNV hereafter. These
memoranda summarized and discussed the newly gathered government statistics
regarding the growth in employer associations in the twentieth century.
According to its 1909 memoranda, Germany had a total of 2,591 employer
associations. Of these associations, 127 were classified as independent associations
111
that were responsible for organizing membership of either member associations or
member firms. These associations had ―affiliate‖ associations that were ―sub
members.‖ Of these 127, there were 46 employer associations at the national level;
these associations had an additional 22 national-level, 212 regional-level, and 1,442
local-level associations attached.52
There were 38 independently operating regional
employer associations (Landes or Bezirk level); these associations had 16 sub-regional
and 80 local level associations connected to them. Finally, there were 43 independent
associations at the local level.53
The total number of firms covered by these associations was 159,304, many of
which were the largest firms in Germany; these member firms employed almost 3.7
million workers (Beumer 1909). The authors of the LNV memoranda also
optimistically pointed out that this total was much greater than the contemporaneous
union density, which was about 2.4 million at the time. In the memoranda for 1910,
the LNV also reported figures on the growth of employer associations, classified by
industrial sector. The number of firms that were member of associations fell to about
115,000, but the number of workers covered by such member firms increased to 3.85
million, again outpacing union growth. The major industrial sectors of minerals and
mining manufacturing metal products, and construction had the highest number of
employees who worked for firms that belonged to employer associations. In mining
52
Discrepancies between the LNV reported data and the 1909 data as reported by the German
government are discussed. 53
This data comes from the Mitteilungen des Vereins zur Wahrung der gemeinsamen wirtschaftlichen
Interssen in Rheinland und Westfalen, 1909 and 1910. In these discussions the original author is not
noted, though sometimes interjections are made by noted members, such as Wilhelm Beumer. More
information about specific associations is available from the German statistical yearbook, discussed
below. The LNV Mitteilungen discussions are of aggregate counts of associations, not discussions of
specific associational features.
112
and related industries, there were nine associations with about 240 member firms,
responsible for over 450,000 workers. In the industry of metal finishing and machine
building, there were 168 associations covering over 12,000 firms and 750,000
workers. In textiles, there were 88 associations covering 600 firms and 470,000
workers. The last ―major‖ associational industry, construction, had 1,226 associations
covering 51,000 firms and over 520,000 workers (Mitteilungen 1910, 231).
The data from the 1909 German statistical yearbook (Reich 1909) further
validate the claim that firms participated in collectivist strategies in the early twentieth
century, and that such participation was not limited to a few industries.54
The
government collected data and calculated a total of 46 national-level associations with
27 national-level associations as attached members, across all major industries. The
most important national-level associations, the Central Office of German Employer
Associations, and the Union of German Employer Associations, are discussed in
section 2. Other national-level associations with large numbers of member firms and
workers included the German Employer Associations for Construction (Deutscher
Arbeitgeber. F. d. Baugewerbe), with 21,000 firms and 250,000 workers; and the
Association of German Metal Industry (Gesamtverband Deutscher Metallindustrielle,
GDM), with 2,800 member firms and over 500,000 workers. In terms of services
rendered, 89 percent of associations collected data on member firms, and 77 percent
collected data on the employees of the member firms (data might include wages or
worker histories).55
In chapter 4, I use this data on national-level associations to
54
See the Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich (1909). 55
Examples of these early important employer associations include the Association of German Bottle
Manufacturers (Vereinigung deutscher Flaschenfabriken), the Union of German Boot and Last
113
systematically test which aspects of employer associations are more likely to predict
the use of specific collective strategies, namely the adoption of strike insurance.
More systematic data on employer associations by industrial sector exist for
the period 1911-1913. Table 4-1 displays characteristics of employer associations.
For simplicity of presentation the table displays period averages for a number of
characteristics by major industry category. The table shows the distribution of the
number of employer associations by industry for the period 1911-1913. I use the raw
data from the statistical yearbooks to calculate a number of indicators of each industry,
regarding the coverage of employer associations. Columns 2-5 display characteristics
of employer associations by industry, without reference to the number of firms and
workers in the industry as a whole. Columns 2, 3, and 4 display for each industry the
number of employer associations, member firms, and employed workers, respectively.
Column 5 displays the number of workers per association. The construction industry
had the highest number of associations in this period, with nearly 1,400. This industry
also had the highest number of firms that were members of employer associations,
with about 49,000 member firms employing over 500,000 workers. But the major
finished metals and manufacturing industries had associations with member firms
employing the most number of workers; over 860,000 workers were covered by such
associations. The mining industry had the highest ratio of workers per association,
nearing 50,000 workers per association.56
Manufacturers (Verband der deutschen Schuh- und Schäftefabrikanten), the General Union of German
Metal Manufacturers (Gesamtverband deutscher Metallindustrieller), and the Employers‘ Union of
Hamburg-Altona (Arbeitgberverband Hamburg-Altona). 56
The count of associations includes associations at the national, regional (Landes or Bezirk), and local
levels.
114
The two rightmost columns of Table 4-1, Columns 6-7, display characteristics
of employer associations with respect to attributes of the entire industry. The data on
characteristics of different industries come from the 1909 German Census (Statistik
des Deutschen Reichs).57
In chapter 4 I conduct more specific econometric tests using
such data. The columns display one basic measure of the degree of associational
coverage with respect to the number of firms and workers in the industry. Column 6
displays the ratio of the number of firms in the sector to the number of member firms
in the association. Column 7 displays the ratio of the number of workers employed in
the sector to the number of workers employed by member firms in the employer
associations of that sector. Lower ratios suggest that the given industry has
associations that encompass more of the industry‘s firms. For example, approximately
25 percent of all firms in the agricultural, polygraphics, and construction industries
were members of employer associations. If we consider the ratio of number of
workers in the sector to the number of workers employed by firms that are members of
employer associations (column 7), the ―most represented‖ industries are the three
aforementioned industries, as well as the most important industries of manufacturing
and mining and heavy industry, and textiles. Approximately one-third of workers in
manufacturing were in firms covered by employer associations; this ratio is estimated
to be one-half for the textile and raw materials/minerals industries. This sector
produced the largest amount of German output, and had many workers covered under
employer associations at the local, regional, and national levels.
57
See Statistik des Deutschen Reichs (1909)
115
These measures of ―organizational scope‖ likely underestimate the substantive
impact of these associations, as in many of the most important industrial sectors, the
most important members were the largest firms, discussed in detail below. This
evidence demonstrates the proliferation of collective strategies in Germany at this time
period, as well as their concentration in the most important industries. In chapter 5, I
use the data presented in Table 4-1 as well as further data on industry characteristics to
estimate the effect of industrial heterogeneity on adoption of collective strategies by
firms. I use similar data on industrial characteristics to predict which characteristics of
the national-level employer associations made them most likely to adopt the collective
strategy of strike insurance.
2.2: From individual to collective strategies: the formation of regional repressive
employer associations
Table 4-1 demonstrates the prevalence of collective strategies of firms in
Germany, although employer associations varied considerably in the degree of
collective action and obligations of member firms, as well as the actual services
provided to member firms. I now provide evidence on how the emergence of these
associations was due to increases in threats posed by unions. The most important
initial collective activities of firms were in cartels and trade associations in the
industries of coal, iron and steel manufacturing, and the finished goods used from
those inputs. These trade associations turned to repressive strategies against workers
in the early twentieth century.58
These trade associations, even before they shifted
58
They also formed to lobby for investments in transportation infrastructure, as well as government
recognition of official cartels. The most important cartels included the Rheinisch-Westfäliches
Kohlensyndikat, which formed in 1893; it was a very rigid cartel, represented 87 percent of all coal
116
resources to forming employer associations to deal with unionization and workers‘
demands, were involved in attempts to counter the increasing political contestation
and electoral success of the SPD.59
This section provides evidence that the threat posed by workers induced the
adoption of firms‘ collective repressive strategies. As I show below, a commonality of
these collective strategies was that they emerged in response to threats posed by
workers—either electoral threats posed by the SPD or unionization threats across
different industries. Once the redistributive threat by workers increased, firms had an
incentive to form associations to respond to the threat. Collective strategies in product
markets—the organization of cartels and a lobbying infrastructure (plus associational
personnel also serving in political capacities)—facilitated the creation of
organizations, with the same member firms responding to increasing contestation of
electoral districts by the SPD and increased unionization with repression (Spencer
1984; Mitteilungen der ―LNV‖ 1909, 1910). These regional and sector-level
associations came to overtake unions in numerical strength and defeated them in
industrial disputes (Geary 1991, 144).
Incidents of industrial conflict provided crucial movements for collective
mobilization of firms within regions and industrial sectors as well as among regions
and sectors. These incidents included demands for strikes; actual strikes; and
produced in Dortmund. It was more difficult to form cartels in the steel industry due to higher product
diversity. The Stahlwerksverband formed in 1894, representing 84 percent of steel production in Ruhr. 59
Additionally, some cartels had provisions which compensated members for lost output during
industrial conflict. For example, coal syndicates had provisions where member firms would take over
supply functions and compensate firms for losses during industrial conflict. But these cartels did not
have formal procedures for joint lockouts or collaborate with other sectors or associations. It was
members of these cartels that eventually saw the need to use their existing collective institutional
infrastructure to form employer associations (Spencer 1984)
117
sympathy walkouts by workers. To be sure, there was much variation in the
approaches and reasons for conflict across different industrial sectors and firms.
Similarly, when such conflict occurred in proximity of national elections, the
redistributive threat posed by workers‘ organizations was made even more salient. As
discussed in chapter 3, the ability of firms to pursue collective lockouts was an
important repressive strategy in response to demands from workers and initial
industrial conflict. Lockouts were often used in anticipation of strikes or in response
to strikes. During major incidents of industrial conflict in this time period, they
allowed for firms to further mobilize. In observing the problems caused by strikes,
Heinrich Kamp of the Phoenix industrial concern argued that employer organizations
were needed before, rather than after industrial conflicts.60
Employer associations
resorted to lockouts and occasionally police backing of such lockouts to prevent
pickets. Such techniques increased during recessions. Lockouts increased during the
1901-02 recession; 600,000 male-worker days were lost; this increased to 1.3 million
in 1903, and 1.7 million in 1904, to 4.4 million in 1905 (Spencer 1984, 106, note 37).
Where did lockouts happen? Lockouts were most prevalent in handicrafts and
finished product manufacturers–metal, construction, machine building, electrical
industries (Spencer 1984 106, note 39) These industries made extensive use of
lockouts, and had common employment of high percentage of skilled workers and
already highly developed organizations of both labor and management. Note,
however, as discussed in chapter 2, collective lockouts imposed costs on firms as well,
and thus were not the first preferred strategy. Where employers were not already
60
Spencer 1984, 104, note 32
118
highly organized, the lockout was ineffective. Firms in highly concentrated mass
industries could use other low-cost methods to repress workers. As Spencer writes,
the ―…the employer had to be certain that other employers in the same or related
industries would not hire his workers, and if need be, would even instigate sympathy
lockouts…where workers were not highly organized, as in the primary iron and steel
industry, a lockout was not necessary. Less drastic methods sufficed‖ (Spencer 1984,
106). Large firms with unskilled workers had alternative repressive strategies besides
mass lockouts—they could just dismiss workers summarily, and undermine unionism.
By contrast, coal, iron, and steel firms were reluctant to dismiss entire workers who
were already hard to recruit in coal. One fear, more extensively discussed below, was
that large firms did not want to lock out workers and drive them into unions (Spencer
1984, 106, note 40).
2.2.1 Regional coordination in coal mining
I now turn to specific cases of industrial conflict and the threat posed by
workers as a mobilizing incentive for the shift to collective strategies to deal with
workers. In 1858, an influential mining association, the Bergbau Verein (BV) formed
in the Ruhr area formed to secure cheaper and more efficient transportation, and
coordinated with other mining associations. The BV became the main economic
association representing Ruhr mining, particularly regarding relations with state
(Spencer, 1984). What kinds of industrial disputes faced the BV and similar
associations? The regulation of the workday was an obvious central issue. In the
mining industry, the main concern was penalties of the Wagenullen—employers‘
refusing payment for underperforming or insufficient loads of coal; similarly disputes
119
existed regarding whether workers would be paid in the rolling mills for producing
low quality sheet metal. Other issues of dispute included non-uniform policies; forced
overtime and Sunday work; and arbitrary re-calculation of wage rates. A critical
problem for firms was the continuous production with rolling mills, and irregular
pauses regarding problems with processing molten metal. Disputes existed over the
separation of workers into 12-hour versus eight-hour shifts (a transition to three shifts
would have caused increases in labor costs and worker shortages) (Spencer 1984, 115,
note 2).
In May 1889 the first major mass strike in mining occurred since 1873. 87,000
out of 104,000 Ruhr miners struck. The main issues were regulation of miners‘
demands for eight-hour shifts as opposed to existing 12-hour shifts. It was a serious
enough disturbance that the Prussian Ministry of the Interior and provincial governors
discussed the possibility of extending the civil forces (i.e. state police or municipal
police, instead of using military assistance (Johansen 2004). The behavior of the BV
and its employer association demonstrate the importance of repression as a response,
both in terms of collective action against firms as well as associational lobbying of the
state. The BV was the employer association that was most hurt by the strike and it
initially rejected any industry-wide negotiation with worker representatives; opening
negotiations would be an automatic concession (Spencer 1984, 64). It also opposed
state intervention to preserve their autonomy in negotiations with unions; this
displeased state authorities, as Chancellor William II wanted to avoid a protracted
labor dispute. Friedrich Hammacher, chairman of the BV as well as deputy for the
National Liberal Party in the Reichstag, eventually entered into negotiations with the
120
miners‘ representatives and urged firms to engage in negotiations with miners
(Spencer 1984, 65, note 8). This government interference irked the BV members (the
mine owners), who thought Hammacher had betrayed them; he was replaced as head
of the BV in 1890 by the hardliner Hanns Jencke. Jencke pursued a strategy after
1890 of constantly supporting firms in violating contracts with workers. For example,
Jencke successful convinced his fellow industrialist Krupp to purge all workers who
were Social Democrats from his firm (Spencer 1984, 67). This industrial incident
demonstrates the importance of a threat from workers in terms of repressive responses,
both political and direct labor market intervention.
The recession years of 1908-09 allowed the industrial elite in heavy industry
the opportunity to increase repressive strategies against workers, who were in a more
vulnerable position (Spencer 1984, 114). In 1908, the BV founded another important
trade association that was more oriented towards the large industrial concerns, the
Zechenverband (ZB). The ZB was designed to manage conflict against workers and to
respond to unionization concerns, and inhibited unionization in the coal mines
(Spencer 1984, 104, note 35). The ZB disseminated anti-worker propaganda and
coordinated efforts to prevent firms from acceding to trade union demands among pre-
existing local organizations. It was intended to advertise to workers and the general
public that industrialists were meant to be unified, to publicize, and to deter workers‘
efforts at organization. The ZB ―…included almost all important leaders of Ruhr
mining‖ (Spencer 1984, 105).
The BV and ZB use these strategies to regulate employment on a permanent,
industry-wide basis, using the information on worker lists as a weapon. Industrial
121
concentration and the design of formal associations facilitated such action (Spencer
1984, 108). Members of the mining employer associations were obligated to not to
employ workers for at least six months if they had failed to give proper notice since
leaving their last job, or had previous ties to unions; employers who were discovered
to have not complied were fined 1,000 marks for each violation. Lists of names of
workers who were not to be employed circulated among firms (Spencer 1984, 107, fn
46). Blacklist or ban on workers with previous SPD ties was enforced in the Ruhr area
except in a few small mines outside the Zechenverband.61
As a result of this collective
repression, by 1910, in the coal mining industry, only 82 individuals were covered by
collective wage agreements. This is the canonical highly cartelized and concentrated
sector with effective repressive employer organizations that employed both yellow
unions and repression. The workforce was generally unskilled, though higher wages
were needed to attract workers to the more dangerous and isolated mining areas.
There were similar circumstances in the chemical and electrical industries, textiles,
and sections of engineering (Geary 1991, 146).
2.2.2 Regional coordination in heavy industry and beyond
61
There were extensive Reichstag debates on this black list issue (Spencer 1984, 108, fn 48). Some of
the more left-wing NL politicians and business lobbyists like Gustsav Stresemann spoke against bans
and blacklists (Spencer 1984, fn 49). These worker blacklists in the coal industry were replaced by a
less extreme form of labor exchanges, discussed above (Arbeitsnachweise) (Spencer 1984, 108). How
did these ―labor exchanges‖ work? They let workers know when and why they were being punished and
provided possibilities for appeal (Spencer 1984, 109). They were a little less repressive, but still
preserved firm autonomy in dealing with unions. However, the Ruhr iron and steel producing and
consuming firms declined to follow the lead of coal industrialists in creation of labor exchanges. Major
firms rejected such a labor-controlling proposal in 1914. The Phoenix steelworks argued that the
interests of iron and steel were different from those of coal industry; the coal industry was more
cohesive, had a greater homogeneity of work force, and therefore regional coordination was easier. But
the key reason for the RHI rejection of the policy was that the creation of labor exchanges would
destroy good relations between Ruhr metallurgical concerns and their workers, and would have given
the unions a further basis for agitation (Spencer 1984, 109, fn 56). This is evidence consistent with the
theory: permitting labor exchanges would have led to higher costs of repression. Thus the original
strategy of repression using lower cost strategies was preferred.
122
In 1874, the largest industrial businessmen in iron and steel formed the
influential Association of German Iron and Steel Industrialists (Verein deutscher
Eisen- und Stahlindustrieller, VdESI). The VdESI‘s initial goal was also to lobby for
tariffs on competing goods. The VdESI was composed of eight sub-groups, including
six regional groups and two groups representing industrial branches that also included
finishing and manufacturing firms. The VdESI also formed as a reaction to the
depression of 1873, and supported the alliance between heavy industry and large
agriculture estates.62
The six regional groups of the VdESI were the Northwest, East,
Central German, North German, South German regions, each with their own
respective branch offices. The two groups of industrial branches were the North
German Railroad Car Builders Association and the Association of German
Shipbuilders. Among these eight groups, the Northwest Group (NWG) had the most
influence on the VdESI‘s policy positions (Poensgen 1929). This association also had
firms that produced finished manufacturing goods as well, and more industrially
complex firms such as the electro-technical giant Siemens–Schukert concern.63
The
Southern and Central German groups were composed almost entirely of machine
construction works (Kaelble 1967; Feldman and Nocken 1975).64
62
The VdESI members coordinated on hours and over-time regulations. Within the VdESI, there were
distributional concerns between large and small firms. In May 1913, the problem of excessive overtime
was discussed; they tried to reduce voluntarily excessive hours. One problem was that smaller, less
modern, and less diversified firms did not want to implement changes (Spencer 1984, 137, fn 45). The
substitution of shifts was harder for such firms because of higher labor costs and difficulty in finding
workers; there the ―…problem of obtaining enough additional workers was a bigger obstacle‖ (Spencer
1984, 138). 63
Feldman 1975, 417 64
See Winschuh (1932). As an example of coordinated lobbying for repressive measures, members of
the Northwest Group had specific meetings to discuss government regulation in workers‘ affairs. On
February 6 and September 23, 1908, representatives met in Düsseldorf to discuss problems of
government intervention, and agreed not to concede to calls for more collaborative strategies with
workers (Spencer 1984, 116). Each employer was to send a letter to the Regierungspräsident of the
123
These associations expressed opposition to government efforts to intervene in
labor markets and internal operations of firms. Their lobbying efforts were a reaction
to perceived encroaching government authority. For example, the above associations
protested the proposed government introduction of worker safety inspectors
(Sicherheitsmänner) in 1909. Employer associations and firms that were members of
the Bochumer Verein and the Northwest Group regularly condemned working-class
presses. These associations also made financial contributions to Reichstag parties
(Spencer 1984, 118, note 18). During the 1907 election campaigns, the Northwest
Group and the Bergbau Verein, contributed 15,000 marks. Krupp director Alfred
Hugenberg tried to centralize political tactics and sought to coordinate political
financing; he wanted all contributions from the BV to go through his office, and
wanted to make sure that financial aid resulted in benefits for donors (Spencer 1984,
119; (Weisbrod 1978). (Hugenberg‘s extremism and further attempts at centralizing
repressive strategies are discussed in Chapter 6). Managing Director Paul Reusch of
the GHH wanted the Northwest Group to be involved in more anti-socialist interest
groups (Spencer 1984, 55). In fact, Reusch sponsored the anti-socialist interest group
the Deutsche Vereinigung, which was formed in 1908.65
The logic of collective repression as a response to the threat posed by workers
extended is evidenced in the behavior and formation of the Northwest Group. Two
district in which his firm was located, asking that he be given the privilege of limiting workers‘ lunch
breaks. These protest letters were sent regardless of whether the sender viewed longer breaks as costly
(Spencer 1984, 116). 65
Resuch threatened to resign from the Northwest Group of the Association of German Iron and Steel
Industrialists and its employer association, the Arbeitnordwest, if those organizations denied his request
for a contribution to the Deutsche Vereinigung. Although these industrialists despised hated social
democrats and some even universal suffrage, some thought that political activities did divert them from
more useful work (Spencer 1984, 56).
124
strikes by skilled ironworkers in Dortmund in 1905 increased interest in the
association.66
However, even within the relatively homogeneous membership of the
organization, there were different costs of repression among member firms, and such
cleavages undermined its effectiveness. There was a split between iron and steel
producers and iron and steel consumers. Primary producers thought the finished
product firms were too conciliatory towards workers; symmetrically, the machine-
building firms thought iron and steel producers were too rigid, and that their repressive
tactics, ―invited attacks from labor‖ (Spencer 1984, 104, note 34). The producers were
able to dictate policy because they were the dominant supplier for metal industries in
the region. This cleavage between these kinds of producers would affect firm
strategies toward workers during Weimar Germany, discussed in Chapter 6.
The repressive efforts of the NWG are also discussed in the memoranda of the
aforementioned Association for the Protection of Common Economic Interests in
Rheinland and Westphalia (the ―LNV‖, formed in 1871). The LNV formed to manage
cartels (quotas and prices); lobby for transportation infrastructure spending; and lobby
for higher tariffs.67
The LNV was founded by the major iron, textile, and coal
concerns in Rheinland and Westfalen. These associations in heavy industry generally
formed initially. The founding members of the LNV were all influential industrialists
in heavy industry and had investments in other firms, and some would become
―association men,‖ that is men who in addition to their posts as firm owners, would
manage funds and institutional structures for collective organizations. Prominent
66
Spencer 1984, 104, note 33 67
See Winschuh (1932); 1886 and 1907 reports of the Verein zur Wahrung der gemeinsamen
wirtschaftlichen Interessen in Rheinland und Westfalen (1886).
125
members included William Thomas Mulvany, who had founded the Prussian Mining
Stock Company (Preussische Bergwerks- und Hütten-Aktiengesellschaft, PBHAG)
and was one of the founding members of the LNV; Ernst Poensgen of
Stahlwerksverband-AG; Paul Reusch of the Gutehoffnungshütte (GHH); and Fritz
Springorum of Gelsenkirchener Bergwerks-AG. These men would represent the
―Herr-im-Haus‖ attitude that of large firms that guarded their autonomy against the
incursion of workers. As Chapter 6 discusses, some of these men would become
important in the inter-war German period for trying to revive the repressive tactics that
they employed in the early twentieth century.
The memoranda provide useful clarification as to what firms thought at the
times the best benefits of collective strategies against workers were. The LNV
discussed both the NWG‘s and its own valuing of the importance of a counter-
response to union mobilization and electoral contestation of the SPD. The reports
praised the anti-labor and union restricting activities employer associations, in
particular their role in defending against strikes and their role in managing
employment exchanges. The LNV credited employer associations with helping to
exhaust union treasures during industrial conflicts, and saving firms from long, drawn
out lockouts. The reports also discuss supporting the coal industry during industrial
conflict, even though some coal industry firms were not formally affiliated with the
LNV. The memoranda also detail their opposition to collective agreements; the
organization‘s support for peak associations‘ positions in recent industrial disputes and
support of firms in the printer trades (though the specific conflict and region were not
mentioned in the discussion). The report authors also approvingly cite other
126
interventions of peak employer associations‘ roles in helping firms win those battles,
and the importance of employer associations to restrain demands of workers and
combat their radical tendencies (Mitteilungen 1909, 217).
These reports also discussed the treasures of trade unions and compared
membership growth in the unions versus the count of member firms in employer
associations. Beumer mentioned the ―willingness of workers to be ‗victims‘‖ during
industrial conflict, and that firms should have a similar degree of fortitude
(Mitteilungen 1909, 217). (The LNV report estimated total trade union membership at
2.5 million, with a treasury of approximately 41 million marks, down from the
previous year‘s estimate of 57 million marks). The report also mentioned the specific
threat posed by social democratic unions and their role in promoting other labor
organizations. Beumer in the report also exhorted employer associations and member
firms to recognize the importance of the political intervention in assisting firms.
In the 1910 report, the LNV noted the smaller union growth , crediting
employer associations for the higher relative growth in employer organizational
membership, from 3.9 million workers, as compared to 3.7 million from the year
before (though membership declined to slightly 115,000).68
The report also noted the
strength of the employer associations in the construction, metal, and textile industries,
as well as iron and mining. They warned not to let down after their initial successes,
and to prevent member firms from signing agreements with unions. The strikes and
organizations in the construction and shipping industries demonstrated the need for
employer associations to ―remain vigilant‖ (Mitteilungen, 1910).
68
They noted that union growth was smaller: overall trade unions, there was an increase in 46,000 as
opposed the 200,000 more workers that associations were responsible for.
127
LNV reports from this time period also summarized the discussion from a
meeting from the Northwest Group of the VdESI of that year (1909, 218). The
Northwest Group also referred to the ―secret terror‖ of trade unionists. (Mitteilungen,
1910, 232). The Northwest Group report praised the reduced number of strikes as a
result of the successful unification of firms. Like the LNV, the Northwest Group also
compared the growth trends in trade unions to that of employer federation. The
Northwest Group report concluded that in light of unions‘ increased militancy,
cooperative strategies were not possible. The group also praised recent efforts of the
association to gather data, and how the circulation such data on worker histories and
wages were useful in efforts to end industrial conflict, such as the strike in Aachen in
1906.69
The LNV then went on to discuss recent efforts of the national government to
collect data on employer associations. The Northwest Group praised the higher
number of workers who were employed by member firms of employer associations, as
opposed to unionized workers—they compared the former count of 3,648,579 workers
to the unionized number of 2,421,185. The Northwest Group also noted that there
would be a merger between the two peak employer associations at some point, and
praised the recently signed cartel contract between the two associations. The
Northwest Group report discussed the ―pressure‖ and ―counter-pressure‖ logic of
employer associations versus unions, and in particular emphasized that employer
organizations needed to form to respond to the ―arbitrariness‖ of the disputes initiated
by the powerful social democratic unions. They argued that the importance of the
69
The Northwest Group report also noted positive trends in the organization‘s five-year history and
most recent trends.
128
financial defense provided by employer associations could not be captured by data
alone.
The Northwest Group discussions also argued against collective agreements
and how they bound workers. The NWG report discussed collective bargaining
statistics: 2,090 collective bargaining agreements/associations. The metal working
industry had 128 such agreements, covering 230,195 workers. These agreements
generally covered the handicraft industry; an agreement covered on average about 11
firms and 10 workers. The group positively interpreted this data: the iron industry
though had on average only 14.4 percent coverage in firms with more than 50
workers, while the participation of workers of that firms of that size was about 60
percent of working population. Thus the Northwest Group was satisfied with the
efforts of the industry thus far in resisting collective agreements.70
Influential trade associations that would develop repressive strategies also
formed in industries that did business with the above associations—in particular
industries that purchased input materials from the firms and cartels represented by the
above economic associations. These associations also had large firms, but with more
skilled and complex products. The Association of German Machine Builders (Verein
deutscher Maschinenbauanstalten, VDMA) was founded in 1892 by 27 firms that
were economically linked with the iron industry. Its goal was to coordinate with the
mines and steel mills that they supplied with machinery (Feldman and Nocken 1975,
420). By 1914, the VDMA had 246 member firms covering 189,000 workers. The
VDMA had a cartelized agreement with the VdESI, under which member firms
70
The LNV also noted concerns about anti-picketing legislation.
129
received export rebates were granted by the VdESI to member firms. Disputes existed
regarding the amount of export rebates, as the steel cartels that constituted the VdESI
and ZDI dictated that only member firms could benefit from such rebates. As within
the Northwest Group, the cartelized agreements between these two factions of capital
would play an important role in helping repressive strategies during the Weimar era;
by 1923, 90 percent of machine construction industry firms belonged to the VDMA.
Of course, the opposition to increased unionization and collective bargaining
was prevalent in other sectors. But, in other industrial and more heterogeneous
sectors, the relative quiescent labor movement meant that firms did not need to bear
the costs of forming an interventionist, repressive employer association: individual
firm repression was sufficient, and thus employer associations were less substantively
important for industrial conflict. The interest group association representing the
chemical industry, the Association for Protection of the Interests of Chemical Industry
in Germany (Verein zur Wahrung der Interessen Chemischen Industrie Deutschland,
VWICID) for example, warned against unionization (Saul 1974, 76). At this time in
the early twentieth century, the chemical industry was relatively strike free and
employed unskilled workers (Saul 1974, 108). The chemical industry became more
organized in a formal association in 1913. In February 1904, representatives of the
Chemieverein, argued that ―…a need for an employer organization does not exist in
the chemical industry, since the relationship between employers and working takers
was satisfying generally so far‖ and ―…the union of the employers would presumably
drive workers into the arms of social democracy,‖ referring to workers who were not
yet unionized (Saul 1974, 108). These concerns were similar to concerns expressed by
130
Bueck: forming pre-emptive employer associations in areas where the workers posed
little redistributive threat would only backfire. This further indicates that collective
repression was more likely a response to the threat posed by workers.
2.3. Transition to national collective repression
Many of the cartels and concerns that were influential in forming the LNV and
VdESI then formed the national level industrial association, the Central Association of
German Industry (Zentralverband der Deutschen Industrie, ZDI) in 1876, which
claimed to speak for all of German industry, but its leadership was in reality composed
of heavy industry firms. The ZDI had institutional ties with the VdESI, LNV, and
NWG. Like the other sector-level associations, the ZDI‘s initial purpose was to lobby
for tariffs. Henry Axel Bueck was leader of the LNV and NWG in 1873, and between
1893 and 1912 was the business leader (Geschäftsführer) of the ZDI and the VdESI.71
There was much firm and personnel overlap within this constellation of associations.
The personnel that lead the Northwest Group of the VdESI were also leaders within
the LNV as well as the ZDI. These association managers also had overlapping roles in
politics, discussed more in section two of this chapter. Wilhelm Beumer was the
business manager of the LNV and Northwest Group within the VdESI; he also served
as a member of the executive committee of the ZDI and as a Deputy in the Prussian
Lower House and the Reichstag. Bueck was business manager of the VdESI and the
ZDI and a member of the Prussian House of Deputies.72
71
Spencer 1984. In a letter from Bueck to Alexander Tille, Bueck lamented the influence of social
democratic ―theories‖ and the public hostility towards firms (Bueck 1901). 72
The NL party was divided in terms of business support. Only a minority—conservative parties and
the right wing of National Liberals, supported heavy industry consistently.
131
As with the industrial and regional-level evidence, the most direct evidence
supporting the link between the threat posed from workers and the formation of
national-level repressive employer associations comes from the numerous initial
statements of the leaders of these associations when they took on responsibilities
regarding industrial relations, or founded affiliated associations to handle relationships
with workers. The founders of the ZDI clearly expressed their preferences against
cooperative strategies towards workers. The ZDI in early circulars opposed any
negotiations with trade unions. Bueck remarked in 1890 that union interference in
production would be firmly rejected employers, and that the ZDI would never
negotiate with unions. Similarly, a 1905 ZDI declaration said that collective
agreements with workers would not be pursued, out of concern of appeasing their
radical notions.73
Bueck remarked: ―The employers‘ organizations have for their
object a common defense against the unjustified efforts and claims of the workers and
their organizations, who seek to impose uniform labor conditions or to interfere in the
administration of undertakings, and the organization of resistance to projected strikes‖
(Krüger 1926, 330).74
Their goal was ―…solely resistance to excessive and unjustified
claims and measures of organized labor‖ (Krüger 1926, 331). The employer
organization‘s function was to support individual firms, and to help them to prevent
threatened strikes, or to resist strikes forced upon them. Bueck succinctly captured the
importance of collective repression: ―The spirit of solidarity among employers needed
73
See Kessler (1907), and the ZDI resolution May 5th, 1905. 74
Krüger does not provide the original documentation for this quote, but similar sentiments are
expressed in the aforementioned letter to Alexander Tille in 1901 as well as in Bueck‘s autiobiography.
See Bueck (1997).
132
to be aroused and continually strengthened, until individual interest came to accept the
principle of voluntary submission to the common interest‖ (Krüger, 1926, 331).
To that end the ZDI founded the German Employer Newspaper (Deutsche
Arbeitgeber Zeitung, DAGZ), which argued that employer associations need to defend
against unions and social democracy and urged disorganized firms to join
organizations. Articles in the DAGZ referred to the importance of workers‘ class
consciousness as a threat, and the danger of firms being lost to union influence.
Members of the ZDI argued that higher coordination among employer associations
was a necessary response to the strengthening social democratic movement, as seen in
SPD‘s improved electoral performance in 1903. By this time, the SPD increased the
number of districts they contested in to over 90 percent of all districts. The ZDI
supported the formation of interest group associations that wanted to reduce in the
influence of the SPD, including the National Association against Social Democracy
(Reichsverband gegen die Sozialdemokratie, RGS); Bueck thought at the time that
these anti-worker and anti-democratic interest groups could work with German
political parties. The 1903 Reichstag electoral results symbolized ―flammable writing
on the wall.‖
Members of the ZDI supported restricting the franchise and became
disillusioned with a majority of parties in the Reichstag that did not. By the early
1900s, only the Free Conservative party and National Party supported such measures.
Regarding political interventions, employer associations wanted to support only
reliable candidates would ―energetically represent‖ business interests. After 1903,
Bueck hoped to form an ―industrial-conservative‖ party that, given the difficulties in
133
enacting franchise restrictions, would at least reduce the political clout of the Center
party and SPD. They turned to other measures utilizing instruments between firms
and in the workplace to restrict demands from workers. To respond, institutional
organizers had to mobilize existing local-level associations (Saul 1974, 102). Articles
in the DAGZ specifically called for a joint effort of bottom up (using pre-existing
local level employer associations) and top down (powerful sector-level associations
would have to organize peak federations). This movement was against not just unions,
but against the threat of social democratic ideology.75
ZDI staff also expressed concern about the effective limits to the cooperation
with the state in terms of repression. Industry representatives expressed some
suspicions of the pro-labor leanings of the Center party, and concern that the National
Liberal party had drifted leftwards. There was explicit concern that elections might be
called early, and thus they pushed for a larger effort on election spending against SPD
candidates. However, these trade associations also decided against forming a central
political association that would be directly linked to a supportive political party,
particularly the Free Conservative Party. The argument against such a move was that
they were afraid of popular backlash of obvious association of employer associations
with just one political party. Industry representatives at the CDI meeting advocated
instead local level funding against SPD candidates (Niederschrift der Sitzung des
Direktoriums des Zentralverbandes deutscher Industrieller 1908).
75
Geary writes, ―…the wave of organization that embraced German industrialists between 1905 and
1913 and which saw the creation of the yellow unions came in the wake not only of the great
Crimmitschau strike but in the wake of impressive Social Democratic gains in elections to the
Reichstag‖ (Geary 1991, 151).
134
The ZDI also battled legislation that would have forced collaborative strategies
with workers. In February 1908 the Reichstag accepted a resolution from the Center
party that would have allowed for collective bargaining in the maritime and shipping
industries.76 Acceptance of the resolution and similar legislation could have
legitimized or supported similar demands for such legislation or outcomes in other
industries. The Center party in fact hoped that this resolution would help the Christian
trade unions in the Saar and Ruhr areas. The Center, Social Democratic, and National
Liberal parties supported this proposed legislation.
The industry that would be most directly affected by this legislation, the
shipbuilders, opposed this resolution; the Association of German shipyards lobbied
against it and warned that union approval of collective agreements would be grounds
for an industry-wide lockout. The resolution, they argued, would threaten the industry
and the existence of the federation. The ZDI argued against legislation; as noted, the
ZDI viewed collective agreements as a symbol of workers‘ rights that could not be
tolerated. Other employer associations argued that if this resolution were adopted by
the naval authority, shipyards and the metallurgical plants in the Ruhr and Saar areas
would also have been forced to negotiate collective agreements with workers as well,
in conjunction with smaller firms in these industries. The VDMA, which was
composed of firms with higher skilled workers, also opposed introduction of
mandatory collective bargaining (Saul 1974, 62, note 67). In fact the ZDI observed
the higher influence of workers within the VDMA after some member firms
negotiated agreements, and used that as evidence against further provisions (Saul
76
This was accepted on February1, 1908 by a vote of 213 to 67. See Saul 1974, 63.
135
1974, 62). The opposition of the VDMA and similar industries that had higher skilled
workers demonstrates that even in industries composed largely of higher skilled
workers, there was opposition among firms of collaborative strategies. Both
associations argued that proposed resolution would also have undermined firms‘
abilities to fire workers for union associations. Thus other employer associations had
incentives to oppose the adoption of collective bargaining in related industries. This is
indicative of a pattern of behavior where employer associations composed of larger
firms made efforts to prevent the extension of collaborative strategies in other
industries.
Opposition to these proposals regarding collective bargaining existed outside
the economically powerful Ruhr area and heavy industry. In Bavaria, for example, the
Bavarian Industry Association (Bayerischen Industriellen-Verband, BIV) expressed
opposition. The BIV counsel Alfred Kuhlo, speaking for the association‘s member
firms, referred to collective agreements as a source of ―eternal discord,‖ and that firms
that signed collective agreements increased worker agitation and interest in unions;
firms bound by collective agreements were under the ―constant control‖ of trade
unions (Saul 1974, 63).77
In 1905, both the BIV and ZDI had lobbied against the
proposal of the Bavarian Prime Minister to legalize and enforce collective bargaining.
Additionally, the Association of Bavarian Metal Industries (Verband Bayerischer
Metallindustrieller, VBM) publicly argued that these proposals would only lead to the
77
These appear in Saul 1974, notes 70-71. The original source is a 1913 letter from Kuhlo.
136
―conquest‖ of trade unions and successfully demanded a withdrawal of the order (Saul
1974, 63).78
In June 1908, representatives of the Prussian and national interior ministries
expressed opposition to legislative interference in the independence of firms. They
also noted that such an attempt to regulate working conditions in the maritime industry
could easily spread to others (as the industry associations had argued). Executive
authorities in the Prussian and national bureaucracies ended up pulling their support
for such measures, due partially to industry pressure. Still, despite their success, they
complained of the state‘s inability to suppress increasing demands from workers.
Section 3: The Creation of Peak Level Employer Associations
Section 2 documented the advent of regional trade associations that shifted to
collective repression institutions in response to the threat posed by workers. These
trade associations were composed of individual firms that throughout the late
nineteenth century had initially acted individually. In this section I demonstrate with
more specific evidence that collective repressive strategies emerged as a result of the
increased threat posed by workers, and the lower costs of adopting a collective
response. The major industrial and regional associations described above, particularly
in coal, iron, and steel, had formalized relations among many of the largest firms in
terms of cartelization and lobbying mechanisms. But these did not coordinate
formally with respect to industrial relations until labor strife and the electoral threat
posed by the SPD and the redistributive threat posed by social democratic labor unions
78
See Steller (1906). At this time, there were some stipulations of collective bargaining in Hessen and
Würrtemberg that only affected the printing and construction industries, and were less of a concern to
manufacturing industries elsewhere.
137
increased in the early twentieth century. This latter threat was punctuated by the
Crimmitschau strike discussed below.79
As discussed in section one above, in many of
the smaller handicraft traditional sectors, associations between firms had formed
earlier, but the industrial associations in the sectors that were most important to the
Germany economy started to address industrial relations issues and demands from
workers in the early twentieth century. Despite the formation of powerful trade
associations in the more important industries, some industrialists, though they were
accustomed to negotiating cartel quotas with each other, expressed reluctance in
paying costs of joining formal employer associations. These costs included not just
annual dues and the commitment to resources in the event of a lockout that other firms
might experience, but also of course the infringement upon autonomy. But as the
threat from industrial conflict increased in the early twentieth century, firms chose to
respond with collective repression.80
3.1 The Crimmitschau conflict
The Crimmitschau strike of August 1903 was an incident of industrial conflict
that spurred the development of national-level associations. The reaction of major
firms and regional and industrial employer associations demonstrates the importance
of the threat posed by workers in inducing national-level repressive strategies as a
response to labor activity and demands. The failure of local and regional-level
employer associations to address threats from Crimmitschau, as well as the backing of
79
Spencer (1984) writes, ―…delayed formation of employer organizations in heavy industry reflected
both the later development of labor unions in those industries as compared to other types of production
and the great resources of the large corporations, which long sustained the illusion that they could
regulate relations with their employees on their own. 80
Spencer writes, ―…Events of 1904-05 ended that illusion by dramatizing the growing number and
importance of outside influences on labor-management relations‖ (Spencer 1984, 104).
138
the local union by the general trade union and the SPD, led to a desire to form more
peak organizations that could pool resources for common lockout funds and
networking of employment agencies. Regional-level associations took advantage of
the salient threat posed by union mobilization and SPD support of such actions to
organize more institutionalized collective strategies.
Textile workers in Crimmitschau had unsuccessfully demanded a ten-hour
workday since 1899. After a set of failed negotiations, and in reaction to an
anticipated lockout, 7,800 workers across five factories struck on August 22, 1903.
(Interestingly, textile manufacturers in the Rhenisch-Westphalian region had
previously argued that a ten-hour workday was likely the maximum amount the
female workers in the textile industry could bear, and thus were not immediately
sympathetic to the refusal of the Saxon manufacturers to negotiate). Soon after the
strike, the Union of Textile Manufacturers of Crimmitschau exhausted its funds to
support the striking workers, and its leadership turned towards the free trade unions
for financial assistance. The executive committee of the free trade unions initially
criticized Karl Hübsch of the Saxon textile union for drawing on central treasures and
for diverting attention from other industrial conflicts (Saul 1974, note 66).
Still, the general trade unions assisted the local association, and the SPD press
advertised for donations to contribute to the cause. The initial contribution was quite
successful, bringing in over one million marks and creating a wave of worker
sympathy. The textile manufacturers and existing employer associations in other
industries viewed the Crimmitschau conflict, due to the intervention of the SPD and
general trade unions, as ideologically elevated from an industrial conflict to a struggle
139
for political power and the prospect of social democracy. It became, according to a
ZDI circular, a question of whether firms would run their own businesses or be
subordinate to the influence of the SPD (VdESI 1903).
The financial support by the general trade unions and the SPD for the local
textile union outpaced that of their counterpart employers. Local employers in
Crimmitschau responded by using strikebreakers.81
Crimmitschau textile
manufacturers asked the Textile Association of Saxony for assistance for funds to
support member firms during the strike, but such funds were insufficient in supporting
the struck firms. The employer association of the Saxon textile industry
(Arbeitgeberverband der Sächsischen Textile Industrie, ASTI) exhausted its
immediate funds by December 1903. The efforts of this local association were
financially inadequate (Krüger 1926, 320). In response to the crisis, the association
called a meeting of the German textile manufacturers from the region in Kottbus to
organize broader support for the firms in Crimmitschau (DAGZ 1903, 2).
Representatives of firms and employer associations from 25 cities decided
unanimously upon a levy of two percent of their firms‘ weekly wages to assist
Crimmitschau firms for the duration of the strike; the collection and management of
funds went along with an effort to organize a broader association of textile firms.
Hermann Vogel, the chairman of the Saxon textiles employers‘ association, warned
that a social democratic victory at Crimmitschau would constitute a major defeat for
German industry (DAGZ 1903, 2).
81
Spencer 1984, 103.
140
The ZDI saw this opportunity to expand its influence, by leveraging the
national attention and importance of this local conflict. It saw also the opportunity for
the organization to expand intervention in social policy, and to expand its philosophy
of ―protection‖ of those who were ―willing to work,‖ against the ―terrorism‖ of trade
unions (Saul 1974, 422). The ZDI set a condition that its support for the firms would
have to lead to an organization that would punish union agitators and to prevent their
reprisals after the ending of the conflict (Saul 1974, note 84; Niederschrift der ZDI,
1904). Importantly, the ZDI at this point was rallying against social democracy as
much as union penetration of plants. Representatives of the VdESI supported these
ZDI efforts and argued that trade unions needed to be smashed to pop the ―charm‖ of
social democratic teachings. They viewed the defeat of these textiles workers as
partial payback for the Social Democratic electoral victories of 1903 (Saul 1974, note
90). Vogel expressed a concern about a chain reaction from the Crimmitschau strike.
The external support of unions aroused fears from regional employer associations that
the conflict would become radicalized and spread across other industries.
One day after the Kottbus meeting called by textile manufacturers, on
December 16, 1903, the ZDI board of directors convened, and following Bueck‘s
request, called on member associations for financial assistance to the firms of
Crimmitschau and began discussions of a formal employer association that would be
the largest in Germany. The ZDI appealed for support of the struck manufacturers and
firms hurt by sympathy strikes, by means of voluntary contributions to (Krüger 1926,
320). The ZDI director, Henry Axel Bueck, toured Germany to obtain such support;
the efforts of the ZDI ultimately helped end the strike in the manufacturers‘ favor.
141
The ZDI before the Crimmitschau defeat had not called on member firms or
associations to financially contribute to assistance to firms to end labor disputes; a
resolution passed by the board of directors on December 17 officially approved of
such assistance. Bueck engaged in personal negotiations with member firms to
convince them of the worth of contributing, and that it was in individual firm‘s
interests to not only make sure Crimmitschau ended in the employers‘ favor, but also
that further attempts would be deterred; free enterprise versus control of social
democratic unions was at stake, given how thoroughly outspent the local employer
association had been relative to the trade union contribution (Mallmann 1990). On
January 19, 1904 the strike ended in Crimmitschau, with the textile employers
victorious.
Formally, the executive committee of the Northwest Group of the VdESI,
proposed on January 4, a levy of 50 pfennigs per worker per month from member
associations of the ZDI. The stated goal was to preserve firm autonomy from
encroachment of unions (Saul 1974, Winschuh 1932). The members in the Saar
region paid the same amount, while member firms in Cologne paid a levy of 0.5
percent of total wages for a Crimmitschau assistance fund. Other initial contributors
to this fund included the Rhenish-Westfalian mining industry, the Bavarian industrial
federation, large chemical companies, and a banking organization. The original goal
was to supply 50,000 Marks per week, and the ZDI succeeded in raising 170,000
Marks (VMB 1904). The associations that formed in response to the strike were
―children of emergency‖ (Saul 1974, 100).
3.2 Repressive collective action: evolution of a peak association
142
3.2.1 Redistributive threat and formation
The board of the ZDI met on January 13, 1904, to establish the General
Administration of German Employers‘ Associations (Hauptstelle Deutscher
Arbeitgeberverbände, HA). In this sub-section, I discuss how the formation of the HA
confirms the prediction of the theory about the importance of the redistributive threat
of workers; what repressive strategies the HA pursued; and how the variable of
industrial heterogeneity produced divisions within the organization that reduced the
effectiveness of these strategies. The HA was the first peak level employer
association, and its object was to ―combat unreasonable demands by workers‖ (Krüger
1926, 321).82
The founders of the HA discussed the necessity of uniting existing
employer associations and apparatus of the ZDI to respond to the Crimmitschau strike;
an organization was needed to counter the ―terrorism‖ of the social democratic
movement, as evidenced by the strike. There was also discussion of maintaining the
HA‘s independence from the ZDI, despite having overlapping membership, and how
to balance the autonomy of regional members with the central lockout fund.
It should be noted that before the HA was officially founded, representatives
from the ZDI, Paul Heckmann, Hermann Vogel, Hermann Blohm, and Johannes
Menck, who had been on the organizing committees and were prominent in other
regional employer associations, tried to develop a truly pan-industrial peak
organization that would have obligated member firms to contribute more than the final
version of the HA charter would end up doing. They represented the GDM, AGSTI
(Arbeitgeberverband der Sachsischen Textilindustrie, and the Employer Association
82
See also Spencer 1984, 103.
143
of Hamburg-Altona (AHA). These associations had been attached to the ZDI, but the
ZDI leadership outside of Bueck was initially skeptical of another association that
would challenge its economic authority (DAGZ 1904; Rundeschreiben des ZDI 1904).
Leaders of the employer associations of Hamburg-Altona and the metal industry
association asked the Secretary General of the Bavarian Industry Association, Alfred
Kuhlo, to draft a program for a peak German employer federation. But Kuhlo‘s
efforts, as well as those of Heckman failed because other regional employer
associations discussed above did not want to give up their autonomy or change their
organizational structure (Saul 1974, 105, 109; DAGZ 1904). Kuhlo explained the
establishment of a general German employer federation for one ―urgent necessity‖
(Saul 1974, note 119; Jahrbuch des BIV 1904) but a pan-industry association that
obligated members to comply was not accomplished. Menck had been a member of
the National Liberal party and legislator. He too had been concerned with the threat
posed by the SPD and the fact that the strength of firms would be broken by
legislation.83
Despite this setback, ZDI representatives still moved forward to create a
national-level association that would increase resource sharing among existing
employer associations and possibly found new associations in industries. Bueck and
the ZDI intended for this trade association to create a specific employer organization
to nationalize and further institutionalize the anti-union policies that already existed in
various member regional and industrial organizations. To this end, the first unofficial
83
Menck left this wing of the NL party and became a member of the Free Conservative party (Saul
1974, 52). This party advocated the further restriction of the franchise. In contrast, the NL party
advocated preserving the franchise.
144
meetings of the HA in January 1904 were attended by approximately eighty
individuals, representing approximately 60 different major employer organizations.
The largest manufacturing areas and industries were either directly represented or had
institutional affiliation, including the large Association of the German Metal Industry
(Gesamtverband Deutscher Metallindustrieller, GDM), the German Brown Coal
Industry Association (Deutscher Brauhkohlen Industrieverein, DBI), the Employer
Association of Hamburg-Altona (Arbeitgeberverband Hamburg-Altona), and the
aforementioned LNV and VDMA. There were also representatives from organizations
in Saxony (Verband der Arbeitgeber der Saechsischen Textilindustrie) and Bavaria
(Bayerischer Industriellenverband). The main representatives were those representing
the previously formed regional employer associations in heavy industry and
manufacturing, as well as employer associations in the textile industry (Mitglieder
Verzeichnis Hauptstelle Deutscher Arbeitgeberverband, 1904).84
Representatives
from the BDI and VWICI (the chemical firms‘ association) also took part in the
January 12, 1904 meeting.
Thirty representatives of employer associations, predominantly from the ZDI,
met on February 15, 1904 to decide the structure and goals of the HA. A commission
of six individuals, who had been selected in January, drafted the statutes. The
84
See letters on opening meetings of the HA, 1904. Despite opposition from BDI members, they
wanted to initially present a unified front (109). Representatives of the BDI in principle accepted the
philosophy of the HA, because they wanted to present a unified front (Saul 1974, 109). The BDI did
not put much effort into stopping the creation of the HA, although it condemn its ―egoistic propaganda‖
that came at the expense of the efforts and autonomy of existing federations. The GDM and largest
textile associations were not formally part of the HA. The GDM and Employer Association of the
German Textile Industry (Arbeitgeberverband der deutschen Textilindustrie, ADT) had 489,300 and
310,000 member workers, respectively. The largest regional employer association was the Employer
Association of Unterelbe (Arbeitgeberverband Unterelbe) with 11,500 member firms employing
153,000 workers. Eventually the GDM joined the HA in 1904, despite its skepticism that the HA was
too attached to the leadership of the ZDI (Saul 1974, note 148).
145
committee representatives were: Vopelius and Leidig, representing the ZDI; Beumer
who represented the Rhenisch-Westphalian iron industry organizations; Menck who
represented the GDM and AHA; Emil Stark who represented the Saxon textile
industry; and Wilhelm Wendlandt who represented the other national lobbying
association that represented higher end manufacturing goods, the Association of
German Industries (Bund der Deutschen Industrie, BDI). All except for Wendlant
were involved with the governing bodies of the ZDI (Saul 1974). The sub-committee
debated about whether the resulting employer association would be bound to
recognize the ZDI as a veto player in its decisions; Wendlandt and Menck objected to
a provision that would allow for ―statutory influence‖ of the ZDI executive committee
(Jahrbuch des BDI 1903/04). But the ZDI leadership on March 18, 1904 refused to
consider this provision, and in fact ruled that the employer association would be
independent and that the ZDI would only intervene if required. Effectively, then,
employer associational autonomy for the new organization was written in its founding
statutes.
The HA was officially created on April 12, 1904. Even though it had formal
independence from the ZDI, ten of the twenty-two committee members of the HDA
were selected by the delegate conference of the CVDI. These clauses could be
changed only with agreement of the delegate conference of the ZDI. But, the two
organizations maintained separate organizing lists and administrative bodies. The
membership in the HA was thus not attached to the membership in the ZDI.
3.2.2 Purpose and activities: repression
146
The records of the first meetings of the HA, as well as its regional constituent
organizations, emphasize the importance of the perceived increase in strikes and rising
success of the SPD. The threat posed by the unions and SPD support in a massive
1899 mining strike and the 1903 Crimmitschau strike prompted the ZDI leadership to
establish organizations that would allow employers to assist each other during strikes
and to engage in pre-emptive lockouts when necessary (Bueck 1997; Leckebusch
1966).85
In a meeting of the board of directors of the ZDI, Bueck lamented the
unwillingness of some employer associations to join the HA and referred to the
Crimmitschau strike as a reminder of the importance of collective strategies
(Niederschrift der ZDI, 1908). The by-laws of the HA indicate that the purpose of the
organization was to unite member associations and firms against threats posed by
workers, and indicated a common purpose with a lockout fund against workers and
strikes (HA 1904; Leckebusch 1966).
The founding charter of the HA from May 1904 demonstrates the basic
importance of a full response to union mobilization as the rasion d’etre of the
administrative structures of the new peak federation. Its stated reason for existence
was to protect firms against workers‘ strikes and boycotts and to assist firms in such
events. Much of the charter deals with the authority of the executive committee
regarding actions to repel union threats. In particular, the founding documents discuss
the importance of connecting existing employment agencies that would share
information on workers; the criteria by which the executive committee would accept
85
The HA‘s main goal was to have adequate funds to respond to strikes and to sometimes preemptively
engage in industry-wide lockouts. These organizations formed in direct response to perceived
increasing threats posed by workers.
147
members; and the authority of the committee to decide whether assistance to member
associations that either were suffering strikes or wanted to initiate lockouts was
warranted. Member firms and associations were obligated to comply with executive
committee rulings. For example, this obligation is articulated in a provision that
required member associations to comply with committee rulings about not accepting
workers who were locked out and seeking new employment, for example.86
The main
instruments of the newly formed repressive peak federation were to centralize lockout
funds among pre-existing member associations and to create institutional linkages
among such associations (HA 1904).87
The HA confined itself to the organization
and grouping of industrial associations, regarding the ―unification of the great trade
associations as the keystone of their power‖ (Saul 1974, 322).
The HA had at its founding had two national-level federations, 67 district
federations, and 129 local federations. Membership increased to 6,664 companies
with 1,092,789 workers in 1909. These federations had as members in total 6,144
member firms, covering 988,142 workers. The average member firm had on average
156 workers.88
Maintaining such membership was an important priority of the
organizational leadership; there was concern that membership had reached a ―steady
state‖ and HA leaders were concerned with keeping pace with unionization efforts—
which the HA had tried to slow down. Vogel expressed concerns about stagnating
86
The charter also described voting rules for the member association. Each member association
automatically was credited one vote; member associations received two votes if there were at least
10,000 member workers employed by member firms of the association. Beyond the 10,000 worker
benchmark, each additional 1,000 workers translated into an additional vote. 87
The initial contribution rate was 50 Pfennigs per worker; the ZDI ended up paying 170,000 Marks to
start the association. 88
There was an increase in 1,700 members and 150,000 workers due to the entry of the German
employer federation for the construction industry.
148
membership not keeping up with the growing labor force (Saul 1974). As discussed
below, the merger of the HA with a counterpart peak association did address concerns
about membership.
The peak organization also accelerated the development of the employer
associations and provided support for existing regional and industry associations. For
example, after Bueck‘s efforts, the German textile manufacturers formed their own
industrial association in January 1904, called the German Textile Employers‘
Association (Arbeitgeberverband der deutschen Textilindustrie) (Krüger 1926, 321).
The peak organization was also supportive of heavy industry in the west, paper,
mining, and glass. About one-eighth of its funds went towards this purpose of a
general lockout fund (HA 1904). Another major purpose of the organization was the
diffusion of blacklists and information on workers, as well as use of labor exchanges
to prevent hiring workers who were striking or who had been locked out; the
organization also helped with assistance of legal fees for firms (Saul 1974, 446). The
organization was also particularly active in the areas surrounding Aachen, the Saar
area, lignite mining of the province Saxony, and textile employers' associations in
South Germany, Elsass Lorraine, and Silesia. By contrast, the other prominent peak
level association, discussed below, was more active in central and northern Germany
and in the metallurgy industry of South Germany. In eastern Prussia, employer
associations overall were less active, due possibly to lower levels of industrialization.
The HA, as the ZDI had argued before, contended that employer associations
needed to protect the right of firms to hire and fire, and were opposed to legislative
efforts of the NL party and SPD to increase collective bargaining rights. These
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formerly individual level strategies at the firm level were aggregated and pooled at the
national level. The HA supported firms during the 1905 strike of Ruhr miners, and
argued that the successful intervention of employer associations and the government
demonstrated the importance of such organizations to respond to the threat posed by
unions and the SPD (Bueck and Leidig 1905).89
The HA was a success in establishing a true, expansive employer association
and coordinating efforts of existing regional employer associations. As discussed
above, the existing regional employer associations in the late 1800s had concerns
about obligations of membership and encroachment of managerial authority that a
peak association would have. But the incidents of industrial conflict helped moderate
these concerns; such associations were willing to cede some autonomy. The majority
of heavy industry firms and their related manufacturing consuming firms of Rhineland
Westphalia had overcome in 1904 their old reluctance of employer associations that
intervened in the regulation of the employer-employee relationships. Much
orientation toward the collective solution had occurred. These new collective
strategies helped complement, or share the costs of, individual strategies.
3.2.3 How industrial heterogeneity undermined collective action
89
Members of the HA resented pressure from the government on business leaders to have a conciliatory
stance in 1905 strike. For example, representatives of the Center party encouraged Chancellor Bülow to
intervene on behalf of the miners; he was concerned that mining strikes would undermine government
efforts regarding military preparation (Spencer 1984, 100). Most government officials expressed
disapproval of requests for military action from employers. The strike lasted from January 14 to
February 9, and involved 73 percent of all Ruhr miners. On March 8, the Prussian government placed
before the Landtag a proposed mining law revision—miners gained some demands, creation of worker
committees, abolition of Wagennullen, and other improvements to their working conditions. Ruhr
employers of course feel betrayed, though not greatly inconvenienced—they thought they should have
―won‖ against these demands and that the state should have stayed out (Spencer 1984, 101). From the
HA‘ view, the main lesson of 1905 was that total intransigence against workers demands and total
employer domination over workers was impossible; some modification of strategy needed (Spencer
1984, 102).
150
Despite the initial unity of the most important large firms and regional
associations as a response to the threat posed by social democratic unions and the
party, inter-industry differences in the costs of repression did undermine unity. The
HA was more effective at facilitating information sharing and centralizing propaganda
and advertising efforts; it also was better at forming new associations, and assisting
specific industries in need of assistance than in creating durable inter-industrial
institutions. These divisions had consequences even though member firms and
associations shared the same general goals. Even though they had lower costs of
repression, these differences meant those with lower costs still had incentives not to
subsidize repression that would disproportionately favor other sectors. Inter-
association negotiations within the peak association confirm one of the predictions of
the theory: when the costs of joining the association are higher than the costs of
repressing individually, firms will not join a collective association.
This prediction is evidenced in the problem of maintaining membership within
the HA and in the unwillingness of some of the member associations to subsidize the
general lockout fund proposed in the organization‘s initial charter. For example the
Essen mining association, and nascent chemicals industry associations resigned from
the HA. In 1908 the Ruhr mining industry founded its own organization, the
Zechenverband (which did not belong to the HA formally, and was not obligated to
contribute to lockout funds, but did support its efforts). As discussed above, the
Zechenverband came into existence after the mining worker strike of 1905. In a
February 1904 letter to Bueck a representative of a chemical association noted that a
need for an employer organization did not exist in the chemical industry, since large
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firms were sufficiently able to restrict unionization. The representative stated, ―The
union of the employers would presumably drive also those elements of the workers
who do not currently belong to social democracy into its arms‖ (Saul 1974, 126). As
discussed above, the large chemical firms had sufficient measures to deter
unionization, such as firm level unions and ―work associations‖ which were designed
to keep workers from joining social democratic unions. Bueck mentioned his regret in
being unable to recruit Duisberg‘s organization to join the HA (Bueck 1908).
The main cleavage was that heavy industry associations were reluctant to
subsidize textile industries, as the textile industry was one of the largest beneficiaries
of the HA. Its firms employed around 285,000 followed workers. The Saar industry
and iron industries in Rhineland and Westphalia did not contribute to mass lockout
funds. They used firm-level unions and associations to prevent workers from joining
social democratic trade unions. The HA supported such efforts, though it is unclear
whether they contributed to such efforts financially. Instead, its main efforts were
actually most evident in assisting the textile industry. The industries in Rheinland-
Westphalia and Saar area actually demanded that they only have voluntary
contributions, and wanted to only compensate their own member firms. They did not
look kindly upon the appeals to ―charity‖ from the comparatively weaker textile
industry, and some viewed it as a ―disgrace‖ (HA 1907). This demonstrates
heterogeneity in firm interests and the difficulty in sustaining a collective strategy,
even though both sets of industries—heavy industry and textiles—were against social
democratic unions. Heavy industry associations were better able to withstand the
costs of work stoppages as well and thus had less inclination to heavily subsidize
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weaker associations. Still, these regional associations in heavy industry did contribute
to assist the textile industry, but chafed at long-term obligations to the central lockout
fund. Vogel and Stark, as powerful representatives within the HA and the textile
industry, managed to establish a strike fund (HA 1907). Although the regional heavy
industry associations initially rejected the demands of contributions of 250 per
thousand wages in Marks, they did eventually make some partial subsidies, but simply
ignored obligations for a full central fund (HA 1907).
3.3: ―Mixed strategies‖? The formation and activities of the VA
The above discussion of the advent, operation, and cleavages of the HA
demonstrates that the formation of this peak level association is consistent with the
theoretical predictions of chapter 3. The HA had a membership of firms and employer
associations which shared similar goals countering union mobilization and the SPD‘s
political program, but the organization still faced inter-associational and inter-sector
distributional issues. Even though member firms in this association had overall lower
costs of repression, there were still distributional conflicts about subsidizing collective
strategies. In this section I show how this logic also applies to the emergence of the
other peak association, the Association of German Employer Organizations (Verein
deutscher Arbeitgeberverbände, VA), which had a much higher variance in the costs
of repression among its members firms. Some of its members at the time of the
formation of the association had already concluded collective bargaining agreements
with unions because their costs of repression were much higher. This meant higher
variation in the kinds of strategies that member associations of the VA adopted, and an
overall more mixed approach regarding demands from workers.
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The origins of the counterpart employer association come from the
longstanding antipathy of handicraft and finished-product industries towards the
alliance of the major semi-manufactured goods and raw material industries, as they
were punished most by cartel arrangements and the passing of such arrangements on
to their input costs (Nussbaum 1966; Ullmann 1976). Partially out of concern with the
institutionalized representation of large manufacturing and raw-materials firms, the
main lobbying association that represented medium-sized finished-product
manufacturing interests the Federation of Manufacturers (Bund der Deutschen
Industrie, BDI, founded in 1895) established its own coordinated employer
association. The BDI had served as a competing lobbying association and
―counterpart‖ to the ZDI. The BDI‘s newly founded employer association had one
goal of ―harmonizing‖ pre-existing collective agreements that had existed at the
regional and sector level. The resulting association, the Association of German
Employer Organizations (Verein deutscher Arbeitgeberverbände, VA) formed in
1904. The organizational leadership was greatly influenced by the aforementioned
United Association of German Metal Industries (Gesamtverband deutscher
metallindustrieller, GDM), the employer organization of finished metal products
(Spencer 1984, 103). GDM representatives were installed in the management offices
of the VA until the VA and HA eventually merged in 1913, an event discussed
below.90
The resulting peak association had seven national-level federations, 96 district
federations and 1,092 local associations. The membership in these associations
90
The GDM in 1904 had 2,549 member firms that employed over 315,000 workers (Saul 1974, 186).
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consisted of 32,500 member firms that employed 1.45 million workers in 1904. By
1909, the VA covered approximately 50,000 member enterprises employing 1,800,000
workers. In contrast to the HA, most member firms of the VA were small or medium-
sized enterprises; the average member firm of the VA employed 32 workers
(compared to the average HA firm that employed 161 workers).91
The consequences
of this different composition in membership are discussed below. Other important VA
member associations were the AHA, the Bergisch regional employer association, and
timber employer associations. After the VA‘s founding, individual smaller federations
of the finished industry, bakers, stepped fitter, and construction industries, local
employer associations of the chemical industry, as well as a number of mixed regional
associations joined the VA (Saul 1974). Many influential industry associations, such
as the GDM and AHA, were members of the VA but were not composed of craft-
based industries.92
3.3.1 Repression within the VA
What differentiated the VA from its counterpart peak association was its higher
degree of industrial heterogeneity among its members, as characterized by a higher
variance in the cost of repression. This ―original sin‖ led to a wider diversity of
strategies, in particular a set of mixed strategies of repression and collaboration within
the organization. The pursuit of repressive strategies is emphasized in the charter of
the VA, which allowed and advocated the use of repressive strategies, in particular the
use of lockouts (Krüger 1926, 322). Even though some member firms of the VA had
91
Data are from the Statistiches Jahrbucher das Deutsche Reich, 1909. 92
The GDM and VA, both of which had member firms that signed agreements with workers, both
objected to industry or association-wide bargains with workers Saul 1974, 59). The GDM was the
critical organization with in the VA (it had 2,549 members with 316,210 workers) (112).
155
signed agreements with workers, the VA‘s stated policy was that it wanted to maintain
the ―fundamental right of employers to choose their own workmen‖ (VA 1904). Thus
the VA was not in principle completely collaborative; its stated policy was to support
managerial rights, and not one of promoting co-determination or the protection of
workers. Despite the existing of bargaining agreements within the VA, the founding
charter of the VA demonstrates some important similarities to the HA in terms of the
members‘ tolerance for repressive strategies.
The July 16, 1904 charter of the VA described one of the main purposes of the
VA was, like the HA, was to assist firms in cases of industrial conflict, and to prevent
firms from suffering from unwarranted strikes and boycotts from workers. The VA,
despite having member associations with collective bargaining agreements, had a
stated purpose of assisting member associations and firms to combat industrial
conflict, and in fact had a clause to assume the responsibilities of firms in this matter if
warranted. This involved compensation of member firms and associations involved in
work stoppages.
The HA and the VA also both supported repressive strategies that both
established and connected existing employment offices, which would improve
information-sharing services regarding the hiring of workers who had been locked out
or had previously participated in strikes. The VA similarly called for connections
between sector federations to share information and resources against strikes and
boycotts. Like the HA, its declared goal was also protection of firms from
unauthorized work stoppages, and to help firms combat them (VA 1904)). As a VA
official described, small and medium sized enterprises would have to become much
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tougher and give up previously ―sympathetic positions‖ if the strike compensation
mechanism of the VA was to be effective. The VA also supported using lockouts in
industries that were composed of craft-based firms, and acknowledged that such
actions would be more difficult (DAGZ 1905). VA representatives thought that strike
insurance and institutional support of lockouts would help contain strike epidemics,
and praised strike insurance and lockout assistance as an ―instrument of the social
peace‖ (Saul 1974, 447). Once the threat from unions increased, even employer
associations firms formerly skeptical about strike insurance shifted their position to
support it.
Some VA members did initially have concerns about the utility of strike
insurance, as it could aggravate labor disputes, and potentially stir further union
organization. As early as August 1903, employer associations that would join the VA
though strike insurance would undermine relationships with workers. However, the
Crimmitschau conflict convinced them to change their minds, and in 1905, they
recommended strike insurance as a suitable means for ―the containment of the strike
epidemic‖ (Saul 1974, 447). Johannes Menck, the aforementioned head of the GDM,
advocated the use of lockouts, though he argued they should be strategically used. He
was concerned that the use of general lockouts could provoke government intervention
or that their overuse would result in anti-lockout legislation that would undermine
employer efforts. Heckman, who in late 1905 became chairman of the VA and GDM,
opposed negotiations with workers and collective agreements, unless they were
absolutely necessary. His view was also adopted by the large member firms in metal
processing and manufacturing of the GDM. Heckman wanted to extend this principle
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to prevent and weaken the accommodating, negotiating stances of the smaller and
medium-sized firms in the handicraft associations (Saul 1974, 447). Though the VA
charter specified a more de-centralized structure in terms of member associations‘
obligations (it did not establish a centralized lockout fund like the HA, despite the
proclamation of similar goals in the charter), the executive committee still had to
approve of assistance to member associations that wanted to hire workers who had
been locked out. The executive committee had the authority to approve of assistance
to member firms. In fact, the committee argued that assistance was only warranted if
the strike was ruled by the committee to be unauthorized. The VA proclaimed in
cases that it had the right to override decisions of member associations, and member
associations were obligated to comply with VA regulations.93
The use of repressive strategies of the VA is also evidenced in its opposition to
the discussed 1908 collective bargaining extensions in the shipping industry.
Consistent with the position of the ZDI, HA, and Bavarian metal and peak
associations, the VA was also opposed these proposals; on October 29, 1908 the VA
issued a statement against the resolution regarding collective bargaining. It stated that
collective agreements are generally ―impracticable in the exporting industries‖ (Saul
1974, 64). The VA position was also not unusual among associations with smaller
firms or higher skilled workers: other associations with member firms employing
93
In terms of membership dues, the VA structured contributions by number of employees. Each
member association paid in contributions two marks per hundred employed workers. The differences
between the HA and VA illustrate the different strategies vis-à-vis workers. Overall, the collective
repressive organization was more coordinated and was better able to adopt a coherent strategy vis-à-vis
its regional members. The HA‘s main instrument against unionization was a central treasury to fund
pre-emptive lockouts and to support firms during strikes (Krueger, 322). The VA did not have such a
treasury. The VA thought that employers should be indemnified against all strikes, and not merely
those involving a fundamental principle; ―…a balance should be maintained between contributions and
benefits, and insurance against strikes should be organized on a grand scale‖ (322)
158
higher skilled workers also opposed collective bargaining extensions. In March 1909
the VDMA also argued that collective bargaining expansion would increase the
influence of trade unions and impinge upon firm flexibility to integrate wages and
technological changes as they saw fit.
3.3.2 Collaboration within the VA
Despite the repressive strategies embedded in the charter of the VA, some
member associations and firms had already concluded agreements with unions.
Because of this membership of industries that had in the late nineteenth century
negotiated agreements with nascent craft-based unions, and the organization was from
its inception forced to adopt a more flexible strategy from the start, as opposed to the
HA. As a result, complete repression was not a viable strategy. Some firms that were
members of the VA‘s constituent employer associations had already concluded
collective wage agreements with unions before the formation of this association, in
areas where the costs of repression were too high (Geary 1989).94
Such members
included firms in metallurgy, building, timber, which had trade union presence.
However, as the discussion in the above section demonstrates, VA leadership
advocated use of repressive strategies to try and undo this collaboration within the
organization.
These associations that were more collaborative in nature that eventually came
to be represented in the VA had responded in the late 1890s to the pressures that
earlier guilds placed on firms. Employer associations formed earlier in these
94
The VA membership consisted of smaller firms and craft-based, and relied mainly on inter-trade
associations (322). (In terms of division of responsibilities between the HA and ZDI, the HA limited
itself to defense against strikes; the ZDI handled social policy lobbying. The VA devoted some initial
attention to social policy questions.
159
industries where guilds were powerful, but they were (like their successor
organizations would become) formed in response to the redistributive threat posed by
the more skilled workers in these industries. As discussed in section 2, initial
employer associations were in the craft and small-finishing industries, which depended
more on craft0based workers. An 1897 law made membership in these guilds
compulsory (Thelen 2004). Since this legislation made certain kinds of labor
intervention illegal, independent employer associations were formed in response to try
and structure the labor market (Saul 1974, 99). This is further evidence that even in
the industries dominated by smaller firms relying on craft skills, the cost of repression
determined the kind of response of firms. For example, 44 percent of workers of
bricklayers had won collective agreements by 1911. These firms were vulnerable to
strike action due to seasonal factors and completion-date fines. As one building
employer said in 1901, not to conclude agreements with workers was ―impractical‖
and ―obsolete‖ (Geary 1991, 146). But the reasons had to do with the high cost of the
alternative strategy of repression.
These industries that were populated with smaller firms and had overall much
lower degrees of industrial concentration were compelled to deal with unions.
Consistent with the theory in chapter 2, structural variables affecting collective
action—in particular high numbers of small firms—left firms vulnerable to
coordinated union demands. Large firms had lower costs of repression and so were
less likely to have to sign agreements with workers. Their relative financial weakness
benefited unions; therefore collective agreements emerged in giving union greatly
increased negotiating power. Such agreements would not emerge in the more
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economically important industries populated by large firms until 1918; this event is
discussed in Chapter 6. The occurrence of collective agreements among industries
populated by smaller firms and/or higher skilled labor force does not mean that this
was the first preference of those firms. It more likely meant that such agreements
were the least costly strategy for firms and that the firms‘ first preference was
repression, which may have been too costly. (Geary 1991, 147)
The VA‘s tolerance of membership of these associations divided the
associational leaders. Bueck viewed the issue of membership of firms with handicraft
technologies of production to be the main reason why an initial merger between the
HA and VA was unacceptable, because those firms generally already recognized
unions. He expressed the view that handicraft firms were a point of weakness in the
battle against trade unions, as they were obviously vulnerable to union intervention
and had a long history of dealing with unions. By contrast, Menck of the VA thought
it was self-evidently in the interest of large-scale industry to strengthen these firms
―since their defeat indirectly also meant a defeat of industry‖ (Saul 1974, 158). Thus
Menck thought a short-term sacrifice of institutional ―recognition‖ of these
temporarily collaborative associations was worth the benefit of trying to deploy the
repressive apparatus of the VA against them. Because local employer associations
were perceived to be important defenses against gains in social democratic unions,
Menck wanted to include employer associations composed of craftsmen and smaller
manufacturing goods. VA officials argued that if large-scale employer associations
from more important industries did not support them, then unions would likely be able
to impose more conditions on other industries. This would be a threat to large-scale
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industry, since skilled workers would begin demanding equivalent wages to other
skilled workers in the smaller firms. An effective peak organization would have to
exercise control over industries populated by smaller firms. The ideal was to make
sure that such associations were ―doubly‖ protected by local and peak associations.
Thus even though there were sector differences in strategies in Germany due to
differences in the cost of repression, even within the peak association that tolerated
collaborative associations, the logic posited in chapter 3 operated twofold. Within the
VA, the craft based industries and other set of industries populated by smaller firms
adopted collaborative strategies largely due to the impractical and higher costs of
repression. Second, the VA charter and its institutional apparatus were designed to
help counter the ―pre-existing‖ collaboration that existed in some of its member
associations.
At the end of 1904, despite these differences, the HA and VA representatives
opened discussions about merging, which would have meant exchange of member
lists, and a common institutional and financial structure to counter strikes and boycotts
(Saul 1974, 160). This supports the idea that the handicraft firms that populated the
VA were ―co-opted‖ into a peak association. The co-existence of the HA and VA
demonstrates the dominance of collective strategies. The modal strategy was a
repressive one, though, as the HA was responsible ultimately for larger firms and more
employees, and the VA promoted repression despite having some collective
bargaining arrangements. This evidence contrasts with recent studies study of
employer coordination of Herrigel (1998), Thelen (2004), and building on them,
Iversen, Cusack, and Soskice (2007, 2010), that focus on industries that were more
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likely to be members of the VA. But a fuller picture shows that firms adopted a wider
array of strategies. Moreover, the more politically important strategies were collective
repressive organizations.
Section 4: Overcoming Differences and Further Collective Strategies
4.1 The cartel contract
At the time of the founding of these two peak associations, despite differences
over recognition of collective agreements, there was already discussion of a merging
of institutional apparatus into one association. The 1904 VA charter discussed the
administration of cartel contracts of some member associations with counterparts in
the HA. The charter explicitly discussed the potentially cooperative relations between
the VA and HA, and pursuit of ―common purposes‖ of both peak organizations
regarding industrial relations. These two employer associations co-existed from 1904
to1913. This division between the HA and VA reflects the split between the two
major trade associations, the ZDI and BDI (Krüger 1926, 321), but their respective
employer associations at the time of their founding laid down plans to further
―collectivize‖ strategies by creating one peak association.
On March 14, 1909, the HA signed a cartel agreement with the VA, but did not
officially form a joint peak association until 1913. The agreement was signed by Max
Roetger for the HA and Paul Heckmann from the VA, and laid the foundation for a
merger, to be established at an unspecified date, between the two peak associations.
The agreement formalized pre-existing repressive strategies of both associations. The
basic tenets of the cartel agreement involved the creation of a central office, merging
of membership lists, and centralized management of the employment exchange offices
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and sharing of information regarding worker histories. The main reasons given for
this cooperation were increased efficiency of managing collective strategies through
one main office (Kartellvertrag zwischen ―Hauptstelle‖ und ―Verein‖, 1909).95
The
resulting proto-peak organization greatly increased the total number of firms and
workers covered by associations to 38,644 employers and 2,438,142 workers.
What would become the cartel contract was discussed at a meeting of the
board of the directors of the ZDI in Heidelberg in September 1908. The position of
the VA representatives at these negotiations (which Bueck and Rötger wanted to do
more privately) demonstrates that despite common repressive preferences, there were
concerns about disproportionate decision-making power being given to the HA. In
particular, VA representatives expressed concern that smaller craft firms that
constituted the VA membership would be consistently outvoted. The HA and VA
were divided over issues of contribution rates; protection of craft industries, and
access to strike defense funds (Tänzler 1929). The main issue was whether industries
populated by smaller firms and craft firms would be protected. Menck, as discussed,
thought they had to be protected, because defeats there could spread to other industries
(Saul 1974, 110). The other issue in these discussions was the levels of contributions
that member associations of the VA; Menck wanted to ensure that any resulting peak
federation would have some exceptions to prevent some member associations from
paying full fees (Niederschrift der ZDI, 1908). This divergence in interests illustrates
the importance of industrial heterogeneity in inhibiting collective action at the peak
level.
95
The original documentation is found in Leckebusch, 1966.
164
Still, less than one year after this meeting, a cartel contract emerged that
resolved some of these disagreements. The cartel agreement demonstrates that even
despite differences in industrial composition of these two associations, the threat from
organized labor was large enough that a peak association was deemed necessary as a
response. Despite the disagreements over relative contributions, the industry
representatives had argued in 1908 that unification between the two organizations was
necessary to counter the expanding efforts of unions. Bueck observed that social
democratic supported trade unions had accumulated 40 million marks, and that
existing employer associations would have to pool resources to keep up with such
funds.
The cartel agreement allowed for enforcing lockouts and specified the goal of
the newly formed organization in punishing workers who initiated industrial conflict.
The central committee, as the committees for the existing peak associations had done,
would rule on whether member associations would be allowed to hire locked out
workers, though initial procedures for this were deferred to the member associations of
the constituent peak associations. (In the text of the agreement, though, the difficult
issues of working out shares of contributions to the centralized lockout fund and strike
insurance from member associations were tabled for future discussion).
The cartel arrangement that laid the groundwork for the eventual merger
between these two peak federations was viewed with suspicion and concern by unions,
as evidenced by discussion of the agreement in the union publication Soziale Praxis.
An article published immediately after the cartel agreement in 1909 observed that the
cartel agreement between the HA and VA would eliminate any rivalries between the
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two central employer associations, and therefore it was important for unions to try and
counter with their own associations. The author of the piece advocated union
organization as a response to the cartel agreement (Sociale Praxis, 1909, 661).
4.2 Formation of the VDA
In 1913 these two peak associations merged to form the Federation of German
Employers Associations (Vereinigung der deutschen Arbeitgeberverbände, VDA).
This organization was the institutional predecessor of the contemporary German
employer federation, the BDA. This organization, and its predecessor cartel contract,
formed largely as a result from the increase in threat posed by unions as well as the
lower costs of enforcement. There is little primary documentation on the actual
mechanics and negotiations of the merger, but from existing documents, the 1913
agreement that formed the VDA merged out of ―friendly relations‖ and signified ―...a
complete amalgamation of their internal and external structure‖ (Krüger 1926, 323).
This agreement meant that the HA accepted the ―principle of affiliation of handicrafts
and attention to social questions, and on the part of the VA of the payment of heavier
rates of subscription.‖ The HA was willing to trade less influence over lobbying on
social policy issues, in exchange for the creation of a larger lockout fund. The
ultimate success of the VDA is difficult because of the onset of World War I.
However, in chapter 6, I describe how the reconstitution of the VDA after the conflict
supports the theory‘s prediction about the shift to collaborative strategies.
In the years preceding the organization of the VDA, Fritz Tänzler, who became
its executive director, discussed its reasons for formation. Attempts at creating an
organization like the VDA were made after the Crimmitschau strike, but failed due to
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obscurely mentioned ―personal‖ and ―tactical‖ reasons. But the foundations for the
VDA had been laid in discussions between the VA and HA in 1904. Tänzler argued
that both peak federations had common interests in forming a peak organization, and
that there had been a longstanding effort to organize member associations to form a
peak level association that could effectively execute lockouts. He argued that there
was a mutual interest in repelling disputes, which were acted upon in the 1909 cartel
agreement (Tänzler, cited in Sociale Praxis, 1913). Tänzler in fact argued that the two
peak associations, the HA and VA, differed only in details. He emphasized that from
the founding of the two peak associations after the Crimmitschau strike, discussions of
joining the two ―organically‖ had taken place, which was finally able to happen in
1912. The draft produced by the cartel committee was submitted to the two
federations for approval, which was received on April 4, 1912.
The newly formed VDA‘s constituent employer organizations oversaw 10,000
collective agreements covering close to 1.4 million workers; these agreements were
legacies from the VA‘s institutional structure. Key leaders from within the VDA and
its constituent organizations would go on to play an important role in the influential
1918 Stinnes-Legien agreement, the first formal codification of a nation-wide
agreement between much of organized capital and labor, discussed in Chapter 5
(Erdmann 1966). The association further institutionalized repressive strategies, but
also adopted mix strategies of cooperation in sectors where the costs of repression
were too high. Still, with the merger, the HA essentially gained more resources to
help execute its own repressive strategies.
4.2.1 Explaining institutional merger
167
A strictly repressive association in the early twentieth century ended up
helping to administer a giant institution that essentially oversaw a series of pre-
existing collective agreements—a qualitative change from its previous position. What
explains this shift in position of the HA, even before the chaos of World War I? The
large increase in the electoral success of the SPD in January 1912 helps account for
this shift to a collaborative strategy. The SPD increased the number of seats in the
Reichstag from 43 to 110 (out of a possible 397) between 1907 and 1912. While there
had been discussions of a merger between these two associations since 1905, it was
finally completed several months after the election. The initial reports of the VDA
and final reports of the HA discuss the increasing electoral threat of the SPD between
1907 and 1912 constituted one reason for this merger: both the VA and HA thought it
would be more useful to have a national bulwark institution against workers, but also
an institution to manage agreements with them. A clear point of compromise was that
the HA believed that the VA should contribute a higher share of lockout funds. Thus
the HA successfully bargained to retain its instruments to enforce anti-labor policies,
but now they served as basic policing procedures of previously existing collaborative
strategies (VDA 1913).
The success and challenge of the labor party was one of the major causes, but
not the only reason, for the shift in the HA‘s strategies. The meetings of the minutes
demonstrate pre-occupation with increased efficiency of managing industrial relations
through a joint organization, as well as increased access to the VA‘s own treasury.
But the basic shift in strategy—one where the HA tried to stamp out organized labor to
a strategy of recognizing their existence—happened after a massive SPD electoral
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victory. This incarnation of the VDA would soon face a much bigger threat from
radicalized labor after WWI. A cursory glance at the mechanics of the post-WWI
major collaborative strategies shows that much of the institutional apparatus for
effective national employer coordination was laid down already before WWI; this
apparatus survived emergency decrees during WWI and became folded into the
administration of collective bargaining in the early 1920s.96
The formation of the VDA was the culmination of the ―…unity of German
employers that they had sought for almost a decade‖ (Spencer 1984, 121). In its brief
time of operation as a peace-time peak-level employer association, the VDA oversaw
a mix of strategies of individual employer associations. The VDA still campaigned
for strategies to restrict unionism, in particular legislation that would prohibit
picketing from striking workers (Spencer 1984, 121, note 37). Additionally, for some
areas, the VDA tried to restrict worker mobility and prevent workers from finding new
employment should they be unsuccessful during a strike; this was a continuation of the
HA‘s policies (Krüger 1926, 326). The VDA also sought to prevent overlapping
membership if firms when possible.97
Where collective agreements were not allowed,
the VDA continued to execute the strategies of the HA. These included lockouts and
provision of supplementary funds during work stoppages (either due to lockouts or
strikes). They included also using employment offices which kept information on
worker histories (particularly regarding political activity, so member firms could
screen workers); and the legal defense of firms in the event of industrial conflict. As
96
See VDA report of 1913. 97
―…an inter-trade association will refuse to accept an individual employer as a member if there exists
in the neighbourhood or region a trade association for the industry concerned, but will invite him to
become a member of that association‖ (Krüger, 326)
169
the HA had done before, the merger, the VDA also campaigned for legal prohibition
of picketing.98
As with the 1909 cartel contract between the VA and the HA, union
representatives expressed concern at the centralization of employer coordination.
They were particularly concerned because the HA leadership which pushed for and
coordinated the unification had a previous history of course in repressing workers. As
an article in Soziale Praxis expressed, the impact of this merger on working conditions
was not to be underestimated (Soziale Praxis, 1913, 866). The specific concern
expressed was with the new leadership direction of the VDA. Though the VA was
acknowledged to have a more conciliatory stance towards workers, unions expressed
concern that the influence of the HA meant the VDA would continue the former‘s
repressive policies, despite the appointment of leadership who had previously been
with the GDM. There was concern that the VDA would not simply represent the
VA‘s policies.
The VDA also created a common lockout fund pool, levied at 20 pfennigs per
1,000 marks in wages for each member association. Tänzler pointed out that the
central fund would enable handicraft industries to deal with larger strikes for longer
periods of time. The large industrial concerns, he mentioned, had interests in making
sure even small handicraft firms were not subjected to strikes and union imposition.99
Another advantage of the unified organization was that it would expand employment
98
It is difficult to assess what direction the VDA would have taken in terms of repression, because its
activities were interrupted by the transformation of the domestic economy into a war-time one and the
domestic instability wrought by World War I and its end. The consequences of these events for firm
strategies are discussed more fully in Chapter 6. 99
This contrasts with existing accounts which argues that handicraft industries had different interests
from larger firms.
170
exchanges and offices, which had been before more of the purview of the HA. The
VDA, as Tänzler described, would substantially increase the resources to battle unions
(Tänzler, 1913, quoted in Soziale Praxis). He also emphasized the importance of
moral suasion and propaganda efforts to win public opinion battles against workers.
The VDA would be an expansion of repressive strategies against workers.
The VDA also helped to institutionalize conflicts between different industries,
in particular small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) and larger enterprises, and
―smoothed out‖ disagreements over treatment of workers (Krüger 1926, 324). Note
there were some areas, as discussed, where due to higher sector level costs of
repression, collaboration was allowed. Under Tänzler‘s direction, the VDA ―…called
upon its affiliated organisations to accede to the legitimate demands of labour‖
(Krüger 1926, 325). The VDA adopted a more conciliatory position towards workers
and did not assist individual firms that locked out workers, if such behavior was
viewed to be illegitimate.100
4.2.2 Managing heterogeneity
A key issue was whether the newly formed peak associations would support
the industries populated by smaller firms and craft-based production. The Hamburg-
based leadership wanted to incorporate those associations, because otherwise they
would be ―too weak without organizational support. Echoing Menck‘s arguments
about the VA, they argued that if the more economically powerful industries did not
support the handicraft and the small firms, trade union victories were more likely. This
100
―In cases where individual employers showed a tendency to reject claims considered legitimate by
their colleagues and to impose less favourable conditions upon their workers, it [the VDA] refused to
support them‖ (Krüger 1926, 325)
171
would, they argued, constitute an indirect defeat of the large-scale industry, since
skilled workers would be able to use their collective agreements to force larger firms
to comply with these agreements. The main concern was that skilled workers in the
craft industries would be able to impose their improved wage and working conditions
on other firms outside of the immediate coverage of these bargaining agreements (Saul
1974, 102). A peak organization that would provide strike reinsurance for craft and
smaller firm industries would address this problem, by undermining collective
agreements in the smaller industries. This contention too is supported by the
aforementioned memoranda from the LNV, who argued that it was beneficial for the
HA to intervene on behalf of the printers‘ employer associations.
This compromise in strategy of the peak association was partially dictated by
the structural reality of heterogeneity in sectors and regions in terms of demands from
workers and wage conditions. The peak association‘s executive committee controlled
a central fund, but the ―center of gravity‖ of the VDA was the local or regional
association in terms of initial decision-making. This allowed for some de-
centralization of wage management, which could not practically be done from Berlin.
The explicit policy of the VDA was to allow for inter-regional variation in wages, due
to variation in local-level transport costs, prices, and working conditions. The mix of
repressive and collaborative strategies helped to enforce these wage contracts. The
VDA, as with its predecessor organizations, pursued a collective strategy such that
workers could not take advantage of inter-firm wage differentials by migrating.101
101
The internal organization and governance of these associations were adapted to the law on
associations in the existing Civil Code. Membership to the VDA was determined by an executive
committee (Krüger 1926, 327). The VDA made it difficult to exit the organization. If a firm wanted to
172
The VDA had difficulty legally enforcing its obligations. But there were
administration rules to fine members for non-compliance and procedures for
terminating membership. The VDA obligated member firms to deposit funds to the
central committee to be used as a deposit in case the firm failed in its obligations.
(The VDA and its constituent regional associations tried to amend the German laws so
that they would be allowed to sue firms for non-compliance, particularly for exiting
the organization without committee authorization). The VDA in fact did expel
members for non-compliance and effectively blacklisted firms, preventing them from
receiving industrial conflict assistance from other firms.
There was also recognition of heterogeneity of interests within the VDA.
Union representatives discussed how the formation of the VDA would heighten
workers‘ awareness of the need to unionize, and that unions did not have the luxury of
divisions that prevented coordinated action. The official merger of the HA and VA
induced a renewed call for trade union unification, as evidenced in the discussion in
the Soziale Praxis article. However, there was recognition of the problem of
overcoming some divisions among workers. A specific danger that was mentioned
was the long-standing efforts of unification among employer associations in the metal
manufacturing industries, which were successful despite differences among
resign from the VDA, it was only allowed to do so at the end of an administrative year; it was required
to give two to three months notice (some regional associations insisted on six months notice). Firms
were generally forbidden to resign during a strike. Firms paid membership dues in return for services,
which included funds during a lockout or strike. Subscriptions were determined on the basis of wage
sheets or workers employed in addition to flat entrance fees for all members. The voting power of
individual firms in the VDA was determined by the number of employed workers and wages paid. The
administration of the VDA was composed of the committee (Vorstand), council (Ausschuss), and the
general meeting of members (Mitgliederversammlung). The general meeting occurred annually and
elected the executive committee (327).
173
employers. Of particular concern was the citation by unions of discussion for
combinations of employer confederations ―without consideration‖ for political and
economic differences, as these federations had a joint goal in fighting social
democratic unions.
The creation of peak level associations, and the proliferation employer
coordination in the early twentieth century, was described as a ―new section in the
history of class warfare‖ (Saul 1974, 447). But still, as the first section that opened
this chapter described, such efforts had mixed results. Major lockouts, particularly
those after the formation of the peak associations which took place in 1904 and 1905
did not reduce union membership. Trade unions increased their membership after
1904. The effect of bleeding union treasuries was partially offset by increasing desires
for workers to join unions, as workers still were able to join because unions could
provide for protection during unemployment. Still, employer associations could
claim more influence over workers than trade unions. In 1910, about 35 percent of
workers were employed by firms who had obligations to employer associations, as
opposed to 22 percent who belonged to trade unions (and that estimate includes non
social democratic trade unions.
After the failures of major industry lockouts to wipe out social democratic
trade unions, employer associations turned increasingly to lobbying for legislation.
There were concerns too from employer associations that mass lockouts would
become too costly; this was coupled with the fact that such attempts were not always
successful. In chapter 5 I test some of the above implications more rigorously with
data from this time period. In chapter 6 I show that the concern about whether the
174
VDA could continue its strategies was partially obviated by the advent of world war
and economic chaos; a fundamental shift to collaboration was to come when
repression was simply not a viable option.
175
Table 4-1: Characteristics of Employer Associations, 1911-1913
Industrial
Sector
Number of
associations
Number
of
member
firms
Number
of
member
workers
Agriculture 53 7,735 73,648
Mining 10 257 495,702
Minerals 133 4,075 218,161
Finished Metals
&
Manufacturing
343
14,970
862,888
Chemicals 4 91 23,227
Textiles 98 2,725 495,685
Paper 42 1,125 56,949
Leather Goods 69 2,778 19,900
Timber 252 7,803 80,934
Foodstuffs 154 12,918 189,589
Clothing 237 11,143 187,467
Cleaning 57 1,371 27,774
Construction 1,399 49,342 528,060
Polygraphics 130 5,223 74,431
Tradeables &
Transport
156 6,389 117,203
Services 11 5,389 9,400
Arts 103 529 25,000
Mixed 144 14,598 800,933 Note: Cells report period averages of 1911-1913. Source: Leckbusch 1964 and Statisisches Jahrbücher
das Deutsche Reich, 1911, 1912, 1913.
176
Table 4-1: Characteristics of Employer Associations, 1911-1913
Industrial
Sector
Workers per
association
Ratio of total
firms in sector
to member
firms in
association
Ratio of
total
workers in
sector to
member
workers in
association
Agriculture 1,413 4 2
Mining 49,570 19 2
Minerals 1,644 13 4
Finished Metals
&
Manufacturing
2,525
18
3
Chemicals 5,807 159 11
Textiles 5,076 52 2
Paper 1,361 19 4
Leather Goods 291 38 13
Timber 330 40 11
Foodstuffs 1,237 31 7
Clothing 787 66 9
Cleaning 495 101 12
Construction 379 4 3
Polygraphics 573 4 3
Tradeables &
Transport
752 204 25
Services 771 767 913
Arts 243 71 5
Mixed 5,791 NA NA Note: Cells report period averages of 1911-1913. Source: Leckbusch 1964 and Statisisches Jahrbücher
das Deutsche Reich, 1911, 1912, 1913.
177
Chapter 5: Testing Mechanisms and Observable
Implications from Imperial Germany
In Chapter 4 I demonstrated that during Imperial Germany, the rise of the
Social Democratic Party and trade unions posed a threat to firms, and they responded
to this threat with individual repressive strategies and then transitioned to collective
action. This latter activity took the form of important peak-level employer
confederations that supported regional and industry-level associations. However,
consistent with the hypotheses regarding collective action, differences among sectors
in terms of costs of repression made management of such collective strategies
difficult. The patterns of development of these associations, evidence regarding
motivations for formation, and observable implications are all consistent with the
theory.
In this chapter I use more fine-grained data from the same time period to test
mechanisms and observable implications of the theory. I exploit sub-national
variation in Germany, using different units of analysis, to test different mechanisms
and predictions of the theory. The first empirical test uses data at the industrial sector
level to test the impact of industrial heterogeneity on the degree of collective
strategies. The second quantitative test assesses if industrial characteristics lead to
differences in degree of collective action. This test focuses on whether institutional
connections between associations matter for substantive collective action, in the form
of strike insurance adoption. The third and final test uses new data on local-level
adoption of repressive firm strategies. I use data at the Prussian voting district
178
(wahlkreis) level and new data on firm membership in key repressive employer
institutions to show that the threat of politicized labor affects the adoption of
repressive firm strategies against labor. Specifically, firms adopt collective repressive
strategies against workers when there is a moderate change in the electoral threat
posed by the SPD, but such collective action is only possible when low industrial
heterogeneity allows for collective action.
Section 1: Explaining Strategies of Collective Action: Evidence at the Sector Level
I describe and present a simple test of the main hypotheses from Chapter 3 that
links industrial heterogeneity with degree of collective strategies of firms. I use the
sector-level data on employer associations from the years 1911-1913 discussed in
Chapter 4 and presented in Table 4-1 to test whether heterogeneous or fractionalized
industries affect the degree of collective action. The yearbook data are of aggregate
characteristics of the associations, coded by sector. The data described for each sector
include: the total number of employer associations, total number of member firms in
these associations, and total number of workers employed by such firms.
Unfortunately, data on individual number of firms and employees for each association
are unavailable, and so only inferences from the sector level are available. In the next
section I use a separate dataset that of a sample of national-level associations to test
other observable implications of the theory. The relevant unit of analysis is the
industrial sector (n = 17). Across all sectors for 1911-1913, the mean number of
associations by sector is 113, with a standard deviation of 256. For example, the metal
manufacturing industry in 1911 had a total of 294 associations; these associations
covered 13,752 member firms, employing a total of nearly 800,000 workers. By
179
contrast, the textile sector had 95 associations with 2,616 member firms, employing
nearly 500,000 workers.
I consider different outcome variables that capture the concept of degree of
collective action at the sector level. To measure the extent of collective action by
sector, I measure the fraction of workers in the labor force in each sector who are
employed by firms in that are members of associations.102 This captures the degree of
coverage of associations. The mean fraction of employer associational coverage of
the labor force is 0.24, with a standard deviation from 0.19. The smallest fraction is
near 0 (in the industry low skilled guest services), and the largest fraction is 0.64 in the
agriculture industry. The fraction for the metal manufacturing industry is 0.39; for the
large mining sector it is 0.55. I use data from the 1909 German Census (Statistik des
Deutschen Reichs) to obtain decomposition of the labor force by sector. This
constitutes the denominator of the dependent variable; the numerator is number of
workers covered by associations.
To construct the main independent variable of interest, the degree of industrial
heterogeneity, I use the same data source to construct indices of fractionalization for
each industry at the national level. The Census gives detailed decompositions of the
number of firms and workers by sub-categories of industries for each of the main
industries. For example, the main industrial category of chemical industries includes
17 sub-industries, for which data on the number of firms and workers in each of those
102
An alternative measures if the fraction of firms covered by association, but such a measure does not
account for differences in firm size and amount of product or labor markets covered by associational
activity. We can consider outcome variables that do not normalize by conditions of the sector such as:
number of associations; number of workers; number of firms covered by the association; ratio of the
number of workers per association; and ratio of number of firms per association), but these are less
appropriate for reasons discussed in the text.
180
17 industries exist.103 For each sub-industry, I first calculate its share of total
employment in the main industry. I use the share of employment in each sub-sector,
as that gives a more accurate approximation of the market share of each industrial sub-
sector.104 Using this data on employment share by sub-sector, I then calculate the
Herfindahl index of employment shares for each industrial sector (the inverse of the
sum of squares for each sub-industry).
The average degree of fractionalization by employment across all sectors is
6.8, with variation 6.0. The least fractionalized industry besides agriculture was the
low-skilled guest services industry with a measure of 1.8. The most fractionalized
industry is one labeled ―trade and transportation‖ with a measure of 21.2. The
industrial category of finished metal manufacturing has a high fractionalization of
19.0. By comparison, the mining industry has a fractionalization measure of 3.0.
I estimate a simple linear regression model where the outcome variable is the
fraction of labor force in a sector that is covered by employer associations (the fraction
of labor force that is employed by firms that are members of employer associations).
The main covariates are the number of associations in the sector, number of workers
covered by associations, number of member firms that are member of the associations,
and industrial fractionalization by employment (as calculated above). All sector-level
covariates except for industrial fractionalization are logged. Consistent with the
hypothesis from Chapter 3, I expect that higher degrees of fractionalization should
103
As discussed above, the data from German statistical yearbooks (Statistik Jahrbücher) contain data
on 22 industrial sectors. To match the industrial categories from these two sources, I combined a few
industrial categories from the Census categories. The metal manufacturing industry is a combination of
metal manufacturing employment and machine instruments employed. 104
I also calculate each sub-industry‘s share of the total number of firms. The share of number of firms
for each sub-industry is also instructive, but detailed data on actual market share of the firms in each
sector do not exist.
181
lead to lower degrees of collective action. The results are displayed in Model 1 of
Table 5-1. Unless otherwise noted, all analyses are at the sector-level and for the year
1911, the year for which complete data for all major sectors are first reported. The use
of 1911 data also allows for appropriate lags from the Census data from 1909. The
main results do not change when period averages of 1911-1913 data are used; nor do
the results change when a fractional logistic model to estimate proportions is used.
The result is consistent with the theory. Regarding the control variables,
sectors that have more associations have a smaller fraction of the labor force covered
under them. Sectors that have more absolute numbers of workers covered by
associations have a higher proportion of workers covered. In terms of directly testing
the theory, as hypothesized, higher degrees of fractionalization by employment reduce
the associational coverage of the labor force; the coefficient is negative and
statistically significant at p<.09. Substantively, moving from the 10th
to 90th
percentile
of fractionalization in an industrial sector reduces labor force coverage from.28 to .08.
The negative effect of this change in fractionalization on employer coordination is
equivalent to moving from the minimum number of associations in an industry to the
median number of associations in an industry. While there is a downward trend, the
result treat should be treated with caution because of the small sample size, as even
with large changes in fractionalization, the 95 percent confidence intervals still
overlap. The effect of fractionalization remains controlling for the number of workers
in the industry.105
105
The coefficient remains negative but the standard errors increase when the number of firms in the
sector is controlled for. But, given that we do not have data on fractionalization by firm‘s profits or
market share, ex ante it is not clear why it should relate to the degree of employer coordination.
182
As an alternative measure of degree of employer coordination, I also consider
an alternative measure of the dependent variable of the degree of collective action: the
ratio of workers covered by employer associations to the number of associations in the
sector. This ratio captures a rough density of associations, conditional on some labor
force participation in associations. That is, it codes a hypothetical sector that has one
association that covers 1,000 workers denser than a sector with two associations
covering the same number of workers, and so on. The mean number of workers per
association in the period 1911-13 was 4,400, with a standard deviation of 11,250. In
the finished metals and machine industry, the average ratio was 2,500. The highest
ratio was in the mining industry with nearly 50,000 workers per association. One of
the lowest ratios was in the construction industry with about 400 workers per
association.
Model 2 presents the results of estimating a different linear regression model
where the outcome variable is this alternative measure of coordination. Again,
industrial fractionalization, which is a proxy for heterogeneity within a sector, is
negatively correlated with associational coverage. Moving from the minimum to the
median degree of industrial fractionalization reduces the number of workers per
association from about 6,000 to 3,500. As above, though, the 95 percent confidence
intervals overlap; this is suggestive evidence that industrial fractionalization has an
effect on degree of collective action at the sector level. This simple test confirms one
of the predictions from the theory. Heterogeneity of firms makes collective action
183
more difficult, as evidenced in the lower presence of employer associations in this
time period.106
It is careful to state the limits of what sector-level data can reveal about the
degree of collective action within each sector. The employer association data at the
sector level do not reveal the distribution of actual number of workers and firms per
association. Consider for example an industry that has a high number of workers per
association. It could be because one association has a very high number of workers,
and the rest of the associations are limited in their membership and do not have many
workers. Or, it could mean that there is an even distribution of workers per
association. Similarly, using just the number of employer associations in sector would
not tell us the degree of coverage of such associations. Both of the measures
displayed in Table 5-1 are fairly blunt ways to measure collective action, but the
negative correlation of industrial fractionalization confirms the importance of the
structural side of the theory posed in Chapter 3.
Section 2: Explaining Strategies of Collective Action: Evidence from Associations
In this section I test another observable implication of the theory, as well as a
substantive claim that arose from the qualitative evidence presented in the previous
chapter. I examine whether institutional ties employer associations, which I argue is a
proxy for a minimal degree of collective action, leads to substantive collective action.
That is, does being officially attached to an association actually bring any benefits? I
proxy higher degree of collective action with an indicator for if the association
106
A problem with the data is that we cannot precisely trace employer associations to specific locations.
Thus there is an ecological inference problem is that specific industrial characteristics may vary by
region or locality. Section 3 of this chapter uses more fine-grained local-level variation in data to test
the hypothesis.
184
provides strike insurance. As discussed in the previous chapter, associations had to
pay costs to provide for strike insurance; the adoption of such insurance implies
sufficient concern with the threat from workers to pay for such insurance. In this
section I test for the correlation between institutional ties that are ―on paper‖ and the
actual enactment of the collective strategy.
To this end, I use another dataset on characteristics of a sample of major
national-level employer associations to test the theory for different associations. The
data also come from the German statistical yearbook of 1909. I use data on 73 major
associations at the national level. The data include for each association the number of
member firms, workers employed by those firms, the sector in which the association
operates, and whether the association provides or plans on providing strike insurance
for member firms. For example, the peak associations the Hauptstelle and Verein
discussed extensively in the previous chapter are listed. In addition, there are other
associations at individual sectors, based out of different cities.107 I also use the sector-
level data discussed in section 1 to test whether sector-level factors affect
characteristics of the associations.
Table 5-2 gives descriptive statistics of the characteristics these national-level
associations, as classified by industrial sector. The table displays the number of
employer associations by sector; the total sum of firms that are members of all the
associations, and the sum of workers employed by such firms. Unsurprisingly, the
metal manufacturing industry has the most number of major national-level employer
associations (14), as well as the highest number of workers covered by employer
107
For example, the Verband der elektrotechnischen Installationsfirmen in Deutschland, Frankfurt a.
Main is an example association in the dataset.
185
associations.108 Additionally, over 90 percent of these associations gathered data on
member firms and workers.
As a proxy for degree of collective action, I consider which associations have
provided or are planning to provide strike insurance. As discussed in the previous two
chapters, the provision of strike insurance (in addition to managing of lists of workers)
was a crucial provision as well as issue of contention in the formation of employer
associations. The presence or discussion of such provisions is a proxy for a more
coordinated body. This variable is binary (1 indicating the presence of strike
insurance or such plans, 0 otherwise). Column 1 displays the number of associations
in each sector that have provisions for strike insurance or are planning to adopt them.
Of the 73 national-level associations, 30 percent had such strike insurance plans.
Much of the activity is driven by the metal manufacturing industry, as 6 out of 14
associations fall in this category. Five out of twelve such associations exist in the raw
materials (earth and stone) industry. Thus much of the associational activity and strike
planning is driven by, but not exclusive to, these major industries. Of the associations
in these two industries, 44 percent provided strike insurance, as opposed to 22 percent
of associations in all other industries. Of the associations that are connected to another
national-level employer association, 48 percent have strike insurance plans; whereas
only 20 percent do for other non-connected associations. These initial differences are
more systematically tested below.
108
Note that these sums only apply to associations that claimed national representation; they ignore
coverage of regional and local associations.
186
As with the sector-level analysis in section 1, I consider the variables of the
(logged) number of member firms and workers, only now I use such data for the
specific association as opposed to industrial sector. To test for the relationship
between institutional connection and strike insurance provision, I consider the variable
which captures whether the association in question has any institutional attachment to
any other national-level association. This variable is a binary variable (1 indicating
attachment, 0 if not). This variable tells us if some institutional connection exists
between associations. I hypothesize that this variable as well should be positively
correlated with adoption of strike insurance.
To systematically test this relationship, I estimate a logistic regression model
where the dependent variable is adoption or consideration of strike insurance,
controlling for the above association and sector-level characteristics. Regarding the
main independent variable of interest, the connection to another national-level
association, a simple difference of means of tests shows the initial importance of this
variable. Associations with such an institutional connection constitute a higher
proportion of associations that provide or consider strike insurance (.48 versus .20, p <
.01). The results are displayed in Table 5-3. The only consistent statistically
significant predictor institutional attachment to another national-level association,
although the binary indicator for mining and manufacturing approaches conventional
levels (there results hold under other specifications). As Models 1-3 shows, the
coefficient on the binary variable indicating institutional connection to another
national association remains substantively large and statistically significant (p<.04), as
does the coefficient for whether the association is in the metal manufacturing industry.
187
The predicted probability of having or planning strike insurance goes from 0.20 (0.05,
0.36) to 0.53 (0.31, 0.75) when an association has an institutional connection. This is
a slightly larger effect than an association being in the manufacturing industry, where
the change in probability is from 0.24 (.08, 0.41) to .49 (.24, .74). This indicates that
types of collective action activities—connections to institutions and provision of strike
insurance—are correlated. More importantly, it validates the claims discussed in
Chapter 4 about the importance of ―institutional connection‖ to peak associations:
such ties imply a higher likelihood of adopting strike insurance. This provides some
quantitative confirmation for the cases discussed in Chapter 4.
Turning to the rest of the covariates, neither the number of firms and workers
in the association, nor the structural characteristics of the sector, predict an
association‘s adoption of strike insurance. Neither the number of member firms or
workers predicts the adoption of strike provisions. Similarly, the hypothesized
structural conditions (number of member firms and workers in the industry, and the
degree of industrial fractionalization) do not predict strike insurance adoption.
Regarding the latter set of variables, this lack of effect might be because of the
mismatch between the units of analysis (sector versus associational variables).
Additionally, as discussed above, the degree of fractionalization might be correlated
with the development within the industry. Metal manufacturing is coded as a highly
fractionalized industry partially because of the high number of sub-industries that
emerged due to the development of a high number of sub-occupations within the
industry (as opposed to say textiles, even though the latter industry had many more
small firms). Unfortunately, the rapid development in some industries meant that
188
more sub-sectors were measurable and classifiable, potentially overstating the actual
degree of heterogeneity in an industry.
The importance of the binary variable of institutional connection to a national-
level association raises the question: what explains such institutional connections? I
estimate another logistic regression model where the national connection variable is
the outcome with the same set of structural covariates. Table 5-4 displays the results.
As models 1-3 shows, the only structural variable that is statistically significant is that
of number of firms: associations with lower number of firms are more likely to be
connected to national employer associations. Moving from the 10th
to the 90th
percentile of firm membership reduces the probability of being connected to a national
institution from .64 (.40, .88) to .20 (-.04, .44). This is consistent with the notion that
lower numbers of firms make collective action and institutional connection easier;
further, such associations might be more vulnerable to threats from unions and thus
would benefit more from such a national connection.109 The conclusion is that
structural conditions do matter, but in an indirect way: the associations that were most
likely to have adopted strike insurance were those in the metal manufacturing industry
and that possessed some institutional connection to another national-level association.
In turn, associations with smaller number of firms were most likely to have such
national-level connections.
Section 3. Explaining Membership in Collective Repressive Associations
In this section I conduct another specific test of the theory by leveraging sub-
national variation in the adoption of collective repressive strategies at the local level.
109
Ideally we would like a pre-1909 measure of ―labor threat‖ for each association.
189
To test the hypothesis that the redistribution threat from workers should affect firm
strategies, I constructed an original dataset on adoption of collective repressive
strategies at the voting district level in Prussia in 1910. I use membership in the
Hauptstelle Deutscher Arbeitgeberverbände (HA), the peak-level anti-labor employer
association discussed in the previous chapter, as a proxy for a repressive strategy of
firms (HA 1910). I also use data that allows me to directly test the variable of
industrial heterogeneity on collective action. I find that low to medium threats from
workers have a positive effect on the adoption of repressive firm strategies. Where the
SPD had more electoral support, firms had a greater incentive to respond by joining
repressive employer organizations. This finding is consistent with the theory: firms
have an incentive to adopt a collective repressive strategy if there is a threat, but only
when that level is low to moderate. In short, when the workers posed a redistributive
threat, firms have an incentive to repress and respond collectively, but such collective
action needs to be facilitated by structural conditions to make it self-enforcing.
The relatively weak support of the SPD in Prussia during this time period
provides a difficult test for the hypothesis because the overall level of threat posed by
this party had not reached a level where the SPD could plausibly take a majority of the
legislature or implement its preferred social policies. The 1907 election was seen as a
relative loss for the SPD and a re-affirmation of some of Chancellor Bulow‘s domestic
policies (Sperber 1997; Suval 1985). Thus testing for responses of firm strategies, as
measured with 1910 data, to the 1907 election represents a hard test for the theory.
This empirical test leverages the dip in support of the SPD between 1903 and 1907 to
provide the most stringent test of the theory. When comparing the behavior of firms
190
across voting districts, support for the SPD in 1907 can be coded as national-level
moderate threat posed by labor.
3.1 Descriptive evidence from a major repressive association, German level evidence
Before I provide support for the above statements, I first examine descriptive
evidence of repressive firm strategies across all of Germany. I gathered data on firm
strategies at the district level using reconstructed lists of the 1910 membership list of
the peak anti-labor employer organization, the Hauptstelle Deutscher
Arbeitgeberverbände (HA). As discussed in chapter 4, this organization had a stated
anti-labor objective. The membership list was composed of two broad categories:
―mixed‖ organizations (which had organizations that covered multiple industries) as
well as ―pure industrial‖ organizations (which had organizations that covered one
industry but possibly multiple geographic areas). This data can be exploited because
almost all member organizations include a geographic place of reference in their
name, indicating their geographical area of service. An example of a member
organization‘s name was the ―Employer Organization of the Textile Industry, Aachen‖
(Arbeitgeberverband der deutschen Textilindustrie, Aachen). None of the listed
members from this year are individual firms. The membership of the HA in 1910 was
composed of 154 employer organizations in the metal manufacturing, raw materials,
glass, paper, and textile industries. Some member organizations were also formally
listed as cartels.
Table 5-5 describes the composition of HA membership by general category
and industry. The majority of the members of the organization were textile
associations. While the membership counts do not give a sense of relative power or
191
size of each member (as textile associations were generally populated by small and
medium-sized enterprises), the frequency of textile associations is not surprising, as
the original spur for efforts at repressive collective strategies, in the form of
coordinating anti-labor institutions, was a response to strikes in the Saxon textile
industry. Also, recall from chapter 4 that there were a series of distributive conflicts
between metal manufacturing and textile associations in terms of subsidizing central
lockout funds. About 75 percent of the members were ―pure‖ industrial associations,
indicating that much of the membership was denoted by local associations operating in
specific geographic areas.
To determine the effect of the workers‘ threat on the adoption of repressive
firm strategies, I test at the micro-level which voting districts in Germany were likely
to have members of the HA. To do this, I first trace each geographically-based
employer organization to an electoral district (wahlkreis). For example, several textile
employer organizations were based out of the electoral district Chemnitz, where the
SPD won a majority in the 1907 election on the first ballot. For comparability
purposes, I truncate the HA sample to just members that had their base of operations
in one electoral district. This constitutes 68 percent of the member associations of the
HA. I can then use the data to determine if firms were more likely to adopt collectivist
repressive strategies (proxied by joining the HA) if the SPD won on either the first or
second ballot. The 105 members that signify repressive firm strategies that are
members of the HA came from 64 electoral districts out of 397 districts in Germany.
Did firms adopt collectivist repressive strategies against workers, in areas
where the SPD was successful in the previous year? Yes. Table 5-6 demonstrates
192
initial support for the ―left threat‖ hypothesis. 27 percent—the highest percentage—of
the members joined the HA where the SPD won in the previous election—this is the
highest percentage among all political parties. But firm participation in this anti-labor
organization is not totally explained by SPD threats. Firms did adopt repressive
strategies where parties of both left and right-wing ideological support won. At the
other end of the ideological extreme, about 10 percent and four percent of the
members appeared in districts where the German conservative and national parties
won, respectively. After the SPD, however, firms adopted collectivist repressive
strategies most frequently in electoral districts where the Center and National Liberal
Parties won (23 percent and 15 percent, respectively). It is important to note that part
of the ―left‖ threat effect is not driven by a few politically important electoral districts;
with a few exceptions, each HA member is traced to one unique electoral district. As
Table 5-7 shows, if we consider SPD victories by industry, the textile industry stands
out as having an anti-labor strategy in areas where the SPD won the most seats. These
results provide initial evidence for the ―left threat‖ hypothesis. While the SPD won in
the plurality of districts that experienced anti-labor firm strategies, such organizations
formed in other areas where other political parties did win.
3.2 Specific test of the theory in Prussian voting districts – the data
But what happens when we consider other covariates besides political ones,
and also consider SPD vote share instead of just victory? To test the theory of firm
strategies using statistical estimation, I also construct a new dataset that tests the
importance of the left threat, economic heterogeneity, and basic demographic
characteristics at the level of national voting district in Prussia. I consider the subset of
193
just the members of the HA in Prussia that can be traced to one electoral district,
truncating the data in a different way from the previous section. This dataset allows
for better testing of competing independent variables to explain which voting districts
in Prussia were most likely to have important repressive firm strategies.
I test the determinants of repressive firm strategies in Prussia, using control
data at the Kreis (city or village) and voting district levels. I constructed a dataset of
basic demographic controls at the national voting-district level by using Kreis-level
demographic data in Prussia (Galloway 2007) and appropriately ―nesting‖ this Kreis-
level data within voting districts. In 1907 Prussia had 231 out of 395 Reichstag voting
districts; the SPD minimally contested in all of them by this time. To do this analysis
I restrict the data to Prussia; there are 58 out of 64 HA members based out of Prussia.
(Again, this accounts for only the members based out of one electoral district; this
indicates we are not dismissing too many ―single-district‖ organizations). This new
dataset includes at the voting district level for the year preceding 1910 for which data
are available: SPD vote share (1907); logged population (1905); percent urbanization
(1905); various measures of agricultural holdings (1905); and a measure of industrial
heterogeneity. The heterogeneity measure of employment fractionalization is similar
to that used in sections 1 and 2, but measured at the local as opposed to the national-
sector level. The difference is that for each Prussian kreis, I calculate the percentage
of employment by the six major industrial categories for which data are available. I
then aggregate these percentages up to the voting district level. I then take the inverse
of the sum of squares of these percentages. The resulting measure is the inverse
Herfindahl Index (HHI), giving us an effective number of sectors. This heterogeneity
194
measure ranges from 1.7 to 5, with a median of 3 and mean of 3.1. Higher values
indicate higher heterogeneity, and this greater difficulty in collective action. Industrial
heterogeneity and the vote share of the SPD in 1907 are correlated at .30.
3.3 Descriptive statistics for repressive firm strategies and membership in Prussia
What explains why firms pursued these repressive strategies in some Prussian
voting districts but not others? To what extent do the left threat and heterogeneity
affect firm membership in this organization? I find that higher support for the SPD is
correlated with adoption of anti-labor firm strategies, supporting the argument that
firms respond to moderate threats from the left. Before turning to regression results, I
present basic descriptive statistics of both SPD vote share and distribution of HA
membership.
displays the distribution of SPD vote share across Prussian voting districts in
1907. The modal district had less than 20 percent support of the SPD. Only 13
districts (6 percent of the districts) had a district where the SPD won on the first ballot.
The average vote share for the SPD in Prussia was 20.1 percent, a 2.5 percent average
reduction from the previous election year of 1903.
Which Prussian districts had associations that were members of the HA? Out
of 231 Prussian voting districts, 58 (or 25.1 percent) of the districts contained at least
one associational member of the HA. Members of the HA in Prussia were involved in
a wide range of industries, including raw materials, heavy industry and manufacturing,
and textiles. Table 5-7 shows the distribution of HA members across the Prussian
voting districts, broken down by quartiles of SPD vote share in the 1907 election. As
195
the electoral success of the SPD increases, a higher percentage of districts experience
repressive firm strategies.
3.4 Estimation results
To test the relationship between SPD support, industrial heterogeneity, and HA
membership, I estimate a probit regression model where the dependent variable is
whether the Prussian voting district in 1910 has a member of the HA. Table 5-8
presents the results and lists the models with each of the classes of variables,
representing different hypotheses. Model 1 confirms the main hypothesis that low to
moderate threat from the left facilitates collective repressive firm strategies. Further
the results of Model 1 show that there is a conditional marginal effect: the left threat
only has an effect on collective strategies when that strategy can be facilitated by
lower heterogeneity. Model 2 shows that this effect holds even when controlling for
urbanization. Model 3 shows that this effect is robust to inclusion of other district-
level controls. Thus firms respond collectively and in a repressive manner to the
electoral threat posed by workers, but a collective response is only possible when
structural conditions permit collective action.
Figure 5-2 presents further empirical support of the argument. This figure
displays the relationship between the support of the SPD and predicted probability of
adoption of HA membership at the district level, interacted with degree of
heterogeneity. For low heterogeneity districts, an increase support for the SPD
increases the probability of a collective repressive firm strategy; this increase is about
22 percent (the confidence interval ranges from 0.1 to 1). For high heterogeneity
districts, the increase in support of the SPD does not affect adoption of collective
196
repressive strategies, as predicted by the theory. The change in percentage is -18
percent, and the confidence interval overlaps 0. However, there are few observations
where the SPD threshold is about 40 percent; thus the effect of high support of the
SPD should be interpreted with caution, as the confidence intervals become
significantly larger. The fact that even modest increases in SPD vote share have such
an impact is partial evidence for the theory that repressive firm strategies to respond to
moderate increases in the left threat, but only in less industrially heterogeneous areas.
The statistical test provides some confidence about the hypotheses about the
determinants of repressive firm strategies. It demonstrates that repression is a direct
response to the threat posed by workers, but collective repression is only possible
when facilitated by more promising structural conditions that are for self-enforcing
bargains among firms or constituent associations.
Section 4. Conclusions
In this chapter I use a number of different datasets on the participation in and
activities of employer associations to test the importance of structural conditions that
affect collective action as well as the redistributive threat from workers to explain
repressive strategies. The first two empirical sections isolated the importance of
industrial heterogeneity and institutional connections in explaining collective
strategies. Section 1 demonstrated the importance of industrial heterogeneity in
explaining the prevalence of collective action by sector. Section 2 demonstrated that
institutional connections to other associations facilitate substantive collective action in
the form of strike insurance. Section 3 specifically tested the redistributive threat
aspect of the theory and showed that collective repression occurs most in areas where
197
heterogeneity is low and the threat from workers is salient. The overall evidence
indicates that repression is substantively important and its emergence is consistent
with the expectations of the theory discussed in Chapter 3. In the next chapter, I
provide further confirmation of the theory by demonstrating the change in firm
strategies to a temporary collaborative regime in the aftermath of WWI and the initial
years of the Weimar republic.
198
Table 5-1: Explaining Employer Coordination at the Sector Level
Model 1
Outcome:
Fraction of labor force
covered
Model 2
Outcome:
Member workers per
employer association
Total number of employer
associations (logged)
-0.10*
(0.047)
-4,441*
(2522)
Absolute number of
workers covered by
associations (logged) 0.11
(0.025)
6,463***
(1349)
Absolute number of firms
covered by associations
(logged)
0.051
(0.041)
-2,710
(2191)
Sector fractionalization by
employment
-0.011*
(0.0058)
-543*
(310)
n 17 17 Standard errors in parentheses. *** significant at p<.01, ** significant at p<.05, * significant at p>.10.
199
Table 5-2: Characteristics of Major National-Level Employer Associations
Number of
associations
Number of
associations
with/planning
to provide
strike
insurance
Number of
member
firms in
associations
Number of
workers
employed by
member
firms
Agriculture,
Nurseries, Fisheries
2 1 21 23,500
Mines, Iron/Steel,
Salt refineries
1 1 70 30,589
Earth and stone 12 5 2,864 169,390
Finished/metal &
Manufacturing
14 6 6,996 635,874
Chemical 2 0 563 2,142
Textile 2 0 18 850
Paper 7 1 4,962 86,425
Leather 1 0 250 8,000
Wood, Cut Materials 4 1 5,217 79,558
Consumption/Food 5 1 45,106 43,930
Clothing Trade 4 1 3,494 55,580
Cleaning Industry . . . .
Construction 2 0 20,994 251,600
Polygraphics 4 2 601 22,199
Trade,
Transportation
4 1 78 43,500
Tourist
Housing/Services
2 0 5,602 12,000
Arts 5 0 23,958 78,000
Mixed Organizations 2 2 38,644 2,438,142
200
Table 5-3: Explaining Strike Insurance Provisions in Employer Associations
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
Institutional
connection
1.58***
(.59)
1.37**
(.67)
1.49**
(.70)
Metal manufacturing
industry
1.27**
(.59)
.96
(.65)
1.11
(.71)
Absolute number of
member firms
(logged)
.075
(.22)
0.074
(.22)
Absolute number of
member workers
(logged)
-.0046
(.25)
0.015
(.25)
Sector
fractionalization by
employment
-0.033
(.057)
n 51 51 51 Standard errors in parentheses. *** significant at p<.01, ** significant at p<.05, * significant at p>.10.
Table 5-4: Explaining Institutional Connections in Employer Associations
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
Metal manufacturing
industry
.53
(.33)
.064
(.70)
-.084
(.76)
Absolute number of
member firms
(logged)
-.34**
(.18)
-.40*
(.21)
-.39*
(.22)
Absolute number of
member workers
(logged)
.11
(.64)
.098
(.24)
Absolute number of
workers in sector
(logged)
.52
(.40)
.088
(.49)
Sector
fractionalization by
employment
.11
(.071)
n 51 51 51 Standard errors in parentheses. *** significant at p<.01, ** significant at p<.05, * significant at p>.10.
201
Table 5-5: Membership of the Hauptstelle Deutscher Arbeitgeberverbände by
Industry and SPD Threat
Industry % of HA
Membership
% of
Organizations that
come from an SPD
district
Raw Materials 0.95 0%
Leather 0.95 0%
Paper 1.9 0%
Services 1.9 0%
Mines, Iron/Steel,
Salt refineries 2.86 0%
Polygraphics 4.76 20%
Construction 7.62 0%
Finished/metal &
Manufacturing 9.52 30%
Mixed
Organizations 17.14 17%
Textile 52.38 42%
Table 5-6: The Left Threat: Repressive Firm Strategies Occur in Districts with
the SPD Winning
Political Party
Number of Districts the
Party Won
% of Total Districts
the Party Won
SPD 28 26.7
Center 24 22.9
Free People‘s Party 18 17.1
National Liberal 16 15.2
German National Party 10 9.5
Conservative 4 3.8
Polish Party 3 2.9
German Reform Party 1 1.0
% Total refers to the total number of members in the Hauptstelle Deutscher Arbeitgeberverbände
202
Table 5-7: Percent of Prussian Districts with Membership in HA Organization
Increases with SPD Vote Share
SPD vote share
is 0-5%
SPD vote share
is 5-17%
SPD vote share
is 17-33%
SPD vote share
is >33%
All districts 12.68 19.72 34.00 46.15
High
heterogeneity
Districts
7.50 33.33 43.48 52.38
Low
heterogeneity
districts
19.35 7.89 25.93 38.89
Table 5-8: Explaining Collective Repressive Firm Strategies in Prussia
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
1907 SPD
vote share
0.04**
(0.01)
0.11*
(0.052)
0.10*
(0.053)
Heterogeneity -0.18
(0.26)
0.33
(0.42)
0.29
(0.43)
1907 SPD
vote share*
Heterogeneity
-0.027*
(0.015)
-0.026**
(0.008)
-0.026**
(0.0016)
Urbanization 0.026***
(0.009)
0.03***
(0.001)
Agricultural
production
0.062
(0.17)
Agricultural
inequality
-4.73
(7.43)
Pseudo R-
squared
0.05 0.13 0.13
n 226 226 226 Standard errors, clustered by voting district, in parentheses. * significant at p < 0.1; ** significant at p < 0.05, *** significant at p < 0.01
203
Figure 5-1
39.39
13.42
16.02
13.42
10.82
5.195
.8658 .8658
01
02
03
04
0
% o
f to
tal d
istr
icts
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 801907 Wahlkreis, SPD voteshare in 1907
1907 Distribution of SPD Vote Share
204
Figure 5-2
Note: Estimation is of conditional marginal effect of SPD vote share. Controls: logged urbanization;
agricultural inequality; logged population
0.2
.4.6
.8
Pre
dic
ted
Pro
ba
bili
ty o
f H
A M
em
be
rsh
ip
0 20 40 60 801907 SPD Vote Share
Homogeneous
Heterogeneous
Left Threat Predicts HA Activity
205
Chapter 6: Evidence from Weimar Germany
―…[the] flood of events overtook us all‖ – Hans von Raumer110
The reflections of Hans von Raumer about the rapid adoption of a new labor
law regime in Germany at the end of World War I illustrate some of the most
important predictions and confirmations of the theory. The flood of events—the
uncertainty that would accompany the return of soldiers after the war and the nature of
the state-run transition economy—drove firms to strategically act to adopt a less costly
regime for them. In this chapter I expand considerably on this point and test the
theory with evidence from the inter-war period in Germany. I demonstrate that large
changes in the two key variables—the redistributive threat to firms posed by workers
and changes in industrial heterogeneity—are linked to corresponding changes in firm
strategies. I also show that the main mechanisms for both variables—the level of the
cost of repression and the variation in the cost of repression—operated to affect the
changes in firm strategies. In particular, changes in industrial heterogeneity affected
ability of employer organizations to enforce collective strategies.
As discussed in the previous chapter, Wilhelmine Germany was characterized
by a set of repressive industrial institutions that were largely designed to inhibit
unionization and were especially predominant in Prussia. This is most prominently
evidenced by the relative strength of employer associations that use the various kinds
of repression described in Chapter 2 as a response to unionization and electoral
strength of the SPD. But after WWI and during the first part of the Weimar era, there
was a qualitative shift to cross-class collective employer institutions that recognized
110
Raumer (1954)
206
unions. Most theories that discuss the historical causes or consequences of industrial
institutions and social policy often reference these collaborative institutions during
inter-war Germany. Yet, current theories and evidence either downplay the actual
transition to such cooperative institutions, or are insufficient in explaining them. The
advent of widespread, state-sanctioned collective bargaining in one of the world‘s
largest economies, and the fact that it is a modern template for ―coordinated market
economies‖ or the possible ―European model,‖ means social scientists often label
Germany as a ―critical case‖ for competing theories. The discussion in this chapter
also goes one step further than current accounts and shows why collaborative
strategies during Weimar Germany actually changed within the time period, and why
repressive strategies were adopted and returned before the republic‘s ultimate collapse.
The chapter proceeds as follows: section one presents evidence of the shift to
collective collaborative strategies during and at the end of WWI. The section links the
variables and mechanisms of the theory to this shift. Section two presents evidence
that changes in these variables led to a collapse in the adoption of collective
collaborative strategies. The section describes the reduction of the threat from
workers in the immediate aftermath of WWI, and the difficulties posed by exogenous
economic conditions in enforcement of collaborative strategies among employers.
The joint affect of these variables was to make a return to repressive strategies
preferable. Section three presents evidence of the use of such repressive strategies in
the late 1920s, and tests a key observable implication of the theory described in
Chapter 3: the failure of actors with preferences for collaborative strategies to succeed
due to problems of enforcement and incentives of other firms. This section presents
207
several pieces of evidence of employer association repression. I show the how
employer associations challenged state laws and unionization; how employer
associations using collective strategies to inhibit and constraint the actions of
collaborative associations; how repressive employer associations lobbied the state as
part of their costs of repression; and finally, how heterogeneity within the repressive
faction affected its political lobbying.
The fourth section briefly discusses how the evidence from inter-war Germany
confirms the theory from chapter 3, and challenges existing accounts and logic of
employer coordination. In particular, changes in firm strategies cannot be attributed to
changes in institutions that protected co-investments in specific assets, or the electoral
system. Evidence that focuses on the variable of electoral systems cannot account for
the change in strategies that took place within the same PR system. Evidence that
focuses on the mechanism of co-investment in assets and the cooperative nature of PR
cannot explain the distributional conflict that dominated much of the period. For each
section, I use several pieces of evidence regarding historical events and data, including
primary evidence, to show the causal strength of the variables. Where possible, I try
to show that the changes in the posited variables are indeed exogenous and that firm
strategies can be thought of as an important response to such changes.
Section 1: From Collective Repression to Collective Collaboration: the Legacy of
War-time Policies and Stinnes-Legien
In this section I show that firms that had previously supported collective
repression as a strategy were willing to switch to a strategy of collaboration once the
costs of maintaining that strategy became too high. When the threat from workers
208
rapidly increased following the end and chaos of WWI, firms preemptively signed
with unions the Stinnes-Legien agreement in 1918, named after industrialist Hugo
Stinnes and union leader Carl Legien. The agreement has been heralded as one of the
most important cross-class compromises in labor history. I describe the agreement
more below; the broad contours of the arrangement were that firms and employer
associations recognized unions, and unions in turn agreed not to overthrow the system
of private property. As I argue below, this agreement largely came about due to firms‘
concerns about higher costs of repression: they would not be able to continue their
pre-war strategies after the war. But, as discussed in sections two and three, the
collective collaborative strategy ultimate collapsed once those costs fell and when the
collective nature of the agreement was no longer self-enforcing. In the rest of this
section, I discuss how the exogenous increase from the threat from workers during the
war and at the end of the war caused the first major shift in firm strategies.
1.1 War-time institutions
Germany‘s participation in World War I and the unprecedented massive
intervention of the state in all aspects of economic activity—in product and labor
markets, as well as adoption of rations and prices controls—radically changed the
legal position of workers and unions in the German economy and polity. The drafting
of approximately eight million soldiers for the war meant the country faced a large
labor shortage. The German government leadership, and the Economic and Prussian
War Ministries calculated by 1915 that the war-time effort could not afford labor
disruptions in the forms of strikes or steady demands for higher wages (Feldman
1965).
209
What explains the initial recognition of unions, which involved a switch to
collaborative strategies with firms? In autumn 1916, the German government under
the leadership of Hindenburg and Ludendorff to engage in a ―total war‖ strategy which
involved a large increase in mobilization efforts and shift of bureaucratic initiatives to
further ration the economy. The exogenous conditions and demands of the war forced
the German government to declare by fiat that firms and the state had to recognize
unions. This was encapsulated in the Auxiliary Service Law (ASL) of December
1916, the first official act that recognized unions (Feldman 1981). The change in the
relative threat posed by unions induced the state to recognize them, lest they be
paralyzed by union intransigence during the war; the German government was reliant
on unions to prevent strikes. This law was a monumental change in the status of
organized labor in German society, and officially recognized German unions as
legitimate bargaining counterparts. The Auxiliary Service law was a large departure
from the previous doctrine which effectively allowed firms to pursue repression as a
strategy.
Under the law, firms were compelled to recognize unions, and they became
part of economic decision-making procedures within firms and were to be consulted
by the relevant war authority boards. Firms had to negotiate with trade union
secretaries on war-time bodies and establish or recognize war-time worker committees
in the plants. After the law passed, the average worker wage increased and
membership in both Socialist and Christian trade unions increased. Unions were
exempted from conscription, and were given a representation in the procedures of
210
collective bargaining under the terms of the ASL of 1916. They were also allowed to
recruit in previously forbidden areas, namely among state employees.
War-time mandated participation of unions in the economy created a joint set
of concerns for many firms: higher wages for some firms that were already being
squeezed by a set of price controls and rations, and concerns about state interference in
decision-making. Of course, there was much firm opposition to these laws, and this
opposition would return in the debate among employer associations over post-WWI
industrial institutions as well as strategies after the war; the opposing arguments that
Silesian industrialists like Ewald Hilger or some of the Ruhr magnates would be used
later during the Weimar period. Some firms and employer associations, despite the
exigencies of war, opposed these new rules, and objected to their lack of participation
in the war-time executive decision. Silesian industrialists like Ewald Hilger raged
against concessions. But other prominent industrialists, who were also powerful within
manufacturing employer associations, like Albert Vögler, Wilhelm Wilhelm
Beukenberg, and Hugo Stinnes were more flexible and accepted quickly the
provisions of the law. These individuals would come to play a critical just under two
years later, in the actual negotiation of post-war institutions.
On the union side, the 1916 Auxiliary Service Law strengthened the reformist
tendencies of the Socialist Free Trade Unions. Union leadership discussed after the
law their goal of building upon the law and forming a set of collaborative ―working
community‖ institutions called the Arbeitgemeinschaft, a goal that was eventually
realized at the end of the war. As discussed in section 1b and at the start of section 2,
there was tension within both the main trade union and among newly formed left-wing
211
political parties about whether the ASL constituted sufficient gains for workers, or
whether more extreme redistributive policies should be pursued.
It is important to note the context of the Auxiliary Service Law: the executive
war ministries had already made other large significant interventions in the economy
by this point. The War Office in fall of 1916 had substantially increased state
intervention in the economy. This intervention included almost all policy areas
relevant for firms: wage and price controls; freight rates, social legislation; military
contracts. There were imposed cartels and wage and price controls. Employer
associations and unions were forced by government mandates to navigate a series of
price and export controls, and maintain workers‘ food supplies when government
allocation schemes broke down; they also had to communicate supply needs to the
local and national offices of the temporarily decreed war-time boards. While many
firms also opposed the Auxiliary Service Law, both firms and unions wanted to lift
export and price controls during and after WWI. By 1916, there was fairly uniform
business opposition to continued state intervention after the war. The expansion of
both bureaucratic influence, as well as union and employer associational capacity to
inflict costs on each other and the state—meant that there was going to be conflict
over how to reform war-time labor institutions once the war was over.
The demands of the transition of a peace-time to full war-time economy meant
that unions and employer associations were more directly integrated into the decision-
making and execution of the decisions of powerful ministries. During the conflict, and
especially after 1916, pre-existing cartels and employer associations became more
influential, as their staffs grew and came into regular contact with ministry planning
212
officials.111
Cartels were used to allocate raw materials; membership in such cartels
was imposed by the government. War-time Germany embodied the highest degree of
corporatist integration of interest groups into economic decision-making.
How did the variable of industrial heterogeneity and the mechanism of
enforceability of collective institutions matter for the formation of collective
strategies? Regarding differences among industries and the structural problems of
collective action, the state essentially forced industrial cooperation in some areas.
Collective strategies had existed before World War I, as described in the previous
chapter, so it was less difficult for the war ministries to use existing employer
associations to ration and implement price controls and solidify cartels. But business
opposition to intervention existed well before actual government policies took place.
Some firms joined cartels to prevent blunt the impact of state intervention—in fact
they anticipated more intervention, and so explicitly expressed a desire to collectively
act to prevent further state intervention (Feldman 1970).112
Business organizations
that formed before WWI preferred minimal state intervention. For example, there
were protests against the German Economic Ministry (RWA) by Hamburg business
groups and the Association of Southwest German Chambers of Commerce in spring
1918.113
The ASL of 1916 and its attendant empower of organized labor, happened
because the costs that workers could inflict had dramatically risen in the preceding two
years.
111
See also discussion in 1916 meetings of the VdESI (1917; VdESI 1916). 112
One of the iron cartels representatives noted, ―…we should voluntarily join together in our own most
basic interest, and not wait pressure from above‖ (Feldman 1970, 317, note 14) 113
Feldman 1970, 321. Interestingly, the protests of these groups provides some evidence against the
notion that Southern German businesses were more pro union. This is discussed at the conclusion.
213
1.2 Transition to collective collaboration: overview of Stinnes-Legien
In this sub-section I show that the concerns about potential post-war chaos
after WWI and the potential threat posed by radicalized workers and soldiers returning
from conflict was the key variable in inducing firms to continue and lock in a
collaborative strategy vis-à-vis unions. This collaborative strategy was embodied in
the important Stinnes-Legien Accord of 1918. Unlike previous war-time mandates,
though, this strategy was initiated by firms and intended to be more permanent, not a
temporary war-time act. The evidence supports the theory that threats from the left
compelled firms to switch to collaborative strategies. Large firms and unions were
both concerned about managing demobilization of soldiers and the potential chaos
after the end of WWI. They were also worried that the administrative authorities,
especially the RWA, would either be unable to manage the demobilization, or
intervene with its own set of procedures. For the firms which had been members of
repressive employer associations, the costs of repression increased.
The November 15, 1918 adoption of Stinnes-Legien agreement was a formal
shift from previously repressive to collaborative strategies of firms. The agreement
was the first major cross-class agreement in Germany that guaranteed minimal
working conditions and legitimized unions as a bargaining partner in the workplace. It
is often considered a template for other major cooperative arrangements or social
pacts. The main provisions of the agreement were a guarantee of a maximum eight-
hour day for workers, and a basic collective bargaining framework between unions
and firms. The agreement‘s procedures were ultimately executed by an institution that
was managed by peak employer organizations and unions, the Central Working
214
Community (Zentralarbeitgemeinschaft, ZAG) (Kaun 1938). The main outlines of the
agreement were that firms officially recognized trade unions as negotiating partners
and had to consent to bargain with them. Mediation agencies and industrial
committees to arbitrate disputes were created based on parity in representation of
firms and workers. Existing employer associations joined a peak association called
the Reichsverband der Deutschen Industrie (RDI).
In exchange for this recognition and provision, trade unions acceded to
recognition and acceptance of private property, abandoning discussion of overhaul of
the capitalist system. This was an important concession the industrialists extracted:
the essential creation of a ―bourgeois republic.‖114
The main issues of contention in
the negotiations leading up to November 1918 were compromises on yellow unions
(these were firm-sponsored worker organizations that had existed during the early
twentieth century, which were designed to undermine representation in inter-firm
unions); the maximum eight-hour day; and whether there would be parity
representation on central committees that were administering collective bargaining
agreements. Ultimately unions consented that any yellow unions that still existed after
six months would be officially recognized by trade unions. The agreement stipulated
joint management of industrial relations between unions and employer associations.
The overarching issue towards the end of WWI was whether the re-
organization of the economy that gave unions more economic influence was only a
short-term, crisis-contingent set of institutions, or rather, a permanent re-organization
of society. This was the issue of fundamental disagreement between business leaders,
114
Feldman 1970, 314, in a phrased coined by Arthur Rosenberg.
215
union officials, and the ministry leaders. There was also of course disagreement over
the temporal nature of these war-time institutions within the German bureaucracy,
disagreements which increased as Germany‘s defeat became clear. Lieutenant
Colonel Joseph Koeth, the head of the powerful Raw Materials Section of the Prussian
War Ministry, viewed the reforms as something more permanent. Business leaders
such Walther Rathenau advocated initially that the institutions should be short-term.
As it became clear that Germany would lose the war, employer associations
and firms faced the decision of whether to advocate reversion to previous repressive
strategies, or maintain in some form the collaborative institutions that had developed.
Unions faced the decision about how much of a change to the war-time institutions
they wanted. And both unions and employer associations had ―extremist‖ factions—
some firms thought that preferred total repression a complete reversion to pre-war
strategies, and some unions thought that post-war uncertainty and the return of soldiers
was the best opportunity to launch a revolution and build upon the ASL. Moderate
firms and unions therefore had some mutual interests in preventing the extremists
from winning.
Why would industrialists have wanted a pre-emptive agreement with workers
to present to the German authorities? What were the advantages of this pre-emptive
agreement? Steel industrialists thought the organization would have more lobbying
leverage and would be able to negotiate legislation before it was passed. The
conditions for a collaborative and a pre-emptive collective strategy had been set by
war-time intervention of the state. An important priority for firms was the removal of
216
state regulations on prices, quotas, and wages.115
On the trade union side, leaders
wanted to contain radical demands from workers for the overthrow of the capitalist
system and focus on locking in the benefits engendered by the Auxiliary Service Law,
and other war-time regulations that gave organized labor more influence.
Of course, strategies regarding labor markets were not the only major concerns
of firms after WWI. A core business preference towards the end of WWI was
autonomy from the state (Selbstverwaltung). As discussed in the previous chapter, in
the early twentieth century there had been little intervention of the state with private
setting of wages; the ―Herr im Haus‖ attitude meant freedom from demands of
workers as well as those of the state. And as discussed above, firms wanted a removal
of war-time price and export controls and a reduction in the power of various boards
that been set up to administer them. Industrialists feared that government interference
and surveillance would continue after the war, particularly after the passage of the
ASL. They viewed cooperating with unions ―as the best defense‖ against state
intervention and post-war chaos. The desire was attaining autonomy from workers‘
demands and from the state.
1.3 The build-up to the switch to collaboration
The monumental shift to collective collaborative strategies can be traced to the
crucial year leading up to November 1918. The shift was because of the initiatives of
a handful of industrialists who had close connections to employer associations and/or
were prominent industrialists with contacts in the war-time and economic ministries.
115
In February 1918 the CDI created a fund to fight postwar ―socialization‖ schemes. See the
September 1917 discussion in the Executive Committee of the Association of German Iron and Steel
Industrialists (VdESI). The Mitteilungen des Kriegsausschusses der deutschen Industrie, from October
1918 discussed post-war transition planning, in particular reducing the role of the state (Industrie 1918).
217
Hans von Raumer, the business manager of the Association of the German Electro-
Technical Industry was one of the major initiators of discussion over post-WWI
industrial relationships with unions. Raumer felt assistance of organized labor in
setting up post-war economic institutions was necessary: without it, there would be a
higher possibility of chaos, social tension, and bureaucratic interference. He thought
there should be an ―organic collaboration with the unions‖ before the ―flood of events
overtook us all‖ (Raumer 1954).116
Raumer and his colleagues wanted a set of
institutions that would manage the demobilization process and re-integrate soldiers
into society, while containing radical elements. He spoke with the leaders of
industries of manufactured finished products (Carl Friedrich von Siemens, Walther
Rathenau, and Felix Deutsch, who were all critical of the attitudes of heavy
industry).117
In their view, pre-emptive cooperation with the major unions would also
help the neutralize socialist threat.
Prominent industrialists and representatives of employer associations feared
both continued government intervention and the inability of the government to prevent
chaos from workers after the war. They were also concerned that a left-wing
Reichstag would make the wartime gains and power of trade unions permanent.118
Raumer also pushed for further encourage centralization and branch organization
across all industrial sectors to create a suitable set of partners to negotiate with
organized labor.119
It was not just skilled industries that would benefit from this
action, as previously existing heavy industry associations would see expansion of
116
Raumer, Deutsche Rundschau, 80, 428 117
See discussion in Raumer (1954), 428. 118
See Raumer (1954) and the discussion in the VdESI meetings of 1917-18. 119
Feldman 1981, 167
218
influence. Industrialists thought that during the close of World War I that membership
for trade unions could serve as a way to integrate returning soldiers and prevent
further radicalization and manage the demobilization of soldiers. The rhetoric used
was to ―save‖ Germany from the threats of bureaucratic and parliamentary
intervention and revolution. Raumer thought that without the role of trade unions,
radicalized masses might have undermined the war effort. The negotiations that
started in 1917 were a deliberate effort on the part of both sets of industrial actors was
needed to pre-empt state intervention and possible civil war or chaos.
Where did the source for agreement come from? The actual intellectual origins
of regular post-WWI institutional contact between firms and workers came from
August Müller and Hermann Schumacher. Müller was a conservative member of the
SPD who worked for the War Food Office in 1916 and the Imperial Economic Office
(Reichswirtschaftsmat, RWA) in fall 1917 and had contact with trade unionists.
Schumacher was an academic with contacts in business circles. In May 1917
Schumacher arranged a meeting between Müller and Stinnes in Berlin; two larger
meetings followed between industrial and union leaders on August 9 and October 2,
1917 (Feldman 1973; Kaun 1938). The war-time imposition of temporary union
recognition as well as expansion of employer associations meant that high-level
functionaries from both sides had been in regular contact managing rations and quota
compliance (or non-compliance).
The primary evidence from the actual negotiations among firms, and between
firms and unions, demonstrates the importance of the ―shadow of the future‖ in terms
of the threat posed by post-war chaos and a potentially interventionist left-wing
219
government for decisions of firms. In particular, reports from the meetings of the
Mitteilungen des Deutschen Kriegsauschusses and Association of German Employer
Associations (VDA) from early 1918 demonstrate the concern with returning soldiers
and whether the ASL was going to be extended. At the meetings, outlines for the
agreement for what would become Stinnes-Legien were debated (largely proposed by
Raumer, Reichert, and Stinnes). Stinnes had become one of the important liaisons
between the firms and the war ministry. He at first thought cooperation with unions
was a secondary issue to securing primary ―war aims‖; he was concerned about what
territory would be annexed in Belgium.
The initial concessions from employers to unions in this process came as early
as September 1917, when Beukenberg said it would be permissible for industries to
have trade union secretaries involved in discussions with the RWA regarding future
social legislation. Vögler in April 1918 stated, ―Employers and workers have very
similarly directed interests. For this reason they ought to get together and represent
them in common. If they can only find themselves in agreement on the great economic
questions, then perhaps they will have found the bridges which may lead to a
mitigation of social conflicts‖ (Varain 1973).120
Beukenberg indicated that industry
was prepared to have trade union secretaries participate in the discussions between the
RWA and the interest groups concerning future social legislation. Note that this is a
logic of cooperation not based on co-investment of assets. Rather, it is a logic based
on mutual interests in preventing state interference in industrial affairs and
management of demobilization and integrating workers without state control. The
120
This quote appears Varain 1973, 115. Beukenberg‘s concession is recorded in the VdESI meeting of
September 24, 1917.
220
purpose of this proposed cooperation was to contain potentially radical or recalcitrant
factions on both sides.
After this initial concession, in the summer of 1918, Raumer expressed fears
that if unions were not involved in management of demobilization, there would be
either chaos or bureaucratic interference. Raumer voiced the position that industry
should undertake an ―organic collaboration with the unions‖ before the ―flood of
events overtook us all.‖121
On October 2, 1918, Raumer met with the following
representatives of the trade unions: Carl Legien, Gustav Bauer, and Alexander
Schlicke. By then, Raumer reported more business propensity to form an agreement
with unions, given the worsening conflict situation. Ludendorff demanded an
immediate armistice and the government led by Max von Baden formed on October 3,
1918: this government would have Gustav Bauer as State Secretary of the newly
formed Labor Office, and would include Social Democrats as part of the new
government. Why did the unions trust Raumer? Raumer‘s overtures to unions were
made, in a letter from Raumer to Siemens shortly after the meeting, ―at a time when
the military situation was favorable (my emphasis). This fact made the gentlemen
[union delegates] confident that our negotiation was not created by the changed
circumstances but sprang rather from a freely made and therefore honest decision‖
(Feldman 1970, 325-326).122
121
Raumer, Deutsche Rundschau, 80, 428. 122
The original source is in a letter from Raumer to C.F. von Siemens, Oct. 8, 1918, from the Siemen
Archiv, Nachlass Henrich, 11/Lg736. As Feldman discusses, Raumer‘s elder brother was a friend of
Stinnes, and Raumer had known Stinnes since 1899. They served as DVP deputes in the Reichstag;
Raumer became Treasury Minister in the spring of 1920.
221
Raumer distinguished his preference which was labeled the ―Berlin‖ stance, for
collaboration, from that of the coal and Ruhr industries, which he anticipated would be
more difficult: he thought more moderate terms could be negotiated in Berlin, but they
would have to deal with the objections of the coal industry. Raumer and Stinnes had
to win over the ―Ruhr contingency,‖ the faction that had been more repressive before
the war. Of course, Stinnes had investments and affiliations with some of these
repressive industries and firms. At this point both Raumer and Stinnes thought
agreement with the unions to manage post-war issues was necessary. Forging such an
agreement became a critical item on Stinnes‘ agenda in October 1918.
What did the Ruhr industrialists say regarding this? They were not the
initiators of these negotiations, even though Stinnes had financial interests in heavy
industry. But, the repressive faction of capital—represented by leading iron
industrialists who had been members of the Ruhr employer associations—met after the
formation of the new government and Raumer‘s successful meetings with trade union
representatives on October 9, 1918, in Düsseldorf. There they ―officially‖ consented
to have Stinnes negotiate with the unions over post-war industrial institutions. Why
did they do this? What was the counterfactual of not doing so? Jakob Reichert, who
played an integral role in these negotiations, recounts the logic of the employers‘
move in a 1919 address:
―The assembled [heavy industrialist representatives] were unanimous in
feeling that the government of Prince Max von Baden and Herr von Payer was
untenable under the existing circumstances and that it would soon be brought
down. One calculated the life of this government to be not more than 4 or 5
weeks…In any case, the iron industrialists could expect no help from a weak
government. If one looked elsewhere and asked if the middle class
(Bürgertum) might become a strong help and support for German economic
222
policy in the future, then one was compelled to say, in view of the many
regrettable events and frequent disappointments experienced over the decades,
that there was no counting upon the middle class, as it is constituted in
Germany, in economic matters. Only organized labor seemed to have a
commanding influence. Form this fact the conclusion was drawn that, in the
midst of the failing power of the state and the government, industry could only
find strong allies in the labor camp, and they are the unions.‖123
Discussions after the Dusseldorf meeting took place among Ruhr representatives,
Berlin representatives (industrialists), and unions, on October 22, 1918 (between
Raumer and unions), and between Stinnes, Vögler, and union representatives in
Düsseldorf on October 26, 1918.124
This is evidence that eventually previously
repressive firms and employer associations were grudgingly supportive of a
collaborative approach because it was the least costly option.
What were these common interests regarding demobilization and state
interference for unions and firms? Both objected to the RWA plan for demobilization,
which would have involved War Office Bureaus that were scatted throughout the
country. They objected to these agencies because their view was such agencies were
both an infringement and that they were not capable of managing the return of the
soldiers; they thought that only branch organizations of industries and unions could
work. As Ernst von Borsig, a Berlin machine builder articulated, ―90 percent of the
statistical surveys gathered by the war Office Bureaus are not worth the paper they are
written on…‖; he ―…would rather have the unions do the job [i.e., of locating work
for returning soldiers and unemployed munition workers alone‖ (Feldman 1970,
123
This address comes from Jacob Reichert, Enstehung, Bedeutung, und Ziel der ―Arbeitgemeinschaft‖
(1919), 6. 124
Stinnes wanted to avoid the sense to his colleagues that industrialists were ―chasing‖ after unions.
223
328).125
In fact, Joseph Koeth, the previously discussed head of the Raw Materials
Section of the Prussian War Ministry, thought it was obvious that the employers and
trade unions should organize the demobilization.
Rathenau explicitly feared by mid-October 1918 that disorganized
demobilization, which would be partially imposed by the allies, could lead to ―civil
war and Bolshevism.‖126
Director Henrich of Siemens addressed Rathenau‘s
concerns explicitly with a proposal presented to the German Society of Engineers on
October 20, 1918. His idea was to have a new demobilization office but have that
office staffed by representatives of unions and industrialists, as well as some
government representatives. Henrich thought that such co-management was necessary
for an effective demobilization.127
The issue for Henrich was getting approval of
Socialist State Secretaries Scheidemann and Bauer, and the left-wing Centrist leader
Erzberger. Stinnes supported this plan and in fact thought it should be marketed such
that the unions would take a more active role. The October meetings afterwards
discussed implementation of this plan. In Berlin, Stinnes and his colleagues asked the
major employer associations to recognize unions; allow for their organization; enter
into collective bargaining agreements; assist with labor exchanges; and have
mediation organs based on parity. Employers were asked to renounce financial
125
The original documentation is from Bayerisches Hauptstaatarchiv München, Abt. IV, MKr, Nr. 14-
412. 126
This quote is from Walther Rathenau who was concerned with speedy demobilization which the
allies would impose on Germany. He wrote War Minister Scheüch a letter on October 15 that urged
formation of a special Demobilization Agency to coordinate the employment of returning masses in
collaboration with industry. See Feldman 1970, 329; Feldman 1973. 127
This statement comes from the Henrich Nachlass, Siemens Archiv, 11/Lg. 736. Other people at the
meeting were Directors Rieppel, Borsig and Deutsch.
224
support of ―yellow‖ unions.128
So by mid-October 1918, the core issues were set on
the table. In Düsseldorf, meanwhile, union leadership was pressured by rank and file
members to secure an agreement that there would be a maximum eight-hour day.
Another, almost equally important objective was that unions were to pressure
employers to bring ―yellow‖ union representatives to negotiations, despite the refusal
of the ―fighting‖ unions to recognize them as legitimate worker organizations.129
These issues were not settled in October. Stinnes expressed the view that ―trade
unions were the one group in society that had the power to contain the revolutionary
situation and that no confidence could be placed in the weak German middle class
(Bürgertum).‖
Events towards the end of the war and the dismissal of Ludendorff on October
26, and the fact that an armistice was going to be called on allied terms, increased the
urgency of firms to negotiate a deal. The major initiators of these negotiations were
aware that enemy territory they had occupied was going to be evacuated quickly and
that institutions were going to be needed to foment an orderly demobilization. On
October 30, 1918, Stinnes, Raumer, Legien, and Bauer approached Ludendorff and
convinced him to keep Hindenberg as head of the army throughout the demobilization
process. They presented to Ludendorff the draft agreement: ―The employer and
worker organizations are resolved to work together in unity concerning all questions
128
Raumer, Deutsche Rundschau, 80, 428 and Kaun, 48-49. Feldman notes that the ―yellow union‖
issue wasn‘t regulated until November 5, and the acceptance of collective bargaining agreement sin all
industries was not made until November 12. But the Ruhr industrialists were less conciliatory.
Feldman 1970. 129
Reusch was insistent that all unions participate. He corresponded with Beukenberg. Feldman also
documents the labor shortage issue from Stinnes: ―I expect a gigantic labor shortage about 12 months
after the demobilization which will then last a few years. These two or three years must be used by us
in Germany. After that the whole world will start saving. By then we must sit in the saddle abroad
once again.‖ From correspondence in HA / GHH, Nr. 3001242/7.
225
pertaining to the demobilization and transition from a wartime to a peacetime
economy.‖130
This document asked for a Demobilization Office with executive
powers to be composed of an equal number of worker and employer representatives.
This program became an official policy on November 9, 1918.
On November 3, 1918, Raumer presented this proposal to Vice Chancellor von
Payer, communicating to him that the employers and their respective organizations
and unions were the only effective organizations capable of running the
demobilization. Stinnes, Rathenau, Legien, and Christian trade union leader
Stegerwald discussed with Chancellor Max von Baden and threatened the government
that they would not collaborate with each other or with the government, if it did not
submit to the idea of the demobilization office (Kaun 1938, 50). The von Payer
Government consented and appointed Koeth as head of the newly established
Demobilization Office.131
Koeth had been the employer associations‘ preferred choice
to run such an office. Raumer contacted other prominent employer associations and
convinced them to be part of a grand Arbeitgemeinschaft, culminating in a central
organization. There would be an ―almost complete organization of German industry
on the basis of agreement‖ (Feldman 1970, 334).
The actions of some the local workers‘ councils established in 1918 validated
the concerns of firms regarding costs of repression. For example, provisional
workers‘ and soldiers‘ councils in Berlin and Cologne called for a socialist republic in
130
Letter from Raumer to Siemens, Oct. 30, 1918, Siemen Archiv, Nachlass Henrich, 11/Lg 736).
Feldman 1970, 333. 131
It is not clear what made the threat from the union and business leaders credible: certainly they had
privately expressed to their respective colleagues that the whole point of the procedure was to avoid
post-war chaos and/or government intervention to stem such chaos.
226
early November 1918. On November 7, the executive of the Hamburg councils
declared: ―This is the beginning of the German Revolution. The World Revolution.
Long live Socialism. Long live the Workers‘ Republic.‖ The soldiers‘ council of
Brunswick thought power should remain in the hands of these councils, and should
have more power than any national assembly (Mommsen 1978; Sollmann 1918).
Militant declarations were made by similar works‘ councils of Dresden, Leipzig,
Chemnitz, Cologne, Cuxhaven, Bremen, Berlin, as well as the Berlin Factories of the
German Motorworks, Fritz Wener AG, and Siemens-Schukert (Geary 1978; Ryder
1959). In early November 1918, workers and soldiers‘ councils of Brunswick, Berlin,
Chemnitz, Munich, and Stuttgart were under direction of left-wing radicals.
These high threats near major industrial centers indicate that indicate that the
solution to co-opt workers was preferred to state intervention and the chaos of return
soldiers without union institutions to integrate them. The threat posed by a left-wing
government induced firms to switch strategies. Firms in fact preferred a political
alliance with workers to reduce the risk of expropriation. The actual German
revolution increased the urgency of solidifying the agreement, which was drawn up on
November 12 and ratified on November 15. The violence accompanying the
revolution made the clear the importance of committing to a collaborative strategy, as
the costs of repression now became more salient to firms. Raumer and Stinnes
expressed fears at this time of ―anarchy, Bolshevism, rule of the Sparatcists or
chaos.‖132
132
Kaun (1938), 52.
227
The formal agreement included the following provisions: the introduction of
eight-hour day in all industries; recognition of unions in all industries was to take
place through collective agreements on wages and working conditions; existing
employer associations would administer such agreements; the agreements would be
binding on all industrial groups not previously involved in the negotiations.133
There
were also specific compromises regarding the yellow unions. Unions agreed to
recognize such unions were still intact after six months as representatives of workers.
This was worth compromising to achieve their goal of Article 10 of the agreement,
which guaranteed parity in representation.134
The agreement also introduced
collective wage agreements on an industry-specific basis.
The Stinnes-Legien agreement created the Central Working Community
(ZAG) and stipulated the creation of a new peak association of employers. The Reich
Association of German Industry (Reichsverband der Industrie, RDI) was created after
WWI in 1919 in place of older business groups, but the institutional structure of the
sector-level organizations was retained. The RDI had 78,000 member firms in 61
affiliated associations. Its structure was based industry-level organizations which
monitored collective bargaining arrangements. The newly formed RDI also
represented machine-building, electro-technical, and chemical industries in negotiation
with trade unions, as well as the older manufacturing and heavy industry associations.
As discussed below, though, employer associations which had previously repressive
133
There were ―secret agreements‖ that made eight-hour day introduction contingent based on the
agreement of other industrial nations. 134
The text of Article 10 reads: ―To carry out this agreement as well as to regulate further measures
needed for the demobilization, the maintenance of economic life and the securing of the possibilities of
existence for the workers, especially the war disabled, the participating employer and worker
organizations will establish a central committee based on parity with a substructure organized by
branches‖ (Preller and Tennstedt 1978), 53-55, also Kaun 1938.
228
strategies resented this representation of new industries in the RDI and would
undermine the RDI‘s operation. Gustav Streseman in fact expressed concern at the
preservation of powerful sector-level organizations and officials in the RDI, and was
concerned with the predominance of branch organizations in new organizations.135
The ZAG successfully achieved another goal of firms: it was in charge of
overseeing collective bargaining and managing the industrial demobilization. It played
the role that pre-existing bureaucracies like the RWA would have taken on. Its
constituent interest groups demanded executive authority and new demobilization
office under control of Koeth. The policies of the newly demanded demobilization
office were determined in collaboration with the ZAG, and implemented on the basis
of self-administration by the Arbeitgemeinschaften.136
The protections to workers enshrined in 1918 in the Stinnes-Legien Agreement
were also legitimized later in the Weimar Constitution of August 1919, which
recognized unions as a legitimate economic organization with functions in the state.
The Weimar Constitution also authorized the government to act as an arbiter in
settling disputes. Article 154 obligated the government to protect workers‘ rights;
article 159 guarantee freedom of association; article 123 affirmed their right to hold
135
Streseman wrote a letter to the League of German Industrialists: ―I am very concerned by the strong
predominance of the branch organizations called forth by the tasks of the Arbeitsgemeinschaften, and,
as a consequence of this development, the apparent intention of staffing the future presidium of the
Reichsverband with new personalities, who will no longer by the spokesmen for the specific views on
economic policy of a central organization but rather shall collaborate in the leadership of the
Reichsverband as representatives of their particular branch of industry. Things being as they are, the
coal industry, the steel and iron industry, the electrical industry and the chemical industry want to be
represented by their leaders in the presidium. To this will probably be added representatives of large
scale industry in Berlin. That means strong influence by the persons like Hugenberg, Borsig, Stinnes,
Deutsch, Duisberg in the new presidium…‖ Stresemann, March 31, 1919, Roll 3051, Serial 6816H,
Frame H/122937. 136
Feldman 1981. The original documentation is in Internationale Korrespondenz, 85.
229
public meetings and distribute leaflets. Article 165 provided for works councils and
district and national economic councils, and granted the worker ―an equal voice with
the employer in the regulation of salaries, working conditions, and economic
development.‖137
This condensation of an incredibly complex set of events from 1916 to 1918
provides observable implications and evidence that support the theory. When the
threat from workers to firms exogenously increased in terms of the demobilization and
uncertainty about radicalism, firms had an incentive to adopt collaborative strategies,
as repressing workers and returning to pre-WWI institutions would have been too
costly. Some industrialists that led the charge were also those that were involved in
repression before the war; other repressive associations were convinced to join. The
reason for the cooperative strategy was less about returns to co-specific assets, but
about prevention of state intervention and higher threats from workers. The theory in
chapter 2 demonstrates that pre-emptive collaboration is an observable implication
that happened in the German case. Further, the collective strategy allowed for both
sides to effectively sanction extremists in both camps. Carl Duisberg, who would be
head of the newly formed RDI, mentioned of Germany‘s transition to parliamentary
democracy and cooperation with the unions: ―I work hand in hand with the unions and
seek in this way to save what can be saved. You see, I am an opportunist and adjust to
things as they are…‖138
Section 2: The Collapse of Collective Collaborative Strategies
137
Braunthal 1978, 143. 138
This statement is from a letter from Duisberg to Dr. E.A. Merck, October 17, 1918, from personal
records of Duisberg, Bayer Archiv.
230
In this section I demonstrate that changes in the threat from workers and
industrial heterogeneity meant that firms ended collaborative strategies and switched
to repressive strategies during the Weimar Republic. The first section documents
extensively the period from the signing of Stinnes-Legien and early Weimar as one of
reduction in the threat from the left, as compared to the end of World War I. The
second section shows that this reduction in the threat meant lower costs of repression,
as well as increased industrial heterogeneity induced by the passing of hyperinflation,
which induced higher variance in the costs of repression. This caused firms to end the
set of collective collaborative strategies enshrined in the ZAG. As a result, the ZAG
unraveled. Exogenous industrial conditions made the ZAG impossible to enforce.
2.1 Reduction in the redistributive threat from workers
Not long after the ZAG was formally implemented, large firms that signed on
to Stinnes-Legien out of fear of further expropriation from workers and the state
immediately began to try and find ways out around the agreement. I argue this was a
response to the lower threat posed from workers. The passing of the threat of social
revolution and the moderation of the SPD meant that firms actually had lower costs of
repression. At first, it might seem strange to argue that in the early years of Weimar
Germany, the threat from workers to the modal firm had fallen. Metalworkers had
played major roles in strikes in 1916, 1917, and 1918. In the first Weimar elections of
January 1919, the SPD received 37.9 of the vote share; the USPD received 7.6. One
interpretation is that this constituted a high threat, because in areas with high degrees
of manufacturing output, support for the radical left-wing USPD party was high. In
particular, the USPD cut into SPD vote share in areas concentrated with
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manufacturing workers: in Berlin, it was 36.4 (SPD) versus 27.6 (USPD); in
Düsseldorf, 34.6 versus 22.5. Overall, in the 1920 elections, the USPD did well in
heavily industrial areas, indicating some more radicalist support than previously
thought (Geary 1978). The USPD moved even more left, affiliating with the Third
International in 1920 (Prager 1970).
In addition to the USPD‘s electoral contestation, there was the matter of its
influence on unions. By October 1919 the USPD had taken significant membership
control within the metalworkers‘ union, the largest in Germany (Geary 1978; Opel
1957). In January 1919, there had been a push by the USPD and affiliated unions for
socialization and state ownership in the Ruhr area; a Spartacist rising in Berlin;
socialist republic proclamations in Cuxhaven on January 11, 1919, with similar
proclamations in Bremen, Brunswick, Munich, and Mannheim. Massive worker
demonstrations against the Ebert-Scheidemann government took place in Brunswick,
Stuttgart, Halle, as well as insurrectionary strikes against the Kapp Putsch in 1920 and
communist uprisings Hamburg, Saxony, and Thuringia in 1923. Firms observed these
events after having just committed in 1918 to granting unions vastly more powers than
before, in conjunction with an SPD run government with an SPD Labor Minister.139
Despite these events, though, I argue that the absolute level of threat from
workers did fall in this time period and shortly after. Compared to the costs of
repression that concerned employers in the final months of World War I, what
139
The demonstrations of November 9, 1918 in Berlin were mainly by workers from northern
armaments factories. Many of the war-time strikes were organized by the Revolutionary Shop Stewards
Organization (RSSO), as were the Sparatacist risings of January 1919. The RSSO was based upon the
turners‘ branch of the Berlin Metalworkers‘ Union Metalworkers. Through the 1920s, 145 out of 285
Communist Party (KPD) functionaries worked in the metallurgical industries. The core of KPD support
came from metalworkers.
232
transpired was a largely successful attempt of the SPD and General German Trade
Unions (Allgemeiner Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund, ADGB) to signal and execute a
strategy of punishing radicals and tempering demands for extreme redistribution. Of
course, after the war, high level and party functionaries had bitterly debated the future
of socialism. For some, the Stinnes-Legien agreement entailed the abandonment of
socialist revolution as a goal of workers. I now turn to three pieces of evidence that
illustrate why and how unions and the SPD were able to moderate their demands.
2.1.1 Moderation, ADGB leadership, and institutional structure
In 1918, the ADGB had 5.5 million members; this grew to 7.9 million in 1920.
85 percent of all ADGB members belonged to one of the 15 industrial unions; this was
immense compared with the number of 20 percent in 1891. At the 1919 Congress of
ADGB, 645 delegates represented the 5.5 million members; 20 percent of whom were
from the more extreme Metal Workers Union. The ADGB had proportional voting in
their annual meetings. Despite those foreboding numbers for firms, combined with
the incidents of industrial unrest above, the ADGB was able to contain radical threats
because the actual executive decision-making bodies granted heavy influence to
leaders of more moderate industrial unions, and because there was ―push back‖ against
radical positions from the moderate constituent unions, which were less radical than
the metalworkers‘ union. The Federal Executive Committee of the ADGB
(Bundesvorstand) had 15 members was the primary decision-making body; seven
were paid functionaries elected by Congress delegates. The other members, selected
at the Federal Executive Board, or the Bundesausschuss, were president of the eight
constituent unions (Braunthal 1978, 91). This Board was another important body: it
233
was composed of the president of each affiliated union, and had additional
representatives for every 300,000-500,000 members.140
This executive was steered by conservative union leaders who could ally with
conservative members of the executive board. Leipart took over for Carl Legien as the
national ADGB Commissioner in 1920, and stayed in that position until 1933. At the
time of Leipart‘s promotion, the executive members of the ADGB were affiliated with
or loyal to the long influential ―right wing‖ of the SPD, which included important
party entrepreneurs like Herman Müller, Peter Grassmann, and Lothar Erdmann. This
shift in conservatism started at the 1919 ADGB Congress, when members affiliated
with the SPD and USPD were rivals. Local unions attempted to put up USPD-
affiliated representatives for nomination to the ADGB executive boards, but were
outvoted.141
Leipart was never challenged as president of the ADGB: he had the
support of majority of Congress delegates and Executive and Board members
throughout his tenure. Union bureaucracy—the institutional restraint of radical
representation—meant some dissatisfaction among rank and file: during crises,
workers went on wildcat strikes or looked for extremist political solutions, and union
leaders in response tried to sanction such behavior.
The right-wing or ―reformist‖ wing was headed by conservative unionists
Leipart and Grassmann: they set the ADGB‘s more conservative policy goals and
140
The ADGB executive had some agenda-setting power, but could not overrule the leaders of other
constituent unions. For example, the executive body could not have ordered the mine workers in Ruhr
to strike; workers in that union had to vote for such action. The ADGB institutional structure went to
regional and city/town levels. In 1930, the ADGB had 1,300 local units. Within ADGB, the affiliated
unions maintained rights over strikes and their own budgets, and acted as counterweight to centralized
system (Braunthal 1978). 141
The ―radical‖ wing did have some seats on the Board: they included Robert Dissman (President of
the Metal Workers Union), who had been one of the USDP founders.
234
endorsed political cooperation with the SPD. Although there was Communist support
in the Metal and Textile Workers Unions, and in the works councils in Ruhr and
Upper Silesia (in areas where employer associations been largely collective
repressive), the Communist faction never seriously threatened the policy positions and
direction of the national-level ADGB executive board.142
The ADGB leadership also involved itself in framing economic clauses of SPD
program to be more conservative and steered it away from using Marxist ideology in
the SPD Congress statements. For example, at the 1925 Heidelberg Convention, the
ADGB wanted to influence clauses on party ideology. Leipart wrote to the SPD
Chairman Müller (the SPD Chairman) of his objection to the draft paragraph on the
struggle of working class. Leipart opposed the strong declarations: ―The claim of the
SPD for the ideological leadership of the unions can be as little recognized as the
leadership claim of the Communist International, which has been vainly attempting for
years to force its goals and its tactics on the unions‖ (Braunthal 1978, 124). As a
result of Leipart‘s objections, the SPD reworded the clause and put the economic
aspects of the struggle on part with political aspects reference to the primacy of
political activity was omitted. The SPD leadership ended up conceding to ADGB
objections on acceding to reformist and not revolutionary principles in a statement.143
2.1.2 Evidence of moderation: sanctioning radicals
142
Communist-affiliated workers were about 10 percent of membership in 1925, and in the Metal
Workers Union this was about 16 percent; this was a decline relative to the 1922 Congress. 143
Note that these policy positions were not due to concerns about preservation of skill-training
institutions. They were due to preserving the redistributional influence of the ADGB. In fact, there
were battles in the early 1920s about the integration of craft unions into the structure of the ADGB.
235
Sanctioning radicals: Communists. In 1919, the communist faction of the
ADGB argued that industrial unions were superfluous and urged workers‘ councils
take over; they demanded revolutionizing of existing unions through communist cells
and ousting SPD officials. In 1920 they accepted the ―Red Trade Union International‖
and thought that communists had the duty to wage a struggle within the socialist
unions. KPD leaders in November 1923 organized a conference in Weimar which was
designed to counter the annual ADGB Congress. In response, the ADGB executive
board simply expelled local councils that had communist affiliations, depriving them
of access to funds. For example, the construction union branch of the ADGB revoked
the membership of 4,000 unionists. This is an example of the ADGB not tolerating
competing radical ideology, and making good on its threats to sanction its own
radicals. The KPD tried to set up alternative unions (the Revolutionary Trade Union
Opposition, the RGO), but it was never that successful (its peak membership in 1932
was 312,000), and this alternative union controlled less than two percent of ADGB
local councils. This KPD backed alternative also failed in its calls for a general strike
in 1932 and 1933.144
The KPD and Communist unions did not really move
overarching ADGB policy leftward during the Weimar era.
Containing radicals: USPD supporters. There was also the serious matter of
the radical faction of workers who supported the USPD. At the 1919 ADGB
Congress, the USPD claimed to have support of one-third of the member workers, but
this was the maximum level, and would decline in the 1920s. At this congress, the
USDP succeeding in forcing conservative union officers to abandon their previous
144
Note that the ADGB had an incentive to exaggerate the communist threat to its own members in
order to ―hide their own failures‖ (Braunthal 1978, 103-104).
236
policy of supporting the SPD only, and to accept a resolution on political neutrality.
In1922, the ADGB pushed for supporting institutional changes within the SPD that
would have strengthened the party‘s more conservative wing, but this effort created a
backlash from the USPD members: they formed in response a left wing in the
reorganized party. Who led this radical faction within the ADGB? The leaders
included Robert Dissman and Siegfried Aufhäuser , who were supported by the Metal
Trade Unions and Textile Trade Unions, as well as minorities of other free unions—
these unions had high membership in Saxony and Thuringia.145
Still, despite this
pushback from the USPD affiliated unions, they were not able to sway the ADGB
leadership positions, and besides the political resolution, extracted little. As an
example, at the 1919 convention of the Construction Workers Union, KPD and USPD
delegates at least succeeded in getting their calls for disbandment of the traditional
structure of the industrial unions on the agenda, but nothing came of it.
Containing radicals: not supporting wildcat strikes. The ADGB and SPD also
demonstrated the moderation in the threat of redistribution—and thus lower cost of
repression o firms—by containing and preventing potentially massive strikes. On
March 4, 1919, the USPD and Berlin Trade Union Commission, called a general strike
to enforce demands for their program, which included ―…the socialization of the
entire economy‖ (Braunthal 1978, 164). The socialist-led government cabinet
―assured a strike delegation that the socialization laws would shortly be submitted to
the National Assembly…‖ (Braunthal 1978, 164). But in a turnaround, the cabinet
after the strike announcement ordered the Reichswehr to quell the strike. The General
145
Note these are the areas that are claimed to be ―high skill‖ areas, but in fact there was a wide
distribution of types of workers; radical union leaders came from these areas.
237
Commission of the ADGB denounced the Berlin Trade Union Commission for having
endorsed a political strike damaging to the economy. An ADGB representative argued
that ―…socialization would best be achieved through the action of the responsible and
elected national leaders‖ (Braunthal 1978, 164). And as will be noted below, the
ADGB did not pursue this course of action either.
The miners‘ union also opposed wildcat strikes and radical workers‘ goals of
state ownership of mines. A February 1919 report of the union proposed the
nationalization of all coal deposits, and government control over the market, prices,
and the opening of new mines. The report caused a mixed reaction among union and
socialist leaders, no immediate commitment from the government. Left-dominated
workers‘ and soldiers‘ councils in the mining sector initiated a series of strikes and
armed clashes between troops and workers. 400,000 miners supported a strike; its
stated intent was to induce state ownership of the mines. However, the Mine Workers
Union did not endorse this strike, nor did they approve of funds to these local councils.
As a result, the strike collapsed swiftly, and was followed by armed clashes between
the workers and government troops under the order of SPD War Minister Noske.146
In
not endorsing these wildcat strikes, the general union and mining unions signaled their
lack of support for extreme left-wing measures.
2.1.3 Evidence of moderation: failures of the ADGB ―socialization‖ commissions
In November 1918, the socialist-led government considered a set of
commission proposals from the ADGB regarding the objective of socialization, or
which industries might be overtaken by the state. But importantly, the commission‘s
146
Radical miners again endorsed a new unsanctioned strike in early April, but the Mine Workers
Union again refused to endorse; as a result, the strike ended quickly.
238
proposals were never supported or implemented by the ADGB Executives. The
ADGB General Commission for example supported socialization initially, but without
that much enthusiasm: even the Metal Workers journal warned that ―…the metal
industry should not be socialized in times of grave political upheavals.‖147
This is
evidence that the threat from workers was no longer extreme: neither the socialist
party, nor the main industrialized union which had been legitimized during and after
the war, were advocating full state ownership of industry. As Otto Huë declared of the
mining union, which had some of the most radical workers and affiliations with the
Communist party, ―But today the question arises as to whether the time is ripe for the
socialization of our extraordinarily complicated industry…This period is not the
present. The socialization of such powerfully developed undertakings as the mines
and iron and steel industries cannot be carried out according to the dictates of the
minority but only at the right time and for the benefit of the community.‖148
The
ADGB Commission in December 1918 and January 1919 further moderated or
quashed proposals from internal committees that discussed socialization policy goals.
In February 1919, the Commission report concluded that if any industries were to be
nationalized, they should only be the most basic ones, and that industries related to
foreign trade and the food supply would not be socialized (ADGB Commission report
1919).
147
Braunthal 1978, 163 148
Braunthal 1978, 163
239
Both the ADGB and SPD leadership in the government rejected proposals
made by socialization commissions, and ended them.149
Rudolf Wissell, an ADGB
leader and SPD Minister of Economic Affairs, suggested to the commission that
Germany could adopt a planned economy. But Leipart and other ADGB leaders
disapproved of the plan, for they feared that would undermine the ability of unions to
strike against the state. The SPD cabinet rejected the plan in 1919. The ADGB
approved of the SPD cabinet rejection of the plan because they viewed it to be too far
reaching: the SPD selected Robert Schmidt, who had been a former ADGB General
Commission Executive member and an opponent of a planned economy, to succeed
Wissell as Minister of Economic Affairs; Schmidt was more conservative, and had a
much more limited plan granting socialization. He proposed the government would
only take ownership of the electrical plants, and would compensate firms should it do
so.
Still, the ADGB had to appease its left-wing supporters. After the fallout from
the Kapp Putsch in 1920, the ADGB re-established a broader-based socialization
Commission. The result was a second commission with 23 members, including the
previous Economics Minister Wissell of the ADGB, but also representatives from the
more moderate Christian and Hirsch-Duncker federations.150
This second committee
again debated socialization proposals, and again, there was much internal division. A
coal industry report of July 1920 had a conservative majority support a ―gradual public
149
This is evident in the policy preferences of the leadership, as well as those of the ADGB. Overall,
the government did not implement the ADGB Socialization Commission‘s recommendations, which
resulted in its resignation. The majority of the Socialization Commission‘s 11 members were socialist
economists. 150
Braunthal 1978, 165
240
take-over,‖ while a minority of other union representatives supported an immediate
takeover. The Commission was deadlocked and ended up endorsing neither position.
The more conservative cabinet of July 1920 led by Konstantin Fehrenbach (Center)
did not act on the Commission‘s recommendations. This is an example of the inability
of the left-wing to agree on socializing policy. Both Socialization Commissions
failed: both ADGB and SPD leaders opposed both times proposals for immediate
socialization out of concern for the electoral power that might give to its radical
supporters.
The actions of the ADGB indicate a gap between their rhetoric and actual
policy initiatives. As discussed in Chapter 3, this indicates that the ADGB found it
costly to be a substantive redistributive threat during this uncertain time. More
conservative labor representatives constituted the majority of the voting bloc in the
ADGB. They professed faith in socialist ideology: in 1919 the ADGB policy
declarations were that socialism was the highest form. But they opposed in practice
the socialization of industry. They swayed party leaders to be more moderate. In fact,
as late as 1931, Tarnow, the ADGB leader, rejected left-wing ideas to let the capitalist
system crumble, and he the urged SPD and unions to protect the capitalist system.151
The ADGB was able to contain the radical left within its own ranks and the SPD, but
did so while paying lip service to faith in socialism. Despite the passage of laws and
emergency provisions in the Weimar Constitution (article 156) that authorized
government takeover of enterprises, the Socialist-led cabinets in 1918-1920 never did.
151
Braunthal 1978, 173
241
2.2 The response to moderation in the threat: firm strategies return to repression &
collapse of the ZAG
The previous sub-section described the overall reduction in the threat from
workers. In this section I present evidence of the theory by confirming the observable
implications of the theory: once the threat from the left moderated, firms had an
incentive to revert to repression. The result was subversion of and defection from the
ZAG. Further, exogenous changes in heterogeneity made enforcing the ZAG—the
maintenance of collective strategies—more difficult. In particular, cleavages between
heavy industry and finished-product manufacturing became more divisive. The lower
costs of repression meant that firms had a higher incentive to roll back the ZAG and to
end the compulsory arbitration decrees. Also, higher heterogeneity and variance in the
costs of repression, as consequence of the ending of hyperinflation, meant there was
more difficulty in enforcing collective strategies.
The political instability and uncertainty, partially described above, and
economic crisis in the early years of Weimar Germany, certainly affected beliefs about
the stability of economic institutions. So on the one hand, perhaps the relatively short-
lived nature of this collective collaborative strategy is not surprising. On the other
hand, the ZAG did survive these initial crises and played a role in preventing further
radicalism. As a test of the theory, it is important because its demise, and the
subsequent strategies of firms, relate to changes in the key variables.
How did the ZAG operate? The ZAG functioned as both a way to structure
union agreements with employer associations as well as a way to help both subsidize
exports. The organization managed a network of control boards to make sure that
242
goods were sold at sufficiently high prices and for foreign currency. It managed a
centralized system of export controls, subsidizing exports. It was composed of
employer associations and led by prominent directors of industrial concerns, including
Hugo Stinnes, Otto Henrich, Carl Friedrich von Siemens, Ernst von Borsig, Walther
Rathenau, and Anton von Rieppel. Hans von Raumer and Jakob Reichert were highly
placed functionaries in major trade associations. These associations managed with
counterpart unions‘ collective bargaining agreements.
2.2.1 Changes in the threat from the left and incentives for repression
Why did the ZAG not succeed in the long-term? First, on the repression-
collaboration dimension of firm strategies: not long after the adoption of Stinnes-
Legien and the ZAG, major employer organizations expressed their opposition to the
union-friendly aspects of the accord. Opposition came after the ZAG constitution was
drafted in December, and even as RDI preparation for its administration began. Major
sector associations disliked the wage concessions to workers, and thought that unions
had been given too much power. Employer associations that had been previously
repressive before the war and grudgingly consented to collaborative strategies during
and after the war, found reasons to undermine the ZAG once the threat from the left
had passed. Reports from the membership meetings of the VDA and LNV express
immediate discontent with the enforcement of the eight-hour day and a desire to
rollback collective bargaining arrangements.152
The economic stabilization helped
reveal fundamental distributional disagreements between workers and firms. What
152
See Association of German Employer Organizations (VDA) in December 18, 1918 in January 2,
1919 and the inaugural meeting of the RDA from Feb. 3-4, 1919 in the Mitteilungen des Deutschen
Industrierates und des Kriegsausschusses der Deutschen Industrie, Feb. 8, 1919. VDA and LNV
reports from 1919-1922 also discuss this issue.
243
happened during the period of stabilization? Employers ended up rebelling against the
eight-hour day and reducing wages. ―Stabilization formulas‖ came, much to the
displeasure of unions, in the form of longer hours and lower wages. Employer
demands for ―moderation‖ from unions coincided with their increasing autonomy.
Part of the new firm opposition came to the operation the ZAG was its
objection to government decrees that were issued to help enforce it. These decrees,
including laws on compulsory arbitration (discussed more fully in section 3), meant
that firms had greater incentives to revert to repressive strategies. Firms and unions
disagreed over the implementation of the ZAG. The ADGB unions thought that the
rules that oversaw bargaining and negotiations would take place should be securely
grounded in voluntary agreements. Contrary to what contemporary unions might
expect, in negotiating the ZAG, unions were initially opposed to government decrees
about compulsory arbitration and concerned that government decrees were reversible,
and thought that voluntary agreements signed by employers would be more
enforceable. They put little faith in the German legislature at that point to enforce
such agreements. Stinnes efficiently summarized the logic of reversibility in 1918:
―…the trade unions say very correctly that which is now introduced by the
government under compulsion and which does not have any legal legitimization, does
not have the same significance as a free agreement between the unions and the
participating industry. The latter will remain, while the former is something that can
be taken away again.‖153
Many of the social arrangements of early Weimar were based
on these broad emergency powers. Both unions and firms did not like the emergency
153
The original source is Feldman, Internationale Korrespondenz, 88.
244
government decrees, but they both recognized that voluntary arrangements were
insufficient. Stinnes‘ cynicism was well-founded: in fact, as discussed below, the
voluntary agreements were violated by firms.
2.2.2 Changes in heterogeneity: consequences for enforceability and incentives for
defection
Regarding the effect of changes in heterogeneity and the mechanism of
variation in costs of enforcement, cleavages within industry mattered undermined its
operation. With the moderation of the threat from workers, the common threat helped
expose different interests across industries for abiding by a cross-class agreement.
These structural conditions, which actually worsened after the passing of the
hyperinflation in 1923, helped undermine the ZAG. In fact, it was during the ―golden
years‖ of Weimar that the ZAG collapsed. This is at odds with the normal views of
crises undermining cooperation. It was the increase in wealth and recovery, and stark
increase wage dispersion (see Figure 6-1) that made the structural condition of
industrial heterogeneity—and the mechanism of enforcement among firms—more
important. Moreover, as shown above, in this period meant costs of repression went
down.
Many important firms and employer associations defected from the ZAG
because they did not want to comply with the regulations regarding eight-hour days
and wanted to deviate from the wage minimums; they sought to reduce wages
(Feldman 1981, 171). The ending of the occupation of the Ruhr meant that heavy
industry associations wished to capitalize and not be constrained by regulations about
245
hours. Employer associations that had pursued repressive strategies were among the
first to undermine the ZAG.
Evidence for this comes from cleavages within the new peak association, the
RDI. Representatives of the RDI at the annual meeting in Jena criticized the ZAG.
The harshest critiques of the ZAG came from representatives of business associations
representing smaller and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), as they were less able
than larger firms of affording wage concessions to workers. SME associations
complained that large firms were better able to pass costs of wage concessions on to
consumers, and more resources at their disposal to engage in negotiations with the
control boards.154
Another piece of the evidence of tensions was the dispute over
leadership of the RDI. Some ZAG supporters proposed the appointment of the right-
wing Social Democrat, August Müller, to be the business manager of the RDI.155
Müller, as noted above, was one of the original initiators of the cross-class alliance
during World War I. This motion was defeated. This is a microcosm of the larger
issue: pro-ZAG businesses now saw the problem as not one of winning the loyalty of
labor, but persuading other firms why they should remain in the ZAG.
There was also the problem of defection on the union side. The more radical
metal workers‘ union officially left the ZAG in October 1919. These union leaders
supported principles of collective bargaining, but argued that the ZAG obligated too
much from member unions. They disagreed with the idea that ―…the ZAG was some
154
Given that there were many SMEs in highly skilled industries, this is evidence against the claim that
skilled-industry firms were more likely to favor cooperative employer associations with unions. 155
See Feldman 1981, 175, note 23.
246
kind of logical and necessary extension of the principle of collective bargaining…‖156
These labor leaders ended up reversing their position on the utility of voluntary
arrangements, as they expressed in 1919 the view that legislation would be more
useful than voluntary agreement with firms that could not be trusted.157
By May 1919,
union leaders were of view that ZAG was ―lacking in interest to them because they
will be able to push through most of their desires legislatively later on.‖158
Another example of heterogeneity of interests and problems of compliance was
the divisions within the Ruhr mining industry. In 1920, Ruhr mine union leaders
refused to associate with the ZAG proclamation of industry-labor leaders in Berlin that
protested against the six-hour shift. They feared being accused of betrayal of
working-class interests, but not because they disagreed with the proclamation. Rather,
they were concerned with the response of mine owners should they complied. Ruhr
mine owners similarly in 1923 tried to extend working day beyond eight-hour shifts.
This move on the part of employers helped instigate the ultimate collapse of the ZAG
(Feldman 1980).
Bücher of the RDI tried to persuade unions to stay in the ZAG. In fact, Bücher
thought industry should be risk-adverse and attempt to lock in benefits secured by the
ZAG as opposed to constantly trying to undermine the organization. As he articulated,
―It would be wrong to disband it simply because the employers might win the upper
hand in the near future, and he is of the opinion that the employers in such a case
would, in the interest of the general good, be more moderate than the workers were
156
See the debate in the 14. Ordentlichen Generalversammlung des Deutschen
Metallarbeiterverbandes, abgehalten in Stuttgart vom 13. Bis 23. Oktober 1919, 244. 157
See the Höltzendorff report, May 22, 1919, from the HAPAG Archiv. 158
See the Höltzendorff report, May 22, 1919, from the HAPAG Archiv.
247
after the Revolution. They would also realize that a reaction might otherwise come
later…‖159
This sentiment nicely illustrates that there were firms for whom
collaboration was still a viable strategy, because of concerns that costs of repression
would rise again if they were to revert back to repression.
The massive inflation in the early years of Weimar helped employer
associations and unions pass on the costs of higher wage contracts to consumers. The
ZAG collapsed as the economy stabilized and the hyperinflation passed. It was
actually profitable for firms and unions during periods of high inflation, as control
boards were connected such that goods were sold at high prices for foreign currency,
allowing Germany to maintain an export advantage. As the German economy
recovered, firms had less of an incentive to maintain this system.
The collapse of the ZAG illustrates that once conditions improved, increasing
the difficulty of enforcing both collaborative and collective contracts, such cross-class
strategies were not tenable. There is an interesting tension illustrated in the previous
sections in terms of the strategic problem faced by unions: with the passing of the
revolution, the costs of repression fell—and they demonstrated considerable
moderation in their policy positions and ability to sanction defectors. But with that
also came an incentive for firms to reduce their level of cooperation. Once ―good
times‖ returned, distributional conflicts between firms and workers and among firms
helped undermine this peak association. The next sections discuss, though how
collective repression was maintained in the remainder of the Weimar era.
Section 3: Repressive Strategies in Weimar Germany
159
The original source is from the meeting of the ZAG directors, November 27, 1923, from the
Zentrales Staatsarchiv der DDR, Abt. 1, Potsdam, ZAG, Nr. 7, Bd. 31/1. Br. 78
248
In this section I present evidence of the theory by describing the reversion to
repressive strategies after the collapse of the ZAG. Employer associations and
individual firms undermined the efforts of existing collaborative associations and
engaged in successful lockouts, waging conflict against unions and rolling back the
agreements they had grudgingly signed when the threat was the highest. As discussed
in chapter 2, this repressive strategy had a number of elements: use of lockouts;
blacklists; dividing workers by only supporting firm-specific unions; support of
political parties that favored their policies. After the collapse of the ZAG, employer
associations pursued all these strategies. I identify the following categories of
repressive strategies pursued and discuss each of them: directly attacking unions and
pro-union legislation; undermining collaborative employer associations; ―locking in‖
other collaborative employer associations to tolerate or support repressive strategies
via collective agreements and cartels; and contributing to political parties to repress
firms.
Associations representing Ruhr heavy industry (RHI) were particularly
influential and engaged in many repressive tactics, despite the Weimar legal
protections of workers. But other associations that had manufacturing goods and
finished-goods also engaged in repressive strategies. These tactics included direct
challenges to unions in the form of demanding longer hour shifts and unilateral wage
reductions. Additionally, these employer associations lobbied for anti-labor political
parties. The RHI and other associations scuttled later attempts at collaborative
strategies; once enforcement conditions fell, they switched strategies to repressive.
After the collapse of the ZAG, firms continued their repressive strategies and tried to
249
further undermine collective bargaining agreements. They pursued an explicit
economic strategy against unions and electoral strategy against the SPD.
3.1 Return to repression: direct assault on hours, working rights, and arbitration
The six most influential Ruhr concerns were: Vereinigte Stahlwerke,
Guttehoffnungshuette (GHH), Krupp, Hoesch, Klöckner, and Mannesmann. Their
leaders complained frequently about rise in ―political‖ costs of wages and social
insurance (even though real wages throughout the 1920s remained nearly constant). In
addition to being influential leaders in the Weimar era repressive employer
associations, they were also part of the ―Ruhrlade‖ that was a conglomeration of
representatives of major employer associations that tried to undermine the RDI. In
October 1928, one month before the large Ruhr lockout that I discuss below, one
average worker week‘s wage (with taxes and social insurance rates deducted), was
worth only two percent more than before the war (Weisbrod 1979, 250). The ratio of
labor to total costs remained at about one-third. (Worker productivity increased, but
purchasing power lagged far behind progress in productivity). Employers for these
concerns had effectively restrained wages for their workers, but, the industrial
concerns still viewed unionism as a threat. The priorities of heavy industry were the
abrogation of the eight-hour day (the working regulation of the Arbeitszeitverordnung
in December 1923). The unifying ideology of these concerns was ―restraining social
democratic‖ influence.
These firms or concerns mentioned above faced the issue of whether to
continue the collective strategies by consolidating existing employer organizations and
further centralizing the administration. Should the LNV, the NWG, the employers‘
250
association of the NWG (which included machine builders as well as iron and steel
producers), the Zechenverband (employers‘ association of the Ruhr coal industry) all
form one formal association? Once again, heterogeneity and cleavages between
sectors mattered. Iron consuming and manufacturing industries resisted these
centralization efforts because they rightly feared that heavy industry wanted to have
sole leadership of the Ruhr. But it is not clear how much contestation of forming a
massive LNV-type organization there was. As discussed below, they were able to
from cartel arrangements with other raw industry consuming associations.
Who initiated the LNV‘s renewed attack on collaborative strategies with labor?
Paul Reusch of the GHH, Fritz Thyssen, and Poensgen from the Vereinigte Stahlwerke
were the leaders of the main cartels and employer organizations who wanted to
enlarge the LNV membership and make it more influential from Düsseldorf; the NWG
stayed separate, but assisted in this effort.160
The LNV and related associations were
also opposed to collective bargaining and the compulsory arbitration system; and
favored a return to direct employer-worker relations and ―yellow unions.‖
3.1.1 Early repressive successes in rights and hours and wages
The LNV and NRG wanted to dismantle the eight-hour day and the system of
collective bargaining. Both associations favored twelve-hour as opposed to eight-hour
shifts. They had an early success with the Arbeitszeitverordnung of December 1923,
which revoked the eight-hour day achievement. The government replaced it with
―voluntary‖ agreements under Labor Minister Heinrich Brauns, which effectively
160
Weisbrod 1978; 1979
251
meant firms could adopt twelve-hour shifts.161
Member firms of these associations
took advantage of this law and similar decrees. Firms for example reduced the
number of blast-furnace workers favored by the decree of January 1925 and prevented
the Working Hours Emergency Act of April 1927 from declaring a return to the eight-
hour day. Once they had been successful in this initial repeal, they fought hard to
keep it in place.
3.1.2 Fighting the conciliation system
To help enforce the ZAG collective bargaining procedures, the government
adopted conciliation boards in the early 1920s. These boards made binding decisions
regarding industrial or contract disputes. Unions thought they could benefit from
arbitrators, whereas employers uniformly wanted nonbinding awards, essentially
rendering the decisions of such boards unenforceable. By 1920, labor leaders favored
granting joint conciliation boards the authority to make binding awards—compulsory
arbitration was a way to avoid costly strikes. Unions calculated that otherwise they
would be the weaker partner, and that net wage decisions from the conciliation boards
would benefit unions. The Center Party and SPD ministers of labor defended the
system of compulsory arbitration, but the repressive employer associations like the
LNV wanted to dismantle it. SPD ministers viewed it as essential (―compulsory
arbitration merely trimmed the peaks of the ups and downs‖ (Wesibrod 1978, 258).
Compulsory arbitration in their view was a cornerstone of collective labor law and was
a natural product of securing equal rights for employers and workers and collective
161
In exchange, Brauns negotiated for unions some maintenance of collective bargaining institutions.
Unions objected to this deal.
252
bargaining. The SPD Minister of Labor Wissell, thought it was necessary, as well as
consistent with article 165 of the Weimar constitution.
Unions did not initially favor such policies. Chancellor Bauer in 1920 initiated
discussion of a permanent compulsory arbitration system. The Labor Ministry drafted
a proposal but pressure from the firms discussed above led the Ministry to add a clause
that would limit awards for certain strikes. Unions rejected this counter-proposal, and
the Labor Ministry formed a committee with all interested parties. In 1921, the Labor
Ministry prepared a bill based on these proposals; it reached the Reichstag in March
1922, but no legislative action was taken. In October 1923, the Stresemann
government bypassed the legislative process and officially decreed a conciliation and
arbitration system—the decree created boards to be headed by government-appointed
arbitration officials. Under the decree, the Labor Ministry was assured of a decisive
influence in labor disputes—the arbitration board‘s jurisdiction included everything
from industry-wide agreements to individual shops. The policy was that ―If the parties
could not reach an accord, then the arbitrator would act as a voluntary mediator…if he
[the arbitrator] failed he could declare the board‘s award binding upon an entire trade
or industry, even if one party did not accept the decision‖ (Braunthal 1978, 151).
Firms and unions thus had to make calculations of what the arbitrator could decide if
they did not settle on an agreement. By 1929, 52 percent of all collective agreements
were concluded on the basis of awards from the arbitration process.
The circumstances and effects of such legislation are important because they
provide evidence that employer associations had reverted to repression. They resorted
to attacking this apparatus that tried to keep collaboration in place. This is most aptly
253
displayed in the lockouts in response to such decisions. In April 1927, the main
employers‘ associations of heavy industry, which also encompassed small and middle-
sized firms in machine building, started an offensive strategy. A labor court declared
in July 1927 a mandatory reduction in hours in steel and rolling mills was to be
implemented in January 1928. This would have forced firms to give up the twelve-
hour shift they had implemented. This declaration was going to affect the negotiation
of new contracts; the negotiations were to be concluded in December 1927. In
response to the decree, firms accumulated a fund that equaled a pay rise of about two
percent. The major firms in iron and steel, including those outside the Ruhr district,
agreed to shut down their plants if the decree took effect. They also forced smaller
firms within the tariff district to follow suit, because a central committee of the
association was to decide the length of the lockout and the distribution of the fund.
When the firms officially announced the lockout (legally four weeks before the
deadline in December 1927), this essentially forced the district arbitrator and Labor
Minister Brauns to limit the rise in wages to a minimal margin and allow for a new
court decree. This new decree left large sections of the working force on the twelve-
hour shift right through 1928. The actual lockout was called off by the associations
once Labor Minister Brauns brokered an agreement and agreed to limit the wage
increase.
The same repressive logic returned in the October 1928 Ruhr iron dispute, a
key example of successful collective repression. This was a case of unions demanding
higher wages, not liking employer counteroffer, and in response, employers locked out
250,000 metal workers. Metal workers unions of three labor confederations demanded
254
a 15 pfennig per hour wage increase, which was rejected by the all the metal-working
employer associations; the union‘s revised request of 12 pfennig per hour was also
rejected). The arbitrator awarded 6 pfennigs per hour to several categories of workers.
The unions requested that it be made binding (reluctantly accepting it). Minister of
Labor Wissell agreed, but the employer association rejected its legality, arguing that
the industry would not be able to tolerate such a wage hike. On November 1, 1928 the
association locked out more than 250,000 metal workers. The employer association
also launched appeals through labor courts: it lost the Land level appeal, but in
January 1929, the Reich Labor Court sustained objections, and accepted the employer
association‘s claim. This repressive measure preemptively threw out workers in
anticipation of the arbitration decision. It was a direct challenge to the SPD leader
Hermann Mueller. This pre-emptive locking out of workers was the most repressive
strategy: employer associations could have refused to pay the wage increase; they
could have closed the plant with the legal four weeks‘ warning, but they chose the
most damaging outcome for workers. This was a major defeat for unions, as well as a
weakening of the principle of collective bargaining.162
The 1928 lockout was expensive: it cost half of Krupps‘ 1927-28 profit, so the
LNV and other firms sought to devise another solution in response to the threat from
the left, as the cost of this repressive strategy was quite high. It was part of a general
effort of a lobbying campaign against the arbitration boards. The SPD was proposing
increased national control of heavy industry; in response the LNV and related
162
The legislature‘s response to the lockout was to partially support the workers: the right-wing party
the DVP had to consent to the government support as a way to prevent other pro-worker measures from
being instigated, including further intervention in heavy industry (Weisbrod 1979, 259).
255
associations sent a memo to SPD Interior Minister Carl Serving that indicated their
readiness to the cabinet accept a unique exclusive arbitration at the hands of Severing.
The intent was to show that there existed some policy options that they could be
amenable to, in trying to get unions to concede (Vogt 1970). Severing eventually
brokered an agreement that reduced the wage increase in the industry to about one
percent over 18 months. Employer associations still, however, called for the entire
system of compulsory arbitration and collective bargaining overturned. (In fact,
Reusch of the GHH internally offered to resign after Severing‘s decision, given that he
thought the brokered agreement was a failure).
3.2 Repression: undermining attempts at collaborative strategies and other
associations
After the collapse of the ZAG‘s official peak and sector-level managed
collective bargaining arrangements, employer associations continued their assault on
the basic tenets of the Stinnes-Legien accord. In this section I demonstrate these
associations that were engaged in repression and also undermined collaborative
employer associations. In particular, they tried to undercut the positions of the RDI.
The LNV changed from being an important regional predecessor, to the regional rival
of the Weimar-era peak association, the RDI. The LNV during the Weimar era,
especially after the collapse of the ZAG, became the main rivals to the RDI, which
was represented by Duisberg. The LNV viewed the RDI as speaking for, even after
the collapse of the ZAG, pro-union positions. The inter-war period in Germany was
characterized by a rivalry between the two organizations (Zunkel 1973). The standard
accounts of industrial institutions in political science ignore these organizations, but
256
they were successful in engaging in repression. One of their main objectives was to
provide coalition governments with alternative sources of information and impose
costs on collaborative employer associations for voicing support for pro-union
legislation. These efforts attained some success despite the presence of SPD led
coalition governments in 1928.
Employer associations, in particular, the LNV and the NWG, engaged in a
strategy of undermining the RDI to set up a credible opposition body with which to
persuade firms and transmit information to the government, as well as support
preferred candidates and parties. Its goal though was not to make itself an object of
popular targeting, and so engaged in ―behind the scenes‖ politicking to counter
positions of the RDI. The LNV disagreed with the industrial relations positions of
some the constituent associations of the RDI, including the more moderate institutions
such as the chemical and electro-technical industries. The goal of the LNV was not
necessarily to destroy the RDI, but rather to undermine its authority as the ―sole‖ voice
of business, and to lobby the government with its own policy suggestions. Reusch in
fact advocated establishment of a more authoritarian economic ministry, Wirtschafts-
und Spardiktator, who would have an extra-parliamentary authority to give emergency
economic decrees by article 48 of the Weimar constitution.
How did the LNV do this? The LNV would meet to directly respond to RDI
meetings, and the content of these were communicated to the relevant economic
departments in the government. These meetings were designed to undermine SPD
legislative proposals, and were during the Chancellorships of the Brüning, von Papen,
and Schleicher governments. An important example of this counter-strategy and the
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conflict between these factions of capital occurred in 1926. Paul Silverberg, a
prominent Cologne industrialist, addressed the RDI members at a meeting in Dresden
in September 1926 on behalf of the brown coal industry associations. He argued that
the major industrial firms were going to remain loyal to the Weimar Republic, and
offered his firm‘s cooperation with the SPD Reichstag Fraktion.163
Silverberg and
Klöckner proposed the renewal of a collaborative institution like the ZAG. This
overture in 1926, after the official ending of the ZAG, represented an opportunity for a
re-institutionalization of relations between unions and employer associations. Further,
this attempt at reviving institutional coordination would have occurred under a
coalition government that included the SPD, increasing its chances for success.
But in response to Silverberg‘s speech, the LNV held a meeting one month
later. At the meeting, Thyssen spoke for the LNV and vociferously refuted Silverberg.
The LNV representatives rejected this extension of compromise and said no member
firms would cooperate with Silverberg‘s proposals (Thyssen 1926).164
Thyssen
reiterated the LNV‘s commitment to fighting social democracy and socialist unions.
Reusch and Vögler at this meeting supported Thyssen‘s speech and led the LNV‘s
efforts to scuttle Silverberg‘s proposal (Stegmann 1974). As an ―alternative,‖ they
advocated strengthening the Werkgemeinscahft (―yellow company unions‖ which had
been partially banned in the Stinnes-Legien agreement). Duisberg, in response to
intransigence of the LNV, wanted to avoid potential controversy—he did not want the
RDI to be embroiled in a battle with the LNV and its related associations—and so he
renounced responsibility on the part of the RDI for Silverberg‘s proposal. This is one
163
This overture was made in 1926. See Silverberg (1926). 164
Thyssen gave this speech at a meeting of the LNV on October 1, 1926.
258
key example of the LNV trying to undermine the RDI‘s proclamation of support for
collective collaborative strategies (Stegmann 1974).165
The same personnel also played the role of spoiling overtures of the RDI for a
revival of the ZAG again 1930. Repressive employer associations including the LNV
responded to Chancellor‘s Bruning‘s speech to the RDI in November 1930 with a
counter-protest meeting in June 1931. These are two moments where employer
associations with collaborative preferences attempted but failed to form peak-level
management of collective bargaining, but could not because the economy‘s variance
in the costs of repression were too high. Existing repressive employer associations
preferred to keep their own strategies.
3.3 Repression: co-opting the collaborative employer associations
The evidence of collective repressive strategies presented in sections 3.1 and
3.2 only partially addresses the question of how repressive employer associations were
able to directly challenge collaborative employer associations. In this section I present
evidence of the relative weight of repressive versus collaborative organizations in
terms of affecting actual industrial outcomes. I provide evidence that repressive
organizations were able, through forming collective institutions that spanned the major
manufacturing goods industries, able to constrain the more pro-worker/collaborative
165
Another example of how the LNV tried to undermine the RDI is in the negotiations over the Young
Plan in 1929. Albert Vögler, general director of the Vereinigte Stahlwerke, renounced his post as
German delegate to the negotiations to be held in Paris over the Young Plan. The RDI remained
politically silent on these issues and did not want to divide its membership regarding choice of a
successor. As a result, heavy industry voiced support for Vögler and implicitly against the RDI chief of
staff Ludwig Kastl, who had taken Vögler‘s place at these negotiations. This position was taken at a
July 1929 meeting of the LNV, which adopted a resolution that showed the ―fullest appreciation of
Vögler‘s decision and cleared heavy industry from all responsibility for the fulfillment of the Young
Plan.‖ The goal was to undermine consensus within the RDI, and to show that on major initiatives, the
LNV would take a different stance from the RDI.
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strategies of other organizations, further undermining the RDI and other moderate
employer associations. They used a set of institutions that took advantage of the
external economic environment and promoted cartelization to do so.
In the post-ZAG era, repressive employer associations used their economic
position and influence over production and processing of raw materials to take
advantage of consumer and finished goods industries in new cartel arrangements. The
effect of these agreements was to restrain the degree to which consumer industry
associations and their member firms could effectively abide by any collective
bargaining agreements, and after the ZAG‘s collapse, these agreements undercut their
engagement in collaborative strategies. This dimension of collective action among
firms in product markets, encapsulated in inter-industry cartels, helped constrain
collaborative strategies of other associations.
How did this economic bargain between repressive and collaborative employer
associations work? The cooperative deal between these associations was the
following: the associations of finished-goods industries would purchase the cartelized
inputs from heavy industry at higher cartelized prices. But these industries‘ firms also
would then receive in return export subsidies paid for by the firms from repressive
associations; the subsidies guaranteed the final products would sell at world market
prices. Finishing industry firms and their associations (particularly machine-building
firms) had been essentially cut off from cheaper French raw material, and heavy
industry firms benefited in the mid 1920s were participants in international cartels.
The net price result of these policies was higher prices for the finished-industry goods
for domestic consumers, as the costs of subsidies were passed on to domestic
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consumers. But another important result was that finished-goods industries were
committed to heavy industry‘s anti-union politics in the form of supporting lockouts.
This kind of collective strategy that ―locked in‖ collaborative associations was
characterized by the AVI agreement. Through these agreements, finished industries;
they were prevented from favoring collaborative or more worker friendly legislation
regarding compulsory arbitration. The AVI agreement demonstrates how collective
action and incentives to repress or prevent collaboration are connected. As part of
these cartels, iron consuming industries had less market influence and were put in a
position where they had to pass on prices to consumers and have no flexibility in
dealing with unions.
The AVI agreement consisted of three agreements between December 1924
and June 1926. The name comes from the Working Community of the Iron Finishing
Industry (Arbeitsgemeinschaft der Eisen Verarbeitenden Industrie, AVI), which was
an industry association that represented branches of machine building, electro
industry, iron and steel wares, and steel construction. The basic feature of the AVI
agreement was that the iron industry assumed the legal obligation to provide raw steel
and other inputs for finished export products at world market prices. The agreement
made possible the re-establishment and extension of the iron industry‘s control over
the domestic market. The agreement would allow for inter-industry cartel and
manipulation of the domestic market. The effective consolidation of the domestic
manufacturing allowed for heavy industry to adopt a more repressive strategy against
workers between 1927 and 1930.
261
What explains this inter-industry agreement? The historical background was
the attempt of the largest German iron and steel concerns and finished goods firms to
collectively act regarding the passing of a post-inflationary period and exogenous
changes in the supply of raw materials, and foreign competition. Starting in
September 1923, imports from producers in the Lorraine and Saar areas were entering
Germany under tariff-free provisions of the Versailles Treaty and depressing domestic
iron prices. At this point German raw materials concerns and producers had to decide
how to react to new post-inflationary conditions (Nocken 1973). The percentage of
syndicated output in this industry went from pre-war level of 43 percent to 90 percent
in 1926; lots of syndicates formed in this period. The new huge steel trust of the
United Steel Works (Vereinigte Stahlwerke, VS) in 1926 had 43 percent of the quota
of the crude steel cartel (Rohstahlgemeinschaft, RG). The threat to German firms
came from Lorraine steel firms and Belgian and Luxemburg producers. The
Versailles Treaty‘s tariff-free provisions were supposed to expire on January 10, 1925.
During the Imperial Germany era, these large firms would have just successfully
lobbied for tariffs on competing imported raw materials. But during this time period
Weimar, the finishing industry associations opposed such tariffs.
Who represented these finishing industries? The most important association
was the Association of German Machine Building Firms (Verein Deutscher
Maschinenbau-Anstalten,VDMA) which ended up administering the AVI. The
VDMA was also an important member association organized within the RDI. The
AVI agreement meant that the VDMA would support the other employer associations‘
call for a low tariff on competing iron materials, if the iron industry agreed to
262
reimburse the manufacturing firms for the difference between the world and domestic
price for the amount of iron used in an exported product. Under the agreement, an
exporting manufacturer could use the world iron price as the basis for calculating and
negotiating input costs, and therefore would not be at a relative disadvantage to
competing foreign firms. The finishing-product industries under the AVI agreement
would at least not oppose the iron tariff: as a result, the iron tariff was lower than what
the iron producers wanted, but preferable to no tariff at all (Nocken 1973, 697). These
different business associations essentially worked out agreements over tariffs and
cartel pricing policies without government interference.
The important point is that this inter-industry agreement meant that repressive
strategies were less costly, and, collaborative employer associations were locked into
supporting them. The AVI agreement allowed for renewed attention from business
associations in iron and steel on compulsory arbitration. As discussed in sections 3a
and 3b, they opposed government social policy and unions‘ demands regarding wages
and hours, as well as the government-enforced arbitration decisions. The finishing
industry associations had a less extreme view of repressive strategies: in their view the
collective bargaining and compulsory arbitration systems had prevented long drawn-
out strikes (note this logic is based on one of avoiding costly disputes, not joint skill
provision). Importantly, the system had also protected financially weaker firms that
otherwise might have had to capitulate to union demands.
But iron producers were able to use the AVI alliance to secure the support of
finishing industry against the arbitration system. How did it do this? Under the
agreement, they were able to automatically raise the cartel price for iron and steel in
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response to any arbitration decision which raised costs through higher wages, shorter
hours, or both. Signatories of the AVI were obligated to accept price increases as
valid, and thus these industries bound to the agreement were economically compelled
to accompany repressive employer associations in criticizing government arbitration
decisions. This united front also mattered for other pricing policies of the
government: for example, in January 1928, the AVI and iron industry jointly
confronted government industry against cartel supervision.
Another example of the effect of the inter-industry agreement on repression
was that during the massive Ruhr lockout in 1928 described above, the finishing
industry associations supported the iron industry in their preemptive repression of
workers. The finishing industry also used its contacts in the left-liberal media to
support the repressive strategies of employer associations. Machine building
associations put pro-lockout articles in the Berliner Tageblatt, Vossische Zeitung,
Frankfurter Zeitung, which had been more pro-worker in the past. The AVI agreement
allowed repressive employer associations to cartelize the industry and attack pro-
worker social policies more directly.
Employer associations that initiated the AVI could also use to keep collective
strategies afloat. For example, when the coal industry association representatives of
the Zechen-Verband threatened to resign from the RDI in 1929 in a dispute over the
Young Plan and thus cause a potential split of the RDI, the iron industry association
threatened to use the AVI to undermine the Zechen-Verband. This forced the coal
industry representatives to remain in the RDI (Nocken 1973, 703). This is evidence of
264
how industries tried to sanction and deter potential defectors to maintain repressive
strategies and prevent a return to collaborative strategies.
The AVI agreement had negative economic consequences: the result was the
costs were passed on to consumers in the form of domestic prices and dampened
domestic demand. Essentially higher domestic prices were being used to subsidize
lower export prices for the entire iron industry. The more moderate labor-relations
views of finishing industry became weakened as the industry was actually politically
weaker on labor regulations. The consequence was to make the AVI more dependent
on repressive employer associations. Large small and medium sized finishing firms
ended up playing a smaller role in labor politics. It is fair to say that the exigencies of
the collective strategy meant that unions lost a true ―cross-class‖ alliance. The politics
of this are discussed below.166
3.4 .Repression: supporting political parties
In this sub-section I present evidence of another form of repressive strategy.
This involves firms bearing some costs to support political parties that challenged SPD
and union policy positions. In fact, most political lobbying activity of firms was
directed toward such political parties. This evidence is consistent with the theory. It
shows that firms invested some amount in the state to get preferred anti-labor policies.
This sub-section concludes with evidence that further confirms the
mechanism of heterogeneity: problems of enforcement within a repressive capitalist
166
During the depression years of 1930-1933, these artificially high iron prices were detrimental to
Brüning‘s deflationary policies. Because of the AVI-agreement, the government was unable to
convince the finishing-industries to artificially lower their iron prices—they could not simply de-
legitimize the AVI-agreement and cartels (their attempts to lower prices by decree were opposed by
other employer associations. These associations essentially broke ties with the Brüning government
(discussed below) with the declaration on December 9, 1931 that called for a 10 percent wage reduction
along with a 10 percent reduction of all prices bound by agreements such as cartels.
265
faction made pursuing labor market goals—through the strategy of state lobbying—
difficult. These problems occurred even though different employer associations and
industrialists shared joint interests in continuing the undoing of Weimar-era labor
reforms.
3.4.1 Mechanics of political repression
Employer associations‘ political strategies were influencing these parties to
support their positions against collective bargaining and the arbitration courts. To use
that influence—a strategy of repression—they used funds. The major industrialists
formed a group that represented a break from the previous system of collecting and
disbursing political money of big business. The two parties that most represented the
views of repressive capital and employer associations were the German People‘s Party
(Deutsche Volkespartei, DVP) and the German National People‘s Party (DNVP). The
right-wing faction of the DVP was particularly sympathetic to the views of heavy
industry. In the 1890s, as discussed in chapter 3, campaign funds had been managed
through a centralized agency established under the auspices of CDI—but the
formation of the RDI made it difficult to continue channeling such funds to campaigns
because the RDI represented a wider variety of industries (including finished
manufacturing and heavy industry).
In 1924, coal and iron industries under the LNV and related associations
wanted to restore the centralization of campaign funds to support favored candidates.
In 1927, this system ran into opposition: Alfred Hugenberg a manufacturing
industrialist, wanted to defer less to his fellow industrialists, particularly those in the
influential associations. He was focused on winning the party leadership of the
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DNVP, and wanted to attain control the funds and subsidies extended to DNVP by
these firms. The existing DNVP leader Count Kuno von Westarp asked Reusch and
Springorum for assistance: they supplied Westarp with the funds from a new tax on
iron firms (Turner 1970).
To institutionalize the above political support for the DNVP, the employer
association leaders from the LNV and Northwest Group decided on March 5, 1928 to
manage political funds through a source called the Eisenseite. Springorum became the
treasurer. A parallel treasury organized by the coal industry (the Kohlenseite) was run
by Ernst Brandi, who was head of the Mining Association (Verein für die
Bergbaulichen Interessen, BV). The actual amount of electoral funds managed by the
Ruhrlade is unknown. Turner estimates that the Eisenseite levy produced a yearly
yield of approximately 620,000 marks for each year 1928-1930. The range of total
funds (Konto Wirtschaftshilfe) during 1928-30 around 1,200,000 to 1,500,000 marks;
thus the contributions of the iron industry based employer associations amounted to 40
to 50 percent of the total. In 1932, though, the BV desired independence and assumed
management of the Kohlenseite‘s funds independently.
What did these firms and associations do with these funds? They subsidized
other anti-union organizations and publications; contributed to political parties and
politicians; and supported headquarters of the parties favored by the groups. Some of
the prominent industrialists and association leaders were officially affiliated with
political parties. Krupp von Bohlen, Silverberg, and Vögler were all supporters of the
DVP; Springorum and Thyssen were affiliated with the DNVP; and Klöckner was a
member of Center Party. Reusch had been with the DVP until 1923, until he resigned
267
in protest over Chancellor Stresemann‘s decision to terminate passive resistance in the
occupied Ruhr. These industrialists, as discussed above, viewed politics as one of
socialist interests versus non-socialist interests. For the 1928 Reichstag elections, they
allocated their political funds among those parties they regarded as bourgeois
(bürgerlich) and sufficiently anti-worker: the DVP, DNVP, and Center party (Turner
1970; Heidenheimer and Langdon 1968).
I present evidence of the political strategy used by firms to get the government
to support its repressive strategies. The DNVP received 200,000 marks from the
Ruhrlade (supported by funds from the mentioned associations) for the 1928 election
campaign.167
After the 1928 election, the Ruhrlade gave monthly subsidies of 5,000
marks to the DNVP and DVP, as well as 3,000 marks going to the Bavarian People‘s
Party (Bayerische Volkspartei, BVP) (Turner 1970, 207). For the 1928 election, the
DNVP received 487,000 marks in total for campaign contributions, so the Rurhlade‘s
200,000 was a substantial portion—about 40 percent—of the party‘s total campaign
contributions. Springorum explicitly brought up the contributions in his discussions
with DNVP party leader Count Westarp—in exchange for these funds, he wanted
industrial and associational decision-making influence regarding the ranking of
nominees on the party‘s lists of candidates for the next elections. Springorum
however was unsuccessful: he had extracted from the DNVP leadership a commitment
to place nominees favored by the repressive employer associations higher on the
electoral list than the more extremist Hugenberg‘s preferred choices. However,
Westarp failed, and Hugenberg‘s preferred nominees ranked higher on the final list.
167
Turner speculates that the DVP and Center Party received similar amount.
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3.4.2 Evidence of sanctioning defectors: divisions with the repressive faction
The problem of dissension within the faction of repressive employer
associations illustrates the mechanism of heterogeneity operating within a repressive
faction. Hugenberg became chairman of the DNVP in October 1928. This was in fact
a defeat for the industrialists representing most repressive employer associations: they
preferred the relatively moderate leadership of Westarp, who had led the DNVP into a
coalition government in 1927-28. Of course, still, these industrialists and associations
objected to the coalition government‘s acceptance of laws regulating the length of
industrial workday, as well as the establishment of an unemployment insurance
program based in part on employer contributions. But, they still wanted the DNVP to
work within the confines of the parliamentary system. They were against any result
that would minimize the influence of the DNVP because they were concerned that
under Hugenberg, the DNVP would become too obstructionist. Reusch himself
encouraged industrial opposition to Hugenberg‘s bid for DNVP chairmanship
(Stegmann 1976).
In 1930, the Reichstag dissolved, and in July of that year there were new
elections scheduled for September. The repressive employer associations and
industrialists set as their goal to reduce the fragmentation of non-socialist parties with
the goal of creating a unified party that could challenge the SPD within the
parliamentary system. Their goal was a ―bürgerliche Einheitspartei,‖ which partially
came out of concern about Hugenberg‘s potentially radical leadership of the DNVP.
At a July 28, 1930 meeting of the most influential industrialists in the repressive
faction, the members resolved to support all parties from the Hugenberg-led DNVP on
269
the right to the former Democratic Party (Staatspartei) on the left, in an effort to
confront the SPD while neutralizing Hugenberg‘s influence. They resolved to aid
potentially secessionist DNVP groups only if they combined with each other and with
the older middle parties to present ‖joint lists‖ of electoral candidates to challenge
Hugenberg. At this point, Reichart, who was head of the national headquarters of the
VdESI in Berlin, was heavy industry‘s leading spokesman in the DNVP Reichstag
Fraktion. He had opposed Hugenberg‘s candidacy and resigned in 1930. The goal of
this new anti-socialist effort was to keep open the possibility of cooperation with the
moderate groups and keep alive the idea of bourgeois cooperation as a viable political
strategy—the choice between submitting to the SPD and extremist choice of undoing
Weimar democracy. The idea was to force compromises from Hugenberg and get the
DNVP to cooperate.
This attempt to moderate the DNVP and simultaneous create a grand anti-
socialist coalition failed. The industrialists Blank, Springorum, and Baron
Wilmowsky met with DNVP spokesmen, and tried to induce it to change its position
with the promise of regular campaign subsidies. Blank persuaded the leaders of the
DVP, the Wirtschaftspartei, and the new Konservative Volkspartei to draft a joint
campaign declaration: the Wirtschaftspartei disavowed the declaration upon learning
about it. Still, these industrialists and their associations contributed funds to parties
that were reliably bourgeois, but this time without extracting any promises from the
parties.168
These industrialists did believe at first in the Brüning government: they
expected abandonment of compulsory arbitration and binding state arbitration of wage
168
Turner speculates money was given to them in 1928, also to the conservative Volkspartei.
270
disputes, and the ending of the ―inviolability of wage contracts.‖ Repressive employer
associations wanted the Brüning government to disavow the SPD and battle against
the unions, and to do away not only with compulsory state arbitration, but with the
whole system of collective bargaining as well. Brüning did meet with them, but he
also depended on the SPD for electoral support, who wanted to maintain existing laws.
By summer 1931, these associations and firms realized Brüning would not waver, and
by autumn of 1931, they openly opposed the government coalition.
For the spring 1932 elections, the repressive faction was still divided. Reusch
and Krupp von Bohlen were against Hugenberg: he was their obstacle to cooperation
among non-socialist parties. They proposed that the associations and firms should
withhold financial contributions from the DNVP until Hugenberg was replaced by a
more moderate figure who could credibly unite parties against the SPD. But
Springorum and Vögler resisted this proposal; they thought such intervention would
only cause more internal party chaos. As a result, the Kohlenseite raised and
disbursed its levy separately; Brandi, the head of the mining association, had long
wanted more independence from the iron and steel-centered industrialists who were
influential. These associations ended up not coordinating electoral funds for the 1932
electoral campaign: they let individual firms decide whether to contribute to the
industrial fund, sponsored by Duisberg.169
This, along with other policy
disagreements, helped divide the repressive faction of capital. It should be noted, of
169
Another non-political cause for internal disagreement among the Ruhrlade occurred in July 1932: in
mid-June the Reich had purchased a majority of the stock of the Gelsenkirchener Bergwerks-AG, and
Gelsenkirchen stock carried controlling interest in the Stahlverein. Reusch was upset with the
Stahlverein and attacked Poensgen, Thyssen, and Vögler for ―acquiescing in the establishment of a
massive state beachhead in heavy industry‖ (Turner 1970).
271
course, that one reason why these associations might have failed in their negotiations
was that they could not deliver sizeable blocks of votes to the DNVP or other related
parties. This evidence illustrates that divisions within the repressive faction—which
already had been quite successful with the collapse of the ZAG and anti-labor
consequences of the AVI agreement—prevented it from attaining all of its objections.
Even this faction had more extremist anti-democratic ones which it could not
adequately sanction and control.
Section 4: Implications and Alternative Views
Before turning to interpretation of the evidence from this time period, I
summarize the main trend in changes in firm strategies in Germany. Figure 6-1
displays the change in firm strategies, going back to Imperial Germany and continuing
through the inter-war period. The template for Figure is used as well for discussion of
other countries in Chapters 7 and 8. The solid and dashed vertical lines denote the
years in which changes in major firm strategies occurred. The x-axis displays decades.
The y-axes display values of the main independent variables. To proxy the threat from
workers and costs of repression I use data on union density and percentage of votes for
all left-wing parties. To proxy for industrial heterogeneity and mechanism of variance
in the costs of repression, I use data on wage dispersion between skilled and unskilled
workers and where data exist.170
As Chapter 4 and the beginning of this chapter discussed, the first major shift
in firm strategies occurred when the two major peak employer associations, (the
170
The wage dispersion data are from Edward Anderson and Concha Betrán. The support for left-wing
parties comes from (Bartolini 2000), and the data from union density comes from (Bain and Price
1980).
272
Verein Deutscher Arbeitgeberverband and Hauptstelle Deutscher
Arbeitgeberverband) merged to form a national organization in 1913. This new
organization was the Association of German Employer Associations (Verinigung der
Deutschen Arbeitgeberverband, VDA). When the electoral support for the SPD
substantially increased, as in 1912, there was an incentive to switch to more
collaborative strategies. In 1913 these two peak associations—the HA and the VA—
unified to form the Federation of German Employers Associations (VDA). By 1913,
the VDA‘s constituent employer organizations saw over 10,000 collective agreements
covering close to 1.4 million workers. Key leaders from within the VDA and its
previous constituent organizations would go on to play an important role in the
influential 1918 Stinnes-Legien agreement, the first formal codification of a nation-
wide agreement between much of organized capital and labor. What is notable is that
the most virulent anti-labor association in the early twentieth century ended up helping
to administer a giant institution that essentially oversaw collective agreements—an
important moderation of its previous position.
When the threat from workers and the costs of repression rapidly increased
towards the end of WWI, firms and unions preemptively formed a cross-class
collaboration, encapsulated in the famous Stinnes-Legien agreement of 1918. This
agreement was a formal shift from previously repressive to a collective collaborative
strategy of firms. The agreement authorized the first major institutions in Germany
that legitimized unions as a bargaining partner in the workplace and guaranteed
minimal working conditions. This shift is displayed in the next line on the figure.
273
But the landmark collective collaborative strategy was not sustainable; this
change is indicated in the last vertical line in Figure 6-1. The ZAG collapsed in 1925
due to exogenous changes in the enforceability of the agreement. After the passing of
the economic crisis and hyperinflation, as well as the lower threat posed by the SPD
and ADGB in terms of their redistribution demands, firms which had prior to World
War I engaged in collective repressive strategies had an incentive to renege and return
to such strategies. Many employer associations and member firms directly renounced
the eight-hour day and re-activated repressive strategies. In particular, employer
associations in manufacturing lobbied heavily against the compulsory arbitration
system that the government had decreed to help resolve industrial disputes when intra-
ZAG procedures were insufficient. In 1930, when moderate leaders of the RDI
wanted to re-introduce collective collaborative strategies, the same associations
lobbied against it threatened to veto such an idea. Besides the defection of employer
associations, more extremist unions, like the Berlin Metalworkers‘ Union, left the
ZAG as well. Once economic growth increased again in the mid 1920s, the variance
in the costs of repression across industries increased, and the incentives for collective
strategies to be maintained disappeared. While the ZAG collapsed in 1925, it served
as a viable template for future legislation that sought to guarantee union and employer
association bargaining procedures.
The preceding discussion of war-time and inter-war Germany demonstrates the
importance of the redistribute threat posed by workers and the heterogeneity of the
economy in conditioning firm strategies. Firms only forged a coalition with workers
out of necessity due to the uncertainty and chaos engendered by the end of World War
274
I. Once the threat from revolution passed, though, the costs of repression fell (as
evidenced by the ability of the ADGB and SPD to contain militant threats) firms had
an incentive to switch strategies. Collaboration with workers was fragile: with the
passing of hyperinflation; an end to occupation of the Ruhr; and a ―moderation‖ in the
threat posed by workers, collective collaboration was not sustainable. This chapter
has documented the different ways in which repression was used and how even
collaborative employer associations were locked into participating. It demonstrates
the theoretical importance of costs of repression and the variance in such costs for
explaining the broad contours of industrial institutions.
This confirmation of the theory contrasts with existing accounts of the co-
evolution of electoral systems and economic coordination. In particular, it proposes a
more convincing explanation of the general strategies of firms than arguments that
focus mainly on electoral systems and the incentives of parties and politicians. As
discussed in chapter 3, Martin and Swank‘s account argues that PR transfers a ―spirit
of cooperation‖ between employer associations and unions and that dedicated business
parties participate in coalition governments to attain cooperative ends with workers.
MS propose a number of explanations for this outcome. They argue that firms have
specific parties represent businesses which then work with parties representing
workers or farmers.
The precise mechanism in their theory that explains the form of employer
cooperation is not supported with the evidence presented above. Further, the theory
from chapter 3 and the subsequent evidence cuts against their claim. First, the fact
that firm strategies changed so dramatically at the end of World War I and during the
275
Weimar republic indicates that the electoral system cannot account for such important
temporal changes in firm strategies. Second, the evidence presented on the actual
adoption of wide-spanning employer coordination actually cooperation pre-dates the
adoption of PR: it was the feared chaos and attendant rise in the costs of repression
that prompted important firms to switch strategies and seek unions‘ assistance in
managing the demobilization.
Third, as discussed in chapter 2, existing accounts which focus on coding such
coordination as collaborative misses the importance of collective repression, which
was important during the Weimar era. In fact, repressive factions of employers helped
to undo the ZAG. Fourth, the repressive positions of the political parties DVP and
DNVP, and the fact that they participated in coalition governments, indicate that
employer associations still invested resources in government to have the state share
the costs of repression when possible. This evidence means that distributive conflict,
not just a spirit of cooperation, can characterize industrial relations within a
proportional electoral system.
This chapter also presents evidence inconsistent with the mechanism posited
by CIS regarding the co-evolution of PR and systems of economic coordination. This
theoretical perspective argues that certain long-standing systems of economic
coordination, due to historical guilds, explains why some countries adopted PR. This
account argues as well that an ―inclusionary‖ logic explains the link between these two
institutions; certain economies have economic institutions that jointly invest in
workers‘ skills. In particular, they cite Thelen‘s 2004 discussion of the ZAG as being
supportive of their mechanism.
276
This manuscript does not address the formation of PR. But the above evidence
on the ZAG indicates that its initial formation and subsequent collapse had less to do
with joint incentives of workers and firms to invest in specific assets. Rather, the
ZAG was formed out of fear that without some institutionalized cooperation, either
workers or returning soldiers from WWI would become further radicalized and
threaten production and the viability of the economic order. These reasons ultimately
mattered more for why the ZAG was established. The preceding chapter establishes
the importance in Weimar Germany of the threat from workers and changes in
enforceability of agreements for explaining variation of firm strategies displayed in
Table 2-1. In the next chapter I discuss how the absence of these existential threats to
the United States meant that repression was sustainable for a more continued amount
of time.
277
Figure 6-1: Change in Firm Strategies in Germany
278
Chapter 7: Evidence from the US Inter-War Period
―I am to set before you the advantages of organization. The benefits of organization
are so numerous and so diversified, and in some instances so obscure that to discuss
all of them would require considerable time…[particularly] the existence of the
National Metal Trades Association and kindred organizations of employers, originated
in the militant attitude assumed by aggressive labor leaders towards the individual
employer.‖ – Andrew J. Allen, Secretary of the Indianapolis Branch of the National
Metal Trades Association, addressed to the Ninth Annual Convention of the National
Metal Trades Association, at Boston, Massachusetts, March 21-22, 1907 (Reprinted in
The Open Shop, 1907, 269, 272).
Andrew J. Allen‘s address to the member firms at the annual convention of one
of the most prominent American employer organizations had many goals. Its main
purpose was to exhort the NMTA‘s member firms to commit more resources to the
organization. It was also a plea for firms to invest more resources and funds to enforce
the principles of an organizational movement that would unite firms against the
perceived increased aggressiveness of American unions. Allen‘s address was
representative of that of other prominent leaders of national and regional employer
organizations. It illustrates that even when some company managers and owners
thought that the benefits from joining an organization were obvious, organizational
leaders still felt the need to persuade member firms to commit resources. Most
strikingly, Allen cites the ―militant attitude‖ of workers in justifying the organization‘s
purpose.
Allen‘s dilemma illustrates the difficulties of collective action of firms to form
associations. Further, it demonstrates the importance of repressive associations
against unions: the existence and influence of these associations in the United States
during the inter-war period provides further confirmation of the theoretical framework
279
presented in chapters 2 and 3. In this chapter I use evidence from a considerably
different country time period to test the hypotheses laid out in the theoretical chapter:
variation in the adoption firm strategies can be attributed to the redistributive threat
posed by organized labor as well as problems of enforceability of agreements.
The United States poses a useful contrast against the German experience,
because, as discussed below, there was historically a lower redistributive threat from
workers and much higher degrees of industrial heterogeneity and structural obstacles
to collective action among firms. As a result, we should observe a different set of
outcomes: difficulties forming employer coordination at a meaningful national level,
and a reluctance to switch from repression to collaboration. I demonstrate that during
periods of exogenous shifts in heterogeneity—war time intervention of the state—
collective repression did emerge, which has been previously undocumented in the
comparative political economy literature. In the United States inter-war period, I
demonstrate that the initial adoption of collective repression and the failure to make it
sustainable the national level are a result of the hypothesized variables. While there
has been much research on how the United States functions as a canonical liberal
market economy, the role of repressive employer organizations in its labor history has
been understudied.
Specifically, to confirm the existence and importance of repressive employer
coordination and test the proposed theory, I use new quantitative and qualitative
evidence from the important anti-labor Open Shop movement in the United States
during the early 1920s. This movement represented the height of manufacturing
firms‘ collective repressive strategies against workers: key organizations that
280
spearheaded the movement espoused an ideology and set of policies that restricted
union presence at the plant level and undermined the nationalization of the labor
movement. Despite the importance of the aggressive anti-labor movement in the
United States, the mechanics and politics of it remain poorly understood I use a new
dataset on participation in the Open-Shop movement at the US county level during the
inter-war period. I find firms‘ adoption of repressive employer organizations against
workers arose in response to higher levels of unionization. Collective repressive
employer organizations, controlling for other structural conditions, emerged at the
local level in response to threats from unions.
The second empirical part of the chapter demonstrates that these initial
collective repressive strategies were not sustainable at the national level during the
early inter-war period. I use primary and archival evidence from records of major
employer organizations, including meeting synopses, publications, and internal
records, to show that these nascent organizations did not engage in increased national-
level coordination among member firms. Nascent employer organizations made a
strategic choice to limit the collective strategy, and ultimately favored reversion to
individual-level repressive firm strategies. Incumbent employer institutions thought
that expanding the collective apparatus could possibly backfire and undermine
existing achievements. The increase in heterogeneity during this time period—
proxied by the exogenous removal of state intervention after WWI—made the
continuing of such collective strategies untenable and unenforceable. Further, these
incumbent institutions thought expanding the collective apparatus could possibly
backfire and undermine existing achievements. The self-imposed institutional
281
constraint—the choice to revert to more individual firm strategies—also contrasts
sharply with the experience of some continental European states. As the previous
chapters demonstrate, Germany experienced much more sustained collective
collaborative strategies from firms after World War I due to the sharply increased
redistributive threat from workers.
This particular research design and test for the US experience is an
improvement over existing explanations of US industrial relations. By using county-
level analyses, I am better able to arbitrate between competing explanations of firm
strategies. Naturally, such analyses cannot help us explain the firm strategy at the
national level, but they allow one to isolate the importance of individual mechanisms
which might work at the national level. The use of primary evidence of course allows
one to assess whether the logic of the strategies described in chapter existed.
Unfortunately, specific data on industrial heterogeneity such as that used in Chapter 5
for Germany are not available for the United States. However, I use qualitative
evidence regarding the expansion of employer associations to test the mechanism of
enforceability of agreements.
Section 1 of the chapter provides an overview of the US case and the main
trends in the outcome variables. Section 2 discusses the particular relevance of the US
time period considered. Section 3 operationalizes the theory in terms of specific
variables, and then describes the original data used. Section 4 presents the results for
testing one prediction for the theory. Section 5 tests another prediction of the theory
with qualitative evidence. Section 6 concludes.
Section 1. Overview of Changes in Firm Strategies
282
Figure 7-1 displays the main changes in employer strategies in the United
States since the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The main strategies that
firms pursued for most of the nineteenth and twentieth century were characterized by
individual and then collective repression of workers to prevent unionization. As the
figure shows, the adoption of the Open-Shop movement occurred after a sharp
government-induced compression of wages during World War I. An exogenous
imposition of wage dispersion reduction facilitated a collective action movement that
was repressive towards workers. A slight increase in industrial heterogeneity, which
is proxied by the increase in wage dispersion towards the end of the inter-war period,
is linked to a shift in firm strategies.
The figure shows the inter-war period switch to a modal strategy of individual
repressive strategies later on in the mid 1920s. These strategies predominated up until
the implementation of the Depression-era National Recovery Act (NRA) in 1933 and
the National Labor Relations (the Wagner Act) in 1935, which legalized collective
bargaining and made illegal many repressive tactics of firms. During the period of
repression, the costs were shared among employer organizations and the state,
including the local, state, and federal government. The graph shows that changes in
the theorized variables correlate with the major shifts in firm strategies.
Overall, firms were able to engage in the lower cost strategy of repression due
to the absence of a coordinated labor movement that would have posed a large
redistributive or revolutionary threat. A multitude of reasons have been documented
for the absence of such a threat from workers. These reasons document the structural
difficulty in posing a large threat from workers: a much larger workforce and
283
geographical scope served as inhibitors of labor collective action; divisions between
craft and industrial unions; and the general absence of a workers‘ party (Montgomery
1989; Perlman and Taft 1955).171
But less documented is the importance of collective
repression from firms as a strategy. Firms engaged in individual-level repressive
strategies when costs of enforcing a collective agreement among firms were high.
After WWI, they were able to adopt more collective repressive strategies, though they
were not of the same scope as those in other states.
From the late nineteenth century until World War I, firms engaged largely in
individual-level repressive strategies. Major steel companies and manufacturing firms
could engage in repressive strategies, preventing and ending strikes. For example,
between 1881 and 1900, firms hired over 500,000 replacement workers of the 4.8
million who went on strike; strikebreakers were used in 40 percent of strikes in this
period and substantively increased the chance of success for firms (Rosenbloom
1998). Unions increasingly struck during this period to attain bargaining rights, and
both large and small firms responded with repressive strategies, and there were very
few sector-level agreements between firms and workers. The judicial apparatus and
contested legal status of unions after 1890 also greatly helped firms engage in other
strategies of repression and inhibit unionization (Bok 1971). Following the passage of
the Sherman anti-trust act in 1890, there was a long legal battle in state and federal
courts between firms and unions on whether unions themselves were illegal
agreements, and whether strikes were legal. Firms could file injunctions against
unions in anticipation of a strike, resulting in costly legal battles and delays for unions
171
These reasons demonstrate the possibility that structural factors that affect employer coordination
can also affect worker‘ collective action.
284
(Fitch 1924; Letwin 1965).
The United States then in the early inter-war period was characterized by a
strategy of collective repression. Collective repression emerged as a strategy to
dismantle war-time labor institutions which had also compressed wages. These
strategies were pursued by multiple influential sector-level employer organizations.
These strategies constituted part of the ―Open Shop‖ (OS) movement, which is a key
example of firms coordinating to prevent workers from organizing. Important
employer associations included the National Metal Trades Association (NMTA), the
National Erectors‘ Association (NEA), the National Association of Manufacturers
(NAM) – mainly a lobbying group, and the National Founders‘ Association (NFA). 172
Under the movement, firms joined local-level employer associations which had the
goal of undermining craft unionism and preventing union infringement on firms‘
―right‖ to set wages, working conditions, and control of training.
Section 2. The United States and the ―Open Shop‖ Movement
172
Martin discusses the turn of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) towards a more neo-
liberal ideology but does not explicitly address the rise of other anti-labor movements or repression as a
strategy before this transition. Her excellent account focuses on the link between the Republican Party
and the NAM, and discusses why this particular organization did not become a cooperative
encompassing employer institution like its European counterparts. One of the key explanations is that
the NAM was perceived to be too linked to the Republican Party, preventing it from being a true
corporatist institution. In this paper I focus on a different outcome: the rise of repressive employer
coordination before the NAM became involved in the decision ―nationalize‖ such movements. See
(Martin 2006) Several important studies in the field of labor history and industrial sociology examine
specific organizations, but without specifying generalizable theory. A wealth of literature exists
regarding the formation of US industrial-relations institutions For development of the NMTA and its
role in the Open Shop see a series of articles by Haydu (1988; Haydu 1999) Harris provides a detailed
account of the Philadelphia branch of the National Metal Trades Association (2000). Fine examines the
history of the important National Erectors‘ Association (1995). Derber provides a description of
important industrial-sector employer organizations (1984) In this chapter I quantify and test some of
the implied theories in these historical accounts regarding development of employer associations.
285
The experience of the United States after World War I is a useful country and
time period in which to examine variation in the development of repressive employer
coordination. Few systematic studies in the fields of comparative political economy
and American political development examine the development of repressive employer
organizations. In particular, the development of the Open Shop (OS) movement in the
United States after World War I presents a unique opportunity to explore the
emergence of repressive employer coordination. It is theoretically important because
it represents a clear instance of firms coordinating to prevent workers from organizing.
Existing theoretical literature on the emergence of industrial institutions neglects the
formation and actions of major employer organizations. In particular, they ignore the
importance of repression. However, the variation in the emergence of repressive
employer coordination during the inter-war period—across different industrial sectors
as well as different geographical regions—indicates important intra-state as well as
temporal variation in the actions of employer organizations. Both kinds of variation
can be leveraged to differentiate between possible explanations of firm strategies.
Under the Open-Shop movement, firms joined local-level employer
associations which had the goal of undermining craft unionism and preventing union
infringement on firms‘ ―right‖ to set wages, working conditions, and control of
training. It is empirically useful because there was much intra-state variation in the
degree of employer coordination, as discussed below. These occasionally brutal
activities had great implications for the worsening of working conditions in the United
States before World War II, but we do not have any systematic understanding of what
explains their variation.
286
The influential onset of the movement can be traced back to the collapse of
attempts to form encompassing collective strategies after WWI. Firms and prominent
employer associations discussed after the conflict how to dismantle the federal
government-imposed wage agreements that came into existence during the war
(Wakstein 1964).173
Their preferences regarding which strategy and industrial
institutions they wanted were articulated in a number of publications, but also
prominently at President Woodrow Wilson‘s National Industrial Conference in
September 1919.174
The purpose of this conference was to agree upon post-WWI
industrial institutions and to resolve labor disputes that had emerged since the end of
the war. At this conference, prominent employer organizations, including the NAM,
NMTA, and NICB, spoke against union preferences to maintain government-imposed
industrial institutions; unions wanted expansive collective bargaining with counterpart
associations. Employers viewed such ideas as a threat to managerial independence.175
The conference representatives of employer organizations included Magnus
Alexander, the head of the National Industrial Conference Board (NICB), James A.
Emery of the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM), J.W. O‘Leary of the
National Metal Trades Association (NMTA), and representatives from individual large
173
See the useful accounts provided by Hurvitz (1977) and Wakstein (1969). The original source for
the positions of different representatives comes from the Proceedings of the First Industrial
Conference, October 6 to 23 1919 (1920). 174
They also discussed their position on repression and support of the Open Shop in a variety of
publications, such as the Iron Trades Review and Metal Trades Bulletin. 175
The conference representatives of employer organizations included Magnus Alexander, the head of
the National Industrial Conference Board (NICB), James A. Emery of the National Association of
Manufacturers (NAM), J.W. O‘Leary of the National Metal Trades Association (NMTA), and
representatives from individual large corporations. Representatives from firms included Bethlehem
Steel, DuPont, General Motors, International Harvester, General Electric, and Standard Oil of New
Jersey. The labor delegation had leaders of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), including Samuel
Gompers, as well as leaders of major railroad unions.
287
corporations.176
The labor delegation had leaders of the American Federation of Labor
(AFL), including Samuel Gompers, as well as leaders of major railroad unions.
Union leaders at the conference wanted to continue the framework that had
been established by the National War Labor Board (NWLB), which had given workers
the right to bargain collectively. As Hurvitz notes, the business delegates‘ preferences
were ―diametrically opposed‖ to those of unions (Hurvitz 1977). Employer
representatives at this summit advocated a return to pre-WWI institutions and a
dismantling of collective bargaining. To accede to union demands, as one industrial
representative put it, would be ―nothing short of a national calamity, for it would set
up a dominating power side by side with the National Government which would have
an influence and a force…[that] no private organization should possess.‖177
Magnus
Alexander, the head of the NICB, advocated at this conference the principle of the
Open Shop. As Hurvitz describes, the First Industrial Conference ended without any
resolution; it was at this conference where the anti-union and repressive preferences of
key employer associations were articulated. They argued that unionism imposed
unfair restrictions on firms‘ managerial authority.178
The two sides did not come to
any agreement that would have kept war-time wage agreements and labor regulations
176
Representatives from firms included Bethlehem Steel, DuPont, General Motors, International
Harvester, General Electric, and Standard Oil of New Jersey. 177
See Proceedings of the First Industrial Conference, October 6 to 23 1919, 196. 178
There were other third-party representatives appointed by President Wilson, but the main issues of
contention were discussed by the organizations representing unions and employers. At this conference,
employer representatives also advocated another strategy to undermine unions, by using ―shop
councils‖ which would be forums for workers to air grievances, but they would not be able to call
strikes or make decisions without managerial consent. At this conference, collective employer
associations advocated also that firms could solve labor problems locally: they opposed the AFL‘s
vision of large scale labor unions bargaining on an equal footing with employer associations. Firms
also expressed anti-union preferences through their role in the National Civic Federation, which had
minimal impact on actual employer association policy (Green 1956)
288
in place.
The Open Shop movement that emerged after WWI and in the wake of the
collapsed national conference was a direct challenge to organized labor and the efforts
of unions to maintain and extend such wage agreements. Wilson‘s attempts to solidify
the government-imposed national cooperative industrial institutions failed. From the
employers‘ perspective, the perception was that firms, after the period of war-induced
government intervention private intervention, needed to ―win back‖ managerial
authority over workers. William H. Barr, the President of the National Founders‘
Association (NFA), stated one succinct goal of the organization after the war: ―War-
time wages must be liquidated‖ (Dunn 1927), 22).
The Open Shop movement was characterized by the diffusion of employer
associations across counties that supported ―open shop‖ or anti-unionization principles
for member firms. These associations generally formed in the metal-manufacturing
and finished-goods industries. The phrase ―Open Shop‖ refers to an objective of the
owners of a firm to have the choice and ―right‖ to hire and fire workers regardless of
their union affiliation. The ―open shop‖ also refers to the firm owner‘s right to
manage worker training without interference from apprenticeship demands from
workers, and pay wages and benefits as they saw fit. The Open Shop was a battle of
employer associations and individual firms against craft-based unionism over the
―right to manage‖ and a strategy to win back and solidify the industrial relationships
that had put workers at a bargaining disadvantage before WWI. The movement had an
ideological component that used rhetoric of firms ―rights‖ to be unconstrained by
union-imposed restrictions. These publications also provided information on the status
289
of legislation and union demands in other states and localities. Many of the
associations were formed to prevent recognition and growth of unions, both within and
across firms. The movement, despite objections to such labels by some firms, was
intended to oppose collective bargaining rights for workers, and to discredit and
reduce the spread of unionism.
The Open Shop movement promoted itself as a necessary institutional response
to the rise in ―closed shop‖ ideologies advocated by unions such as the International
Association of Machinists (IAM) and the longstanding threat posed by member unions
of the American Federation of Labor (AFL). Firms involved in the Open Shop
movement and staff members for regional and local offices produced an impressive
array of publications and propaganda to promote its policy goals as part of a strategy
to reduce the political and economic influence of workers. For example, the National
Metal Trades Association published The Open Shop, with articles from prominent
industrialists on threats posed to firms by unionism and pro-labor legislation. The
NAM published in 1921 a guide to the Open Shop for distribution in public schools
and libraries (Open shop encyclopedia for debaters 1921). Other publications like the
Iron Trades Review and Metal Trades Bulletin discussed the progress of legislation at
the state and federal level that was perceived to be harmful to firms. They also
included useful information on industrial trends and economic data.
This diffusion in local associational activity coincided with increased activity
from national-level employer associations that used aggressive and sometimes violent
means to defeat unionism, particularly in the steel-making and steel erection
industries. The explicit goals of these local and state organizations were what one
290
historian called ―undoubtedly the most militant and widespread offensive ever
undertaken by the American employing class—a class which has probably shown
greater vigor and fighting spirit than in any other country‖ (Dunn 1927, 22). This
period in industrial relations after World War I was characterized by a mix of vibrant
sub-national employers‘ activity from manufacturing firms, along with a nationally
promoted anti-union ideology. They existed in over 250 US metropolitan areas, many
of which were medium-sized or the largest industrial areas.179
This burst of collective
repression helped reduce unionization in the inter-war period.180
These local and regional collective repressive associations, like their German
counterparts, sought to achieve anti-union goals through several instruments. They
imposed rules prohibiting employers from hiring union or formerly union-affiliated
workers; coordinated ―blacklists‖ that prevented workers with any union history from
being hired; imported strikebreakers; and tried to consign member firms to participate
in lockouts to enforce their aggressive anti-union stance. As described in Chapter 2,
an important instrument of such associations was the multi-employer sympathy
lockout in response to strikes. Employers united in a city would agree to lock out
union-affiliated workers in the event of a strike. The motivation was to force unions
to use as much of their strike-support funds as possible. This strategy countered the
union strategy of engaging in whipsaw strikes, which consisted of targeting and
striking against individual firms and ―picking them off‖ one at a time. Sustained
179
The 1936 La Follette Senate Committee report documents a variety of tactics used by companies to
undermine unionism, including the use of labor spies, intimidation, violence, and coordinated lockouts. 180
Elsewhere I document why these initial employer organizations chose not to form a peak inter-sector
body that would have management over local employer associations‘ efforts. These organizations made
a strategic decision that local-level repression was sufficient.
291
employer coordination at the local level, with the weapon of the lockout, was designed
to counter such union activities. Beyond these instruments that directly targeted union
workers and union treasuries, some state-level employer associations lobbied state
governments for legislation against unions, such as outlawing pickets and allowing the
use of court injunctions against strikes.181
The Open Shop movement in the inter-war period began as firms across cities
in the United States, beginning with waterfront employers in Seattle, and
manufacturers in San Antonio, Toledo, and Indianapolis, independently established
employer associations that espoused Open Shop ideals about the right for employers to
manage without labor interference. These movements were often established by
specific industries, though they sometimes adopted city titles for their movements.
For example, the organization the ―Associated Industries of Seattle‖ was the Seattle-
based open shop employer association. These early local employer coordination
movements started largely independently of each other. By 1922, over 200 US cities
had employer organizations (Wakstein 1961).182
These newly formed local employer associations were called ―Open Shop
Associations‖ (OSAs). These OSAs functioned much like the kind of repressive
employer coordination regimes described in Chapter 2. They generally functioned as
follows: an OSA‘s member firms paid dues and agreed to comply with institutional
rules such as participating in a lockout, but in exchange they received information and
181
Swenson discusses the logic and use of these lockouts. See Swenson (2002). Harris describes their
use in Philadelphia. See Harris 1991, 111-132. The Senate committee hearings chaired by Senator La
Follette provide much detail about the use of lockouts, labor spies, and blacklists. See U.S. Congress,
Senate, Subcommittee of the Committee on Education and Labor. Hearings Pursuant to S. Res. 266,
Violations of Free Speech and Rights of Labor. 74th–76th Cong., (1936–1940). 182
See discussions in various trade publications, including: (Public Sponsors Open Shop Associations
1920; Declare for Open Shop in 78 Cities 1920).
292
industrial-relations services described above, such as assistance in times of strikes, and
supporting funds to compensate for lost productivity during lockouts. Some OSAs also
published local trade journals and circulated information on labor conditions and
wages of firms. OSAs distributed information about ongoing and potential labor
organization, and were to provide strike assistance when a member firm asked for it.
The existence of an OSA in a city or county is a straightforward indicator of a
collective repressive coordination, as it constitutes a successful attempt on the part of
firms in a manufacturing industry to institutionalize their operations against organized
labor.183
The preceding discussion has focused on local diffusion of OSAs and
ideological elements to this anti-union effort, but national employer associations also
existed. The National Metal Trades Association (NMTA) and National Erectors‘
Association (NEA) were key actors in managing labor markets in select industrial
areas, and were the national unions‘ largest adversaries. As discussed above, the
NMTA had representatives at Wilson‘s industrial conference, and Allen‘s address at
the start of this chapter was intended to persuade NMTA members. These
associations shared similar Open Shop goals. The major manufacturing lobby, the
National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) also became more oriented towards
espousing anti-labor policies, which I discuss below. The Open Shop movement—
both the locally coordinated and national institutions—helped reduce unionization
rates during the 1920s (Wakstein 1961).
Studying variation in OSAs allows us to test hypotheses about what explains
183
We do not have local (city or county) level data on the ―success‖ of each OSA regarding its
attainment of its objectives.
293
variation in repressive employer coordination. To measure instances of repressive
employer coordination, I use a new dataset on local-level adoption of OSAs. Local
level OSAs serve as the best available proxy for repressive employer coordination.
Despite the influence of the Open Shop movement on US industrial relations, and its
brand of virulent anti-unionism, we know very little about its diffusion, and how these
independent local repressive movements related to existing national institutions.
Historians have provided important descriptions of specific associations‘ activities
during this time period, but there has been little use of systematic data to explain why
OSAs emerged in some counties and not others.184
Two empirical questions arise regarding variation in repressive employer
coordination and the test of the theory. First, what factors explain variation in local
adoption of OSAs? Understanding such variation allows for testing of the theory at a
more micro level. Second, why did local level OSAs not expand the scope or further
institutionalize to form a true ―national federation‖ of employers that would have been
a more effective bulwark against organized labor? In short, why was there no
―American Federation of Employers‖ to counter the AFL? This would have been a
fortuitous period for US employers to solidify and engage in repressive coordination at
the national level. As I discuss below, issues of enforceability help explain why
national-level strategies were not adopted.
Section 3: Testing the Theory with Micro Data
Hypotheses
Because of the scarcity of empirical studies of the development of the Open
184
Harris in particular provides a detailed account of the role of the Open Shop in employer
coordination of labor markets in Philadelphia. See Harris (2000).
294
Shop movement in the United States, and the absence of studies regarding variation in
repressive employer coordination more generally, I outline in this section a basic set of
hypotheses that follow from the discussion in Chapter 3. I consider variables that
should affect the probability of the adoption of an OSA at the local level. To measure
these instances of repressive employer coordination, I use a new dataset on local-level
adoption of OSAs. The existence of a local OSA at the city or county level is the best
available proxy for firms‘ repressive coordination against workers, as it is a discrete
unit of a collective repressive employer organization. For the following hypotheses,
the question is why a specific county would adopt an OSA.
Economic variables. I first consider demographic and economic structural
variables that should affect the adoption of repressive employer organizations. First, I
expect that areas with higher manufacturing output should be more likely to have
repressive employer organizations. Higher output means there is enough economic
activity such that firms should either have more resources to form organizations, or
have an interest in maintaining high output through an employer organization. This
hypothesis is consistent with previous descriptions of national-level employer
organizations.185
Second, following the same logic about industrial output, I expect
areas with higher population to be more likely to have repressive employer
organizations. Third, I hypothesize that the number of firms in an area should be
negatively related with the adoption of repressive employer organizations. This is
because an increased number of firms could reduce the probability of successful
185
See McCafree (1962) for discussion of this point.
295
collective action among firms (Olson 1968).186
Non-economic variables. I now consider hypotheses that link non-economic
variables to the adoption of repressive employer coordination. I hypothesize that
repressive employer organizations should be more likely to form the higher the threat
to firms posed by worker unionization. Firms should be more likely to form
repressive employer organizations as a counter to workers‘ demands. This is
hypothesis is consistent with the descriptive evidence about employer organizations‘
preferences (as evidenced by their publications, discussion at annual meetings, and
their positions taken at Wilson‘s Industrial Conference). Many other employer
organizations outside of the United States also initially formed to respond to demands
from unions.187
However, this hypothesis has not been rigorously tested.
I consider now hypotheses regarding political variables. Firms should be
responsive to political conditions in making decisions about forming repressive
organizations. Specifically, I hypothesize that repressive employer organizations are
more likely to form to respond to left-wing electoral support. This is because firms
would be concerned that local support for left-wing politicians would make pro-union
policies more likely. As discussed in chapter 3, this could be because of the concern
that the local population will support unions through favoring legislation (such as laws
that prohibit the use of injunctions to prevent strikes, or that exempt unions from anti-
trust regulation), or through coercive intervention in labor disputes that would favor
workers. Under this hypothesis, employers coordinate to form repressive
186
An alternative hypothesis is that because the number of firms in a locality might cause or be a
consequence of higher economic production, more firms in a locality could be positively correlated with
the development of employer associations. 187
See examples from Gladstone and Windmuller (1984).
296
organizations in response to the activities of the state, as opposed to those of unions.188
In the first empirical section, I test these competing hypotheses with a new
dataset on US county-level variation in repressive employer organizations from the
inter-war period. In the second empirical section, I address the question of why these
local movements did not organize with existing sector-level organizations to form a
more organized national confederation of employers after the formation of local-level
Open Shop associations. The evidence, gathered from reports and internal discussions
from regional and national employer institutions, indicates that the US Open Shop
movement did not nationalize because existing employer organizations chose not do
so, due to concerns about the costs of enforcing such an agreement. The qualitative
evidence indicates that the interests of incumbent institutions matter for explaining the
emergence of repressive employer coordination at the national level.
Data Sources, Variables, and Estimation
In this section I describe the sources of data and coding procedures used to
code variables to test the above hypotheses.
Measuring the dependent variable: city/county level repressive employer
coordination. To measure the dependent variable of the existence of repressive
employer coordination, I use results from a 1920 questionnaire distributed to firms and
associations administered in 1920 by the Associated Employers of Indiana (AEI). The
188
An alternative hypothesis is that lower support of the left could mean that that the population would
be willing to support actions by employer organizations (such as lockouts or importation of substitute
workers during a labor conflict). Therefore, left support could be negatively correlated with more
employer organizations. Political support for employer organizations could take the form of pro-firm or
anti-union legislation, or executive intervention in industrial disputes. The empirical test below
arbitrates between these competing hypotheses. One difficulty is that the Democratic Party was not
nearly as affiliated with workers as Socialist parties were in European states, indicating that Democratic
support is not necessarily a threat to firms (Sanders 1999); (Montgomery 1989).
297
AEI supplemented the questionnaire with attempts to find out which cities in the
United States had active Open Shop Associations (OSAs). As noted above, the OSA
is a useful proxy to denote the existence of repressive coordination. The adoption of
an OSA in a city or county indicates that firms in a given locality felt strong enough
that a formal association was needed.189
I use the AEI survey data to generate a list of
US counties that contain an OSA because more precise economic data from the US
Census are available at the county level.190
The dependent variable of interest for all
county level analyses is binary: I code whether a particular county had an OSA. I
code the county with a ―1‖ if an OSA in the inter-war period was present; ―0‖
indicates no OSA was present.
Independent variables.
Economic control variables. I use county level economic data from the 1920
US Census. I include lagged control variables at the county level for logged
population, amount of manufacturing output, and number of firms (ICPSR 2004). 191
Non-economic variables: Threat posed by unions. To code the threat posed to
firms by unions, I use data that quantifies the amount of union presence at the county
level. This dataset indicates whether a US county had a union local for 23 industries or
189
The AEI‘s survey data are discussed in several editions of the Iron Trades Review. The existence of
an OSA in a county does not indicate that the city government or the electorate chose to have an OSA;
it only indicates the collective decision of firms within a given locality to form an OSA. 190
This results in a reduced number of observations because some counties have more than one city
which had an active OSA). Unfortunately the sampling methodology used by the AEI to form their list
of active OSAs is not available. 191
Haines, Michael R., and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research.
Historical, Demography, Economic, and Bibliographic Citation: Social Data: the United States, 1790-
2000 [Computer file]. ICPSR02896-v2. Hamilton, NY: Colgate University/Ann Arbor: MI: Inter-
university Consortium for Political and Social Research [producers], 2004. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-
university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2005-04-29. Other economic
variables are discussed in the results section.
298
craft professions for three different time periods between 1890 and 1915. The three
time periods for which data on the existence of a union local are coded are 1890-1895,
1895-1910, and 1910-1914. Data on the presence of union locals by county are
available for 595 cities in 17 states.192
For each industry at each of the three different
time intervals, there is a binary indicator for local union presence.
To construct the measure of union threat to firms at the county level, I first
code a binary variable for each county that indicates whether county j was home to a
union local in industry x for any period t (t represents one of three time periods of
1890-1895, 1895-1910, and 1910-1914). A ―0‖ indicates that for the given county-
time period-industry in question, no union local was present; a ―1‖ indicates that a
union local in that county present. I then sum for each county j each of these binary
indicators. This sum indicates the total number of binary indicators for a union local in
a country, throughout the entire time period, 1890-1914. For example, if a county had
no union local until the period 1910-1914, but then had union presence in 10 different
industries in that period, its summed union threat would be 10.193
The variable
Unionthreat denotes this sum. Higher values of Unionthreat indicate that throughout
the time period 1895-1914, the county had a higher number of different unions
192
The industries or crafts where union locals were coded are: Boiler Makers, Boot and Shoe makers,
Bricklayers, Carpenters and Joiners, Cigar makers, Coopers, Flint glass workers, Gold beaters, Hod
Carriers, Machinists (IAM) , Electrical Workers (IBEW) , Ladies Garment Workers (ILGWU) ,
Molders (IMU) , Typographers (ITU) , Leather workers, Metal polishers, Painters, Postal workers,
Pattern makers, Sheetmetal workers, Stove mounters, Amalgamated Wood Workers. The states for
which county level data on union local presence were available are: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, Wisconsin. 193
Similarly, if a county had one union local in the same industry across all three time periods, its value
on the Unionthreat variable would be three. Unfortunately, such data at the annual level do not exist.
Nor do data on union density by county level exist for this period. But the data at the time-period level
capture much of the threat posed by unions to firms by documenting the number of locals in different
industries.
299
represented in the county. The mean of this union threat variable is 4.8 and the
standard deviation is 5.9.
I also code a variable that measures the growth in union presence at the county
level. To do so, I follow the same procedure as above—summing the binary
indicators for a union local for each county—for each of the three time periods. The
difference between the total number of unions across all time periods (Unionthreat)
and the sum for just the first two time periods captures the number of new union locals
that emerged. This variable is called Uniongrowth. This variable captures changes in
union presence in the most recent period before employer organizations emerged after
WWI. The mean of this union growth variable is 2.3 and the standard deviation is 3.0.
35 percent of counties experienced no growth in union presence between 1910 and
1914. 20% of counties had one additional union local in this five-year period. This
was also the modal amount of union growth, conditional on a county experiencing any
growth in union presence. Both variables of Unionthreat and Uniongrowth are the
best available measures of the threat posed by unions to firms during this time period.
Political variables. To measure the threat from a left-wing electorate, I use
county-level Democratic presidential vote share from the 1920 election. This is a
proxy for political support for the left and the potential threat from the left to firms. I
also use data for the Socialist presidential vote share from the same election. I also
use the difference in Democratic presidential vote shares between 1916 and 1920.
Estimation procedure. To test the competing hypotheses about the
development of repressive employer coordination, I estimate a probit regression model
300
with standard errors clustered by county. 194
The unit of analysis is the US county.
The dependent variable for each specification is binary: whether the county was noted
to have an OSA or not. I use the existence of an OSA as an indicator of repressive
employer coordination. The model takes the form:
probit (Yij) = i + 1Xi + i (1)
where Yij indicates the binary presence of an OSA for county i, and X is the vector of
relevant covariates for each county. In all specifications the subscript j is binary,
taking a value of 1 if the county has an OSA, and 0 if not.
Section 4: Results from Micro-Tests
Before presenting the results of different estimations, I discuss some basic
patterns in the data that are supportive of the hypothesis that the threat posed by
unions is a predictor of repressive employer coordination (which I proxy by adoption
of an OSA). In 1921 there were 272 cities (217 counties) in the United States that had
at least one OSA. The cities that had such associations were not just limited to the
largest metropolitan areas; in fact, such employer associations were prominent in
194
One methodological concern could be that given the limited data available regarding county-level
union presence, there could be selection bias when estimating the effect of union presence on OSA
adoption. That is, it could be the case that for the counties for which data on union presence are
available, are also counties in which OSAs are adopted, but it may not be the case that the union
presence has an independent causal effect on OSA adoption. To address the possible selection issues, I
also estimate a Heckman probit model with sample selection. This is the equivalent of a Heckman
selection model, except the model consists of a probit model in the selection equation, and a probit
model in the outcome equation. In this model, the selection equation has the binary dependent variable
indicating if data were available on union presence or not for a specific county. The main dependent
variable was the same as in equation (1). The intuition is that some of the economic independent
variables might explain why union data are more available in certain counties. In the Heckman probit
model, the statistical significance of the parameter estimate of ρ is the correlation of errors between the
two questions. If ρ is zero, then the unobserved variables that affect whether union data area available
for a county are independent of the unobserved variables which might affect adoption of an OSA. In all
specifications of the selection model, ρ was statistically insignificant indistinguishable from zero, and
the coefficient on the variable Unionthreat was the same as those estimated in the probit equation (1).
Interested readers should consult Dubin and Rivers and Greene 1997 for details on derivation of the
model (Dubin and Rivers 1990); (Greene 1997). See Berinsky for an application of the model (1999).
301
many medium-sized cities throughout the Midwest and South. 2,889 counties did not
have an OSA, so the dependent variable of interest for all US counties is seven percent
of the sample. Only one US county had an OSA that also had no union local presence
in any industry (that, is where the value on the union threat variable is zero). This is
strong baseline evidence that the minimal existence of a union in a county is necessary
for an OSA to exist. In other words, the set of counties that experienced an OSA
constitutes almost an entire subset of cities with at least some union presence in the
previous time period 1885-1914.
For the entire set of counties, population and manufacturing output are
correlated at r2 = .56. Manufacturing output and the number of firms are correlated at
r2 = .57. The 1920 Democratic presidential vote share is negatively correlated with
population, manufacturing output, and number of firms (r2 = -.047, -.13, -.31,
respectively). Regarding union presence or union threat, interestingly both union
presence and union growth are negatively correlated with Democratic presidential
support (r2 = -.20, -.21, respectively). Union presence is also positively correlated
with population, manufacturing output, and number of firms (r2 = .69, .47, .28,
respectively).
How are counties that have an OSA different from those without? I conduct
difference of means tests between the means of the economic variables of the OSA
and non-OSA counties. As expected, OSA counties are much richer and more
populous counties than non-OSA counties. OSA counties have four times the amount
of manufacturing output per capita as non-OSA counties and are about nine times as
populous (p<.001 for both tests). OSA counties also have 30% more firms than non-
302
OSA counties (p<.001). Regarding differences in Democratic presidential vote share,
OSA counties have a 10% less electoral support for the Democratic candidate than do
non-OSA counties (36% versus 46%, p<.001). OSA counties also have a mean of
approximately 14 different union locals between 1885 and 1914, whereas non-OSA
counties only have a mean of three union locals for this time period (p<.001). Thus
the initial evidence indicates that union presence is an important factor that
distinguishes OSA from non-OSA counties.
Table 7-1presents results of different probit estimations of equation 1. Overall,
the results confirm the hypothesis that union presence affects the adoption of
repressive employer associations, even controlling for important economic variables.
Models 1-3 consider just the effect of economic covariates on adoption of an OSA.
Models 4-6 consider union characteristics. (Recall that due to more limited data on
union characteristics, there is a smaller sample of counties. For models 4-6, 15
percent of the counties have an OSA). Models 1 and 2 show that population and
manufacturing output are positively correlated with a higher probability of OSA
adoption. The coefficients for both variables are positive and statistically significant
at conventional levels. However, as Model 3 shows, the number of firms is not
correlated with the probability of OSA adoption in a county. The non-effect could
have several interpretations. It is reasonable that higher number of firms in a county
would make it more difficult for a collective employer association to form. But it is
possible that such a relationship could be non-linear: a small number of firms may
decide they are capable of repressing workers without the need for a formal open-shop
association, and thus not form an OSA. Conversely, if there are a large number of
303
large firms, they may be better able to overcome collective action problems. The
number of firms does not capture the relative sizes of firms, which may better proxy
for difficulty in collective action as a predictor for formation of an employer
organization.195
Models 4-6 control for the variables of the threat posed by unions, changes in
this threat, and the Democratic support of the electorate. The coefficient on
Unionthreat for all three estimations is statistically significant and substantively
meaningful. Importantly, these results hold controlling for general industrial
productivity and number of firms. It is evident that overall union presence affects the
adoption of an OSA. Note that when the effect of union presence and union growth
are accounted for, the standard errors for the coefficients for manufacturing output and
number of firms increase dramatically. This is one of the few systematic tests using
sub-national variation to link the threat posed by organized labor to the response of
repressive employer coordination.196
Table 7-2 displays the substantive effect of the union threat variable. The table
shows the changes in the probability of a county adopting an OSA when the value of
Unionthreat variable changes (with 95% confidence intervals in parentheses, and
holding all other variables at their means). Overall, there is a steady increasing
positive relationship between the degree of union threat and the probability of the
adoption of repressive employer coordination. A county with no union presence has
195
Specifications that include a square term for logged number of firms per capita also yielded no
statistically significant coefficient for either the original term or square term. 196
All models in Table 7-1 were also estimated with the economic variables normalized by number of
workers in the county (as opposed to per capita); the coefficient on Unionthreat does not substantively
change and remains statistically significant. The inclusion of other economic controls—percent of
owned homes, amount of manufacturing value added—did not affect the results.
304
almost no chance of having an OSA. Moving to just one union during the time period
gives just a probability of .01. But a county having an increased union threat level at
eight union locals has a higher probability of OSA adoption of .17. A county with a
union threat level of 16 has a probability adoption of OSA adoption of .80. It should
be noted that despite the relative statistical importance of union presence over
economic variables, only relatively high values of unions (13) change the probability
of OSA adoption above .50. Still, there is a definite positive impact of union threat on
the probability of repressive employer coordination.
The results from models 5-6 show that the coefficient on the variable union
growth is negative. Counties that face more union growth in the five years preceding
WWI actually have a lower probability of having an OSA, though the trend is less
pronounced. The substantive impact of the coefficient is not as large as that of the
variable union threat, nor is the effect monotonic. Following the same procedure used
to generate the results in Table 7-2, the predicted probability of an OSA for a county
with no union growth is .12. An increase in the value of the union growth variable to
two (the mean of the sample) lowers the probability of OSA adoption to .06. An
increase of four union locals between 1910 and 1914 generates a probability of OSA
adoption that is statistically indistinguishable from zero. Thus the negative effect of
union growth on OSA adoption is limited to changes involving less than four union
locals, though this constitutes about 75% of the distribution.
This result suggests that a very high amount of union growth right before WWI
makes it more difficult for employers to establish OSAs. Thus, repressive employer
coordination might only be possible under conditions where unions pose a threat to
305
firms, but faster union growth can prevent firms from organizing in such a way. From
this data alone it is difficult to infer whether this is because firms try to coordinate
repressively and fail to do so, or whether they sign agreements with workers under
collaborative arrangements (such as consenting to collective bargaining), or both. The
negative effect of union growth on OSA adoption indicates that the arrival of specific
union locals, indicating perhaps the creation of ―union towns,‖ can have
disproportionate effects that undermine coordinated employer repression.197
But, the
overall results indicate that union presence going back to the early twentieth century is
correlated with firms‘ response through collective repressive strategies.
Model 6 controls for the threat posed by a left-wing electorate, as indicated by
Democratic presidential vote share in 1920. The coefficient for the variable is
statistically significant, but the substantive effect is quite small. Following the same
calculation of predicted probabilities as shown in Table 7-2 (holding all other
covariates at their means), a presidential vote share of 10% yields a probability of
OSA adoption of .11 (.037, .17). A higher presidential vote share of 50% leads to a
predicted probability of OSA adoption of .05 (.015, .091). A much higher presidential
vote share of 70% leads to a predicted probability of .03 (.0017, .070). While there is
a negative relationship, the effect is not large and the confidence intervals overlap for
much of the range of data.198
Overall, the results indicate that it is not the electoral
concern at the county level that affects firms‘ decisions to create an OSA, but rather
197
This finding is robust to alternative specifications of ―union growth‖ for the time period until 1914.
One interpretation of this negative effect is that there is variation in the degree of militancy and nature
of union demands among the 23 industries and crafts. 198
Specifications controlling for difference in presidential vote share between 1916 and 1920 yield
similar results. Specifications controlling for Socialist presidential vote share yield a statistically
significant but substantively small positive coefficient.
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specific concerns about union presence. One reason for this set of results is that the
Democratic Party, while perceived to be pro-labor, was far less extreme in its demands
than counterpart Socialist parties in other states. Firms were more responsive to direct
threats posed by union organization than Democratic politicians.199
Overall, the results demonstrate both the existence of repressive employer
coordination and confirm the hypothesis that union presence predicts repressive
employer strategies. The above results help isolate individual factors that explain why
repressive employer coordination was adopted in some counties and not in others.
Once the effect of union threat is accounted for, number of firms and manufacturing
output are not correlated with repressive coordination; only population is still
correlated with probability of OSA adoption. These results confirm the theory and
previous historical evidence that repressive firm strategies were primarily designed as
defensive organizations against union penetration of plants. The next section
considers whether these hypotheses can help us understand decisions to form
collective strategies at the national level.
Section 5.Qualitative Evidence: Why did the Open Shop movement fail to generate
―An American Federation of Employers?‖
In this section I turn to explaining why repressive coordination at the local
county level did not necessarily translate into repressive coordination at the national
level. In contrast with the German experience, influential peak employer
confederations were limited in ability to compel member associations, and in fact were
short lived. Why was a strategy of repressive coordination not sustained beyond this
199
See Martin (2007) for discussion of the relationship between the Republican Party and the NAM.
307
initial post-WWI Open Shop movement? Given the virulence of some of the anti-
union rhetoric used by both employer organizations, and the potential collective
benefits that a more coordinated national organization could have attained, it is
surprising that a federation, or more nationally coordinated set of movements, did not
emerge. The Open Shop seems like it should have naturally segued into an American
Federation of Employers, or some similar organization. But it did not. Why?
In this section I use qualitative evidence on the attempted formation of a
collective repressive strategy at the national level to show that the mechanisms posited
in the theory—that heterogeneity and resulting high variance in costs of repression
across different localities—large explain the choice not to form a more influential
peak association. I provide evidence that key industrial actors—initial employer
organizations—chose not to do so, but also against the preferences of other employer
organizations, for several strategic reasons. It was not due to a failure of collective
imagination. Existing employer institutions did not support plans for nationalization
of the Open Shop because of: 1) concern with radicalization of craft labor movements;
and 2) protection of their incumbent institutional authority. I argue that in particular,
the second reason is consistent with the mechanism of difficulties of enforcing
agreements. Specific records from employer organizations provide evidence of
preferences and strategies of the major actors in this time period.
After World War I there was much discussion among existing employer
organizations regarding the question of national-level collective action; these
associations were those that had participated in the aforementioned industrial
conference. Many national level organizations viewed their task as defending against
308
what they perceived to be encroaching union presence in plants, both in finished metal
goods as well as raw metals processing (Fine 1995). Such organizations included the
NMTA, NEA, and the NAM. The NAM, the most publicly visible organization at the
time, had demonstrated previous interest in labor issues but did not until after World
War I have an official committee that addressed them and drafted policy responses.
The NAM had little to do with earlier local-level pre-WWI anti-labor organizations.
But they directly confronted the choice about whether to nationalize this movement
after WWI, and discussed the possibility of forming inter-regional bodies to deal with
union in internal correspondence and meetings (Wakstein 1961).
As early as 1907, some individual executives in the NAM had advocated a
form of national federation of employers that would counter organized labor directly.
J.W. Van Cleave, the president of the NAM, addressed member firms of the NMTA,
and thought that the modal manufacturing firm should have a preference for repressive
coordination at the national level, as well as across sectors. In particular, he voiced
support for a national federation:
―To a large degree we have organization among employers already, but we do not
extend the principle far enough. We must supplement organization with federation.
The National Metal Trades Association, the founders‘ Association, the National
Association of Manufacturers, the National Typothetae and the other organizations of
great interests should be brought into constant and intelligent cooperation. All these
and other great national organizations of employers should come together in a spirit of
mutual fraternity and establish a central body in which each would be represented.
This central body, or council, could deal with the interests common to all
organizations. These interests are not only large in number, they are large in
magnitude. And in each particular they are rapidly expanding...One of the evils which
every organization of employers is frequently called upon to combat is silly or
pernicious legislation…‖ (Van Cleave 1907)
Van Cleave singled out his dissatisfaction with employers‘ existing individual state
309
level and somewhat ad hoc approach to organization, regarding labor legislation and
unionization:
―I have said that each organization of employers is often called upon to combat these
menaces [demands raised by unions] to its activity and prosperity. But each
organization acts separately. Each fights its own battles, in its own time, and in its own
way. Each makes its own experiments, and learns its own lessons from its own losses.
And the losses are frequent and humiliating. By an intelligent concentration of effort
these reverses to us would be avoided, and we would be spared the losses and
humiliations which beset us under our present lack of cooperation. We could avert
these losses in one or other of two ways. By coordination of effort in diffusing
education among the people we would have a chance to head off all foolish or vicious
propositions before they were introduced in our national or state legislature, or by a
prompt massing of forces, we could defeat them after they were introduced…Let us
have a federation of all the organizations of employers, in which each organization,
while preserving its independence as absolutely as at present, will come into
cooperation with all the other organizations in a great council, in which each will have
a choice and in which all will meet on terms of fraternity and equality‖ (Van Cleave
1907)
From Van Cleave‘s address, and other early NAM documentation from this
period, it is unclear whether he intended for a federation that would do more than
coordinate information flow and lobby. At the time of this address, the NAM had at
the time no explicit labor-oriented institutional apparatus that would have supported
such a massive integration of local-level employer organizations; it is unclear whether
the proposal there could have even been implemented. But the expressed initial
preference for such an organization raises the question of why it did not emerge in the
wake of local-level Open Shop movements after WWI.
In the immediate post-WWI period, several influential leaders of regional
employer organizations met to discuss a national federation; one leader was Andrew
Allen of the Associated Employers of Indiana (AEI), whose address was noted at the
outset of this paper. Allen was one of the most vocal proponents of further developing
310
a national federation that would coordinate local-level Open Shop movements. In
1919, the AEI undertook a research endeavor to assess local employer-organization
interest in such a federation, part of which involved collecting the survey data
analyzed in the first empirical section. Allen desired that the AEI be the leader behind
such a movement. The AEI had successfully challenged the efforts of the machinists‘
union in Indianapolis, and Allen wanted to take this victory nationally and establish a
comprehensive collective institution of employers.
Allen‘s own correspondence with the NAM and with the executive committee
of the AEI reveal a central tension among local employers‘ preferences. On the one
hand, some organizations did not support the idea of placing organizational decisions
in the hands of a national federation. A summary of Allen‘s committee report stated,
―In some quarters at first it was felt that a local association could do more effective
work by ‗going it alone,‘ but when it was explained that a national federation does not
presume to dominate the affairs of the local, but to offer such assistance as the local
could not possibly obtain otherwise, the local invariably has favored ‗going in.‘‘200
This concern reveals that local associations that already existed had concerns about
giving up autonomy of management of labor relations to national-level employer
organizations.
Internal correspondence between Allen and officials of other state and local-
level employer organizations reveals some interest from local employer organizations
in a national-level organization that could provide assistance, in the form of
information about union activity or strike support. The records of the November 11,
200
This comes from articles in the Iron Trades Review , (Public Sponsors Open Shop Associations
1920)
311
1920 meeting of the AEI executive committee include a memo from Allen to other
AEI executives. The letter describes Allen‘s account of his attempt to get employers
to sign on to his proposed ―American Plan‖ and his previous meetings with
representatives of the NAM. Allen argued that the AEI had been ―besieged on all
sides by local employers‘ associations in all sections of the country‖ to establish a
central national organization to assist businesses that would ―[bring] about the
exchange of information, counsel, advice and mutual assistance and guidance for the
national good in association endeavor with respect to right industrial relationships.‖
(Allen 1920). The minutes of this meeting also note Allen‘s belief that the execution
of the ―plan of mutual cooperation in behalf of the open shop on a national scale‖
would start in December of that year. The AEI itself would presumably have had a
large administrative role in such a national-level organization, although this is not
detailed in the letter.
The precise outline of the AEI plan that Allen had come to advocate, stemming
from internal AEI suggestions, as well as consultations with ―hundreds of
Associations throughout the country,‖ is unknown. But Allen details a number of
aspects of the proposed organization. The new organization would have centralized
existing state-level ―American Plan Associations‖ (i.e., state-level employer
organizations) into a national organization based in Washington. This national
organization would have required annual meetings from representatives of all state-
level employer organizations; had national-level employment of ―field agents‖ to
promote the Open-Shop organization (partially funded by state-level organizations);
clear hierarchy of state and city-level employer organizations and coordination among
312
them; establishment of an information exchange service; inauguration of a department
to deal with standardization of employment contracts and civic and industrial
coordination; and funding of the plan through taxation of existing employer
associations to support these measures (Allen 1920). Such a proposal would have
been institutionally quite different from the status quo, characterized by the patchwork
nature of the Open Shop movement and the tremendous local-level variation in
repressive employer organizations.
It is difficult to assess the counterfactual of how many of the above measures
would have been implemented, had Allen‘s movement to nationalize employer
coordination succeeded. The proposals discussed by the AEI were not completely
based off of other national organizations like the NMTA, which had more explicit
rules regarding support for lockouts and support for member firms during strikes. The
AEI meetings on this subject do not reference the existing NMTA or NEA institutional
structures and rules. So it is unknown how much of an overhaul to the status quo that
the AEI proposal would have been, in comparison to the then locally-driven Open
Shop movement. However, given the lack of centralized efforts that actually directed
the Open Shop movement, and absence of national-level institutional apparatus, it
seems the AEI proposal would have constituted a fairly radical departure and overhaul
from locally-driven status quo.
The Death of the Federation Movement
The AEI plan foundered because the necessary support required from existing
national organizations, particularly the NAM, did not exist. The actual death of the
AEI proposal occurred when the NAM refused to consider it in the NAM Open Shop
313
Committee (OSC), on November 16, 1920. Allen himself attended this meeting to
help influence the institutional goals of the OSC, and broached his proposal to the
OSC committee members (Allen 1920). But key NAM officials including James A.
Emery, the NAM legal counsel, were present. The NAM OSC did not consider Allen‘s
proposal formally after Emery expressed his opposition (Emery 1920). Emery held
particularly important sway in the organization. In his correspondence with AEI
member firms and other regional employer organizations, Allen expressed
disappointment at the NAM and NEA‘s shelving of the nationalization plan.
Why did the NAM and other affiliated national employer organizations stop
Allen‘s AEI plan to nationalize the OS movement? Two reasons were given. The first
reason was that nationalization of an employer movement would radicalize labor, and
just as critically, inflame public opinion against employers. Walter Drew, the
president of the pro-Open Shop NEA, wrote Allen on October 29, 1920: ―The
appearance of a national organized movement for the purpose of crushing labor
unions, as it would be interpreted, would be unfortunate…If the employers make the
move that you suggest, the public will say, ‗ it is only the same old fight between
capital and labor,…[Our] worst enemy at this time is the employer who attempts to
take advantage of the reaction against the unions in order to return to old methods of
exploitation and unfairness‖ (Allen 1920, 2). While Drew was one of the most vocal
proponents of the Open Shop philosophy, he also took pride that the movement‘s
goals had been attained at the local level without arousing public anger against
employers (Fine 1995). The NAM also shared Drew‘s concern, regarding federation,
that the ―appearance of a new national association would give organized labor the
314
opportunity it desired to start counter propaganda on the ground that capital was
making preparations to curtail the power of trade unions‖ (Allen 1920, 1). Drew‘s
concerns may have been cold comfort to counties that either could not form an OSA,
or could not get NEA assistance. They also illustrate an inherent tension in the
differing strategies of firms when dealing with workers—they had to pitch their battle
as partly ideological, no doubt upsetting some firms that found it advantageous to
collaborate with unions, but they also had to restrain from nationalizing the policies
that logically followed from the rhetoric. Existing employer organizations viewed
local-level strategies to be sufficient in dealing with union demands.
A second explanation for the NAM killing of the AEI plan was that AEI plan
would have posed a serious threat to the NAM‘s desire to be the institutional leader of
employer actions. The NAM had already in May 1920 established the OSC to concern
policy proposals regarding union threats, and AEI leadership on the matter would have
detracted from NAM‘s hegemonic position on the matter, which was needed to attract
and maintain membership, the financial lifeline of the organization (Steigerwalt 1952);
(Griffin, Wallace, and Rubin 1986). The NAM did not want to cede any control to the
AEI. As Emery himself stated: ―…what is needed is not more organizations, but more
co-operation; that new machinery is not necessary for greater efficiency and that
conservatism is better than an unnecessary display of aggression‖ (Emery 1920).201
Emery expressed to NAM leadership the importance of turning the NAM into the
primary institutional advocate for labor relations issues of member employers, as well
201
These come from the Minutes of NAM OSC Meeting, November 16, 1920. The original source of
this documentation is the OSC Meeting minutes from the National Association of Manufacturers
Accession 1411. Series VII Box 127. Hagley Library Museum and Archive. Wilmington, DE.
315
as for potential member firms.202
In fact Allen, the initial entrepreneur of
nationalization, expressed a suspicion in his letter, after his plan was shelved, that the
NAM voiced disapproval because ―… prominent eastern national associations
interested in the furtherance of the open shop, [voiced] disapproval of the proposed
plan to coordinate local associations‘ activities because (a), they either misunderstood
the motives and plans or (b) were fearful that the Associated Employers [of
Indianapolis] would be successful in doing the very work these national associations
should have undertaken and accomplished long ago‖ (Allen 1920. In a meeting of the
NAM‘s OSC in November 1920, Walter Drew of the NEA suggested that Allen from
the AEI ―…should be given to understand that the great national associations would
not go along with him in the plan proposed.‖203
What exactly did the NAM‘s Open-Shop Committee do, if its committee chairs
and parent institution did not want to take the federation approach and really create a
national institution with repressive coordination? Their efforts in centralization of
information and lobbying were still considerable, but they did not constitute the
collective strategy that was common in other employer associations in European
states. The committee was originally proposed by Counsel James Emery to President
Stephen Mason on February 12, 1920. In Emery‘s letter, his principal concern was
unions‘ attempts to ―destroy‖ independence of the judiciary, and that an OSC should
promote the ideology of anti-unionism. The OSC‘s initial responsibilities included
202
This sentiment came from a letter from James Emery to Stephen Mason, February 12, 1920.
National Association of Manufacturers Records. Accession 1411. Series VII Box 127. Hagley Library
Museum and Archive. Wilmington, DE. 203
NAM OSC meeting notes, November 16, 1920. National Association of Manufacturers Records.
Accession 1411. Series VII Box 127. Hagley Library Museum and Archive. Wilmington, DE.
316
compilation of information, presenting it to member firms, contacting and persuading
the media, and becoming the principal medium of ―propaganda.‖204
The NAM
succeeded in this information clearinghouse role.
But Emery was particularly concerned with limiting NAM intervention in
regional employer movements around the country. The OSC codified what had
already been a local movement. The newly created OSC did not obligate local
employer associations at all to the dictates of the NAM board. As reported in the ITR,
―…local associations are not affiliated with one another in an organized movement,
nor are they under specific obligations to one another, although they are promised the
active support of a national association.‖205
The OSC committee resolved only to
have informal cooperation between the NAM and local bodies.206
There were explicit
provisions in OSC meetings for the NAM not to interfere in local employer
associations or open-shop movements, and to leave local organizations to engage in
any militant or anti-labor activities.207
In fact an NAM administrator, J. Constantine
argued that regarding Open Shop policy, the NAM in ―cannot actively enter the field
of specific local labor troubles.‖208
The most succinct expression of this sentiment
came from Noel Sargent, head of the OSC during this period:
―The Committee…opposed recommendation by Mr. Nelson of Tacoma that the
National Association of Manufacturers should attempt to coordinate the work of local
bureaus. Such coordination can best be handled by trade bodies, such as the National
204
Letter from James Emery to Stephen Mason, cited in Wakstein, ―The Origins of the Open-Shop
Movement, 1919-1920,‖ 473. 205
(Wages Working to Normal Basis 1921), 7-10, 8. 206
NAM OSC Meeting Notes, October 10, 1922. National Association of Manufacturers Records.
Accession 1411. Series VII Box 127. Hagley Library Museum and Archive. Wilmington, DE. 207
NAM OSC Meeting Notes, December 14, 1923. National Association of Manufacturers Records.
Accession 1411. Series VII Box 127. Hagley Library Museum and Archive. Wilmington, DE. 208
NAM OSC Meeting Notes, February 6, 1925. National Association of Manufacturers Records.
Accession 1411. Series VII Box 127. Hagley Library Museum and Archive. Wilmington, DE.
317
Metal Trades Association. Any such coordination on a national scale by a national
organization such as the N.A.M. would moreover tend to substantiate union claims of
central direction of the open shop movement. The Committee expressed opposition to
any such central direction or control, believing that the Open Shop Department should
remain as an agency of research and advice, with the open shop movement continuing
its spontaneous character.‖209
This qualitative internal evidence supports that conclusion that non-federation
of repressive coordination was a choice on the part of employers, particularly those in
already incumbent positions, and that institutions like the NAM wanted to keep the
status quo.210
In these particular discussions from the OSC there is little mention of
partisanship of the government or discussion of whether certain kinds of governments
would better support their decisions on this matter, although there had been
institutional connections between the NAM and the Republican Party. It may be the
case that they felt this de-centralized form of institutionalization would be
invulnerable to future partisan intervention.
This narrative of the non-development of a national-level peak federation in
the inter-war period demonstrates some of the mechanisms posited in Chapter 3. In
particular, it shows that incumbent employer institutions found it too costly to try and
form further collective associations. This evidence can be interpreted with a logic that
is consistent with the idea that different costs of repression across different localities
made a peak-level confederation that set a uniform policy too difficult to adopt.
Further evidence that details this particular mechanism is warranted, though.
209
Noel Sargent, OSC Meeting, February 6, 1925, pg. 4. Cited in Wakstein, ―The Origins of the Open-
Shop Movement, 1919-1920.‖ 210
This evidence and claim here are not inconsistent with Swenson‘s observation that a national multi-
employer lockout in the United States would have been difficult due to the size of the state. The
evidence suggests that even if such a lockout were possible, existing nationally based employer
organizations thought local-level coordination was sufficient. See Swenson (2002).
318
Section 6: Conclusions
This chapter presented a micro-level test of the theory explicated in chapter 2:
the redistributive threat from workers and industrial heterogeneity can account for the
emergence of specific repressive kinds of firm strategies. The micro-level response of
adoption of open-shop associations in response unionization confirms the first
prediction of the theory. This supports the idea that low to moderate threats from
workers—political and economic—give firms incentives to be repressive in response.
Part of the nature of this relatively lower threat is due to the non-revolutionary and
relatively moderate nature of the Democratic Party, relative to its European
counterparts. It is of particular importance that these variables predict a unique
repressive and anti-labor strain of firm activity. However, as predicted, by the theory,
low to moderate threats from workers meant firms could still repress in response. Part
of the nature of this relatively lower threat is due to the non-revolutionary and
relatively moderate nature of the Democratic Party, relative to its European
counterparts.
The fact that a nascent, anti-labor coordinated movement only became possible
after the war-time imposition of wage compression and encompassing agreements, and
became difficult to enforce across localities, is evidence of the importance of variation
in repression costs in explaining collective action. I suggest that from a broader
perspective, this perverse strain of coordination played a large role in making the
United States the liberal-market economy that it is today. The advent of the Great
Depression and political re-alignment it induced brought a burst of pro-labor
legislation in the 1930s, resulting in a reorientation away from collective repression as
319
a strategy. The National Recovery Act (NRA) allowed for legalized cartelization and
allowed for collective bargaining (Hawley 1995). In the next chapter, I move beyond
the United States and test the theory with evidence from a much wider sample of
cases.
320
Figure 7-1:
321
Table 7-1: Determinants of County-Level Repressive Employer Coordination
Model 1 Model 2 Model 3
Logged
Population
1.26***
(.082)
1.08***
(.086)
1.09***
(.088)
Logged per
capita output
.30***
(.069)
.27***
(.076)
Logged per
capita # firms
.11
(.104)
Union threat
Union growth
Democratic
Pres. vote
share
Constant -14.66***
(.876)
-14.44***
(.771)
-13.67***
(1.007)
Observations 3048 2857 2857
Adj. R-
squared .47 .51 .51
Robust standard errors in parentheses, clustered by county. *** p<0.001, ** p<0.01, * p<0.05
322
Table 7-1: Determinants of County-Level Repressive Employer Coordination
Model 4 Model 5 Model 6
Logged
Population
1.15***
(.261)
1.09***
(.256)
1.20***
(.282)
Logged per
capita output
-.03
(.141)
.01
(.153)
.01
(.148)
Logged per
capita # firms
.55*
(.270)
.60*
(.280)
.32
(.334)
Union threat .13***
(.030)
.21***
(.047)
.22***
(.049)
Union growth -.17*
(.084)
-.20*
(.085)
Democratic
Pres. vote
share
-.01*
(.005)
Constant -10.60***
(2.944)
-9.99***
(2.912)
-12.26***
(3.703)
Observations 459 456 456
Adj. R-
squared 0.57 .57 .58
Robust standard errors in parentheses, clustered by county. *** p<0.001, ** p<0.01, * p<0.05
323
Table 7-2: Changes in Probability of OSA Given Levels of Union Threat
Union
threat
level
Predicted
Probability
of OSA adoption
1 .01
(.005, .018)
3 .02
(.003, .043)
5 0.05
(.012, .093)
7 .12
(.057, .19)
8 .17
(.084, .26)
9 .24
(.11, .36)
10 .31
(.15, .47)
11 .39
(.18, .60)
12 .48
(.23, .72)
13 .56
(.29, .84)
15 .73
(.44, 1)
16 .80
(.52, 1)
18 .90
(.69, 1)
20 .96
(.81, 1)
Predicted probabilities based on holding all covariates, except for Unionthreat variable, at means.
95% confidence intervals in parentheses. n = 456.
324
Chapter 8: Cross-National Evidence
The previous chapters demonstrate the existence of the repressive collective
strategies, test the mechanisms of the theory by exploiting sub-national variation at the
local level, and use extensive qualitative evidence regarding the decisions of firms and
employer associations. In particular, concerns about responding to organized labor
and labor parties mattered for decisions of pre-existing employer organizations to
engage in repression.
In this chapter I demonstrate the portability of the theory and the importance of
the typology of different kinds of firm strategies. I show that the broad historical
experiences of the development and change in functions of employer organizations
across countries are consistent with changes in the posited variables of the threat from
workers and exogenous changes in industrial heterogeneity can be linked to the
hypothesized variables. I show that the mechanisms of the costs and variance in costs
of repression affected the decisions of firms to form repressive employer associations.
I present comparative historical case evidence from Germany, the United States,
Sweden, Denmark, Britain, France, Australia, and Japan. The evidence demonstrates
the validity and importance of the new conception of firm strategies in Chapter 2, and
shows how the proposed theory can better explain the cross-national and temporal
variation. Section 1 summarizes the approach and general expectations from cross-
national trends. Section 2 discusses each of the cases. Section 3 concludes.
Section 1: Summary of Cross-national Evidence and Approach
The case evidence confirms the main predictions of the theory. The stylized
facts from the case evidence are consistent with the theory: first, the modal initial
325
employer organizations were repressive. They arose as an immediate response to
workers‘ attempts to unionize and sought to resist worker demands. The cases of
collective collaboration with workers only occurred in a specific set of industries
which were not always large or politically influential. Firms generally initially
adopted collective repressive strategies, and only switched to collaborative strategies
when the threat from workers increased dramatically. Early employer organizations,
whether locally or nationally, formed to push back against workers. Firms initially
organize when they can as employer organizations at the sector level: they organize to
work against unions that are generally demanding higher wages, control over working
training and wage schedules, and other infringements against firm ―managerial
authority.‖ When possible, firms engaged in collective repressive strategies against
initial unions to maintain managerial authority and prevent union dictation of wages
and working conditions. But, if the threat from left-wing parties rose and costs of
repression of workers also increased, such firms had incentives to switch to
collaborative strategies.
Second, the evidence also shows that national level collective strategies are
difficult to maintain because they involve bargaining between sectors with divergent
interests, in particular sectors with higher variance in the costs of repression. When
industrial heterogeneity increases, the variance in the costs of repression within an
economy increase, and sector members and firms have incentives to defect. This is
evidenced in the devolution from inter-sector to single-sector level strategies, or as
firms defect from sectors. An observable implication of this is the lack of success in
some countries of national employer organizations in engaging in long-term successful
326
lockouts, or in failures of employer organizations to retain membership. Where
national multi-industry lockouts and organizational use of strikebreakers as a
collective repressive strategy were not possible, such as in the United States, other
repressive strategies were used, including state intervention.
Third, we observe that changes in strategies occur because firms do not want to
the state to bear the entire costs of repression or enforcement. This accounts for the
pre-emptive nature of some cross-class agreements, most prominently in Germany,
Sweden, and Denmark. Finally, many of the major changes in firm strategies
occurred within country time periods where the electoral system did not change. This
casts doubt on the size of the causal impact of electoral systems on firm strategies.
Throughout discussion of the cross-national evidence, we observe some
common initial phenomena that should generalize to a wider set of states. Employer
organizations, if they form, form at the sector level against unions that are generally
demanding higher wages, control over working training and wage schedules, and other
infringements against firm ―managerial authority.‖ In some cases, like the United
States, these initial employer organizations were able to inflict great damage against
workers‘ movements, by allying with major firms, other employer organizations, or
with assistance from the state. American individual and collective repressive
strategies were successful, and pitched battles today over worker legislation are a
consequence of this initially successful strategy that put unions on the long-term
defensive. In other cases, like Germany, the rapid rise in support for organized labor,
the concerns about repressing workers towards the end of WWI, and the initial
electoral threat posed by the Social Democratic parties after WWI created incentives
327
for firms to switch to collaborative strategies. In other cases, like the Scandinavian
states, firms pursued initially collectively repressive strategies, but found it less costly
to engage in collaboration, with one of the goals being wage restraint. The important
outcome of other countries, including Britain and France, is the failure of collective
strategies—repressive or collaborative—to stay collective.
The broader conception of firm strategies described in chapter 2 means it is
difficult to test cross-national correlation relationships between the hypothesized
variables and changes in firm strategies, in a multivariate regression framework.
Ideally, one would estimate multinomial probit models for a complete dataset for the
period of 1880 to the present, with each kind of firm strategy as a possible outcome.
One of the difficulties with the approach, as discussed in Chapter 2, is that there is
little annual fluctuation in the independent and dependent variables; rather, there are
shifts in the qualitative kinds of firm strategies adopted across time periods. With the
universe of observations for the set of OECD states, there are too few observations and
too little change year to year to estimate such a model without large standard errors for
each coefficient. Moreover, as discussed below, a theory should be able to explain the
substantively large shifts in industrial regimes that occurred. Current cross-national
regressions that link employer coordination to electoral systems (or vice versa) depend
on a small number of observations, and as discussed extensively in Chapter 2, have
too narrow a theoretical conception of employer coordination. Moreover, such
estimations can be sensitive to specifications (Martin and Swank 2008; Cusack,
Iversen, and Soskice 2007).
328
As an alternative approach I show how the major changes in firm strategies in
a series of countries can be traced to changes in the variables hypothesized in the
theory chapter: threat from the left-wing party and exogenous changes in industrial
heterogeneity. The case study approach of course makes ruling out alternative
explanations more difficult, but I show that the changes in firm strategies within
countries are consistent with my theory. Where possible in the interpretation of the
historical evidence I demonstrate how existing explanations are insufficient in
explaining changes in firm strategies. In particular I show changes in firm strategies
across or within states are uncorrelated with changes in the electoral system (Martin
and Swank 2008), and I also show how structural conditions as posited by Swenson,
while important, are insufficient in accounting for the main outcomes (Swenson 2002;
Swenson 1991).211
Swenson discounts the role that left-wing parties play in changing
the incentives of firms to switch strategies on both the collective-individual and
repressive-collaborative dimensions. The state played a crucial role in affecting costs
of repressing workers, and also incentives to act collectively. As Table 8-1 shows,
from this cursory view of several cases, the existence of collective repressive
strategies and their conversion to collaborative strategies has little to do with the
electoral system.
Section 2: Country evidence
Sweden
211
The account described in Swenson (1991, 2002) is persuasive. Swenson hypothesizes that structural
conditions allowed for cross-class alliances in Sweden, in particular within the export-oriented
manufacturing sector. This account challenges previous theories that posit that labor power explains the
lack of industrial conflict and that firms as a unified class grudgingly (or were unwillingly compelled)
to accept centralization of industrial relations. For discussion of the Danish and Swedish cases, I rely
on wage dispersion data and Swenson‘s own evidence to re-interpret what transpired regarding changes
in firm strategies.
329
The proposed theory can explain the timing and qualitative changes in firm
strategies in Sweden. In Sweden, firms organized at the sector and eventually national
level to counter unions, engaging in collective repressive strategies. Once costs of
repression increased and the state threatened to adopt a more interventionist role
regarding costs of enforcement, pre-existing employer organizations had an incentive
to switch to collaborative strategies. Throughout this process, low industrial
heterogeneity allowed for high collective action within Swedish manufacturing
sectors. As Swenson shows, wage restraint was as major goal of the early employer
organizations. The challenge that faced the early sector-level Swedish employer
associations was to force moderate counterpart unions to effectively constrain and
sanction more extremist unions. This account re-interprets the evidence presented in
Swenson.212
Figure 8-1 shows that the initial firm strategies in Sweden were repressive in
the early twentieth century. The first vertical line indicates the formation of initially
collective repressive employer organizations. Once costs of repression rose, however,
firms shifted to more collaborative strategies in the 1920s. This culminated in the
1938 Basic Agreement in Saltsjöbaden. The second (dashed) line indicates the
transition to collaborative strategies. Recent research on Sweden focuses on the
presumed collaborative nature of the famous Agreement between the LO and SAF
(which had begun negotiations for this agreement starting in 1936). Key provisions of
the agreement called for centralized mediation of disputes, abolishment of targeting
212
Swenson 2002; 1991
330
―third parties,‖ and preventing industrial conflict. This agreement is often held up as
the template of cross-class alliances.
But, initial collective firm strategies were considerably more complicated, and
had a repressive nature early on. Early important organizations were in the building,
timber, and manufacturing industries. The manufacturing organizations formed to
wrest and secure managerial authority from unions. The first solid line indicates this
adoption of collective repressive strategies. In 1902, the Swedish Engineering
Employers Association (VF) locked out the Swedish Metal workers‘ Union, to prevent
the unions from asserting control over the labor supply and wages. The lockout
punished nearly 14,000 workers. The result was an agreement between both actors in
1905, which resulted in some guarantees for workers, but was a major victory for the
VF because it established managerial control. According to the agreement, unions
allowed firms to hire workers with skill levels and pay them as they saw fit; as in the
United States, unions conceded to a firms‘ practicing an ―open shop.‖ (Swenson 2002,
79). (In fact, as Swenson points out, unions here conceded on issues of craft control
that their American counterparts did not).
The same repressive strategy was threatened on a much broader scale just
shortly after this victory for the VF. In 1905, the national-level employer
organization, the SAF, threatened to engage in its first major multi-industry lockout of
the LO with similar goals, which would have threatened potentially all manufacturing
activity in Sweden. This threat (it is not clear how credible it was) did induce the LO
to agree to the December ―Compromise‖ of 1906. This agreement again not only
recognized managerial authority, but it also explicitly permitted the use of such
331
strategies (the multi-industry lockouts) to continue. In fact, the LO agreed to let SAF
firms use sympathy lockouts (targeting workers who had not participated in a strike).
And again in 1908, the sawmill industry would achieve a similar outcome with its
workers. One of the goals of these strategies were, as discussed in the description of
repressive strategies in the above section, was to force LO to spend much of its money
supporting workers, weakening its capacity early on. But another key goal was of
course securing managerial freedom.
The problem was that such repressive strategies could not be indefinitely
maintained for several reasons. The first was that employers were concerned about
increasing radicalism and local strikes that its lockouts were inducing. Firms realized
after the initial successes of the actual lockouts and threats of lockouts that syndicalist
or more recalcitrant unions could not be adequately ―restrained.‖ Swenson quotes the
SAF leader von Sydow, ―it is hard to declare a lockout when there is nobody to
declare a lockout against‖ (Swenson 2002, 84). Thus eliminating these kinds of
unions would have involved a higher cost of repression.
Second, labor scarcity in key manufacturing sectors was inducing up-bidding
of wages. The SAF realized that the LO could assist in dealing with both problems.
The latter reason is especially highlighted as the most convincing for the cross-class
coalition in Sweden: the Swedish manufacturers credibly threatened the LO with
lockouts. This induced the LO to centralize wage institutions with the explicit goal of
keeping militant building and construction unions in line and restraining their wages.
The result was wage restraint nationally and a reduction in inter-sector wage
differentials. Manufacturing unions in the LO (who had long been intolerant of
332
militancy in the protected building trades), helped achieve that goal because of a
preference for wage restraint and lower unemployment. In fact, Swenson interprets
the LO as almost ―winking‖ when it communicates the SAF‘s threats of lockouts to
building unions (knowing that such threats would induce cooperation). This pattern
indicates that repressive strategies can be used to achieve the firm goal of wage
restraint—but in the Swedish (and Danish) cases, the goal was to get a union authority
to be able to effectively sanction its own potential defectors. This is evidence of the
broader theoretical mechanism posited above about the importance of a degree of
heterogeneity low enough such that moderate employer associations and their union
counterparts are capable of punishing and deterring would-be defectors from
collective strategies.
A third reason why a switch from collective repressive strategies was preferred
was that the firms had an incentive to prevent the state from taking on costs of
enforcement, and intervening in industrial affairs. Because pre-existing collective
employer organizations were already successful, there was no need for the state to take
over costs, either of repressive or collective strategies. An important aspect of the
1938 Saltsjöbaden pact is that the agreement between the SAF and LO was done
preemptively to reduce state intervention into industrial affairs. That is, the SAF was
willing to undertake some of the costs of enforcement of its collective strategies if it
meant that the state would not be able to interfere. The SAF initiated such discussions
with the LO to in anticipation of (and to prevent) the Riksdag from considering further
anti-lockout legislation, which had been the SAF‘s main weapon for 30 years. The
LO, as discussed above, thought such weaponry was useful in helping to discipline
333
militant unions too.213
The key piece of historical evidence needed to prove this
argument is some documentation from firms linking the 1932 electoral victory of the
Social Democrats to the belief that anti-lockout legislation would be pursued, to the
SAF negotiations regarding the pre-emptive nature of this collaborative agreement.
However, throughout the 1930s, the Swedish Social Democratic Party occasionally
intervened, generally helping to enforce firm strategies of lowering wages.
As an important caveat to the previous discussion, the case of Sweden
illustrates that an employer organization that engages in a repressive lockout that can
both increase managerial authority and reducing local level union penetration and
wages, but also increase union centralization and union power to sanction militant
labor branches from conducting strikes. Note that a repressive strategy can have both
goals. The strategy to achieve these results can be repressive, including lockouts on
member and non-member ―innocent‖ workers. The repressive lockout, as Swenson
details, can have as one of its goals centralization to promote wage restraint. But,
note that this strategy is only chosen once it becomes too costly to repress all workers.
Given that the employer association cannot ―on its own‖ successfully defeat unionism
at the local level, the next best strategy is to have labor organizations adequately
sanction and control local affiliates.
Britain
The development of employer organizations in Britain since the late nineteenth
century confirms the observable implications of the theory. Britain is characterized as
a modern liberal market economy, with a general lack of coordination among firms.
213
Swenson, 2002, 114
334
This was not for want of trying, however—the story of British employer organizations
is one of general failure to maintain collective action and to successfully execute
collective strategies. The main story of the development of employer organizations in
response to union growth in Britain is that the low left threat gave incentives for
employer organizations to pursue repressive strategies. Collective strategies, due to
extreme differences across sectors, meant that such collective action was difficult to
maintain—employer organizations faced continual defection from member firms and
sector organizations.
Early employer organizations formed at the regional and sector level in
response to increased unionization and demands from craft-based manufacturing
workers. In the 1870s there was a series of sector-level employer organizations that
emerged in response to major strikes. They were designed to counter such demands.
Thus as predicted by the theory, due to a low threat from the left and higher wage
dispersion initial firm strategies were individually repressive. Early British employers
formed industrial associations after 1850 to counter unionism. They were explicitly
anti-labor, and were formed to dictate labor conditions to organized labor; they were
not formed to ―negotiate‖ with labor but rather to remove their influence from plants
(Yarmie 1980). The most important early regional anti-labor association was the Iron
Trades Employers‘ Association (ITEA), which formed in 1872. The ITEA resisted
union demands by using strikebreakers and replacement labor, using ―black lists‖ and
supplying data to firms on the union history of previous workers. But the ITEA was
not a national level organization. There were several initial attempts at inter-sector
collaboration, but they foundered because of conflicts between sectors over
335
sanctioning of member firms (in particular, conflicts between shipbuilding and
manufacturing sectors). For example, in 1889, the Federation of Shipbuilding and
Engineering Employers tried to engage in initial lockouts, but collapsed because of
differences in what each sector (shipbuilders and manufactured goods) wanted.
The clearest evidence from Britain that supports the theoretical predictions
comes from the development of the most important and influential employer from the
early twentieth century, the Engineering Employers‘ Federation (EEF). Figure 8-2
displays this strategy with the solid vertical line in 1896. The EEF formed in 1896 in
response to a labor dispute in Clyde-Belfast, and was initially designed to battle with
its main counterpart union, the Amalgamated Society of Engineers (ASE), over wages
and control over the shop floor. The EEF engaged in two national lockouts in 1897-98
and 1922 against the ASE to force recognition of EEF member rights in regulating
wages and apprenticeships (Zeitlin 1991, 1983). The ASE launched strikes and
pressed for wage advances, and hour reductions, including a campaign for a maximum
eight hour day—hallmarks of the aggressive craft labor movement. The EEF formed
as coordinated ―resistance‖ to union demands, and the story of the EEF is one of
central apparatus having limited success in getting local associations to comply with
its rules, and preventing them from engaging unions independently. The particular
issue was battle over control over worker assignment and compensation, or simply
―who would own the machines‖ (Zeitlin 1991, 55).
At the end of the first EEF directed lockout in January 1898, which involved
around 45,000 workers, the ASE membership agreed to the basic right of managerial
control over wages, and firms were free to do a number of things antithetical to
336
unions, such as the freedom to hire non-unionist workers and pay them equally as
union workers (just as the VF in Sweden had won in 1905). But the agreement also
established a framework for basic collective bargaining; EEF members recognized this
framework as legitimate. The upshot of this agreement was that the ASE could not
allow any strike from a local union to proceed until it had received national approval.
Like the SAF, the EEF threatened to ―discipline‖ the ASE by threatening national
lockouts in response to failures of the ASE to restrain its members. EEF members
regarded the lockouts in 1898, and again in 1922, as successful. But, the lockouts did
not get rid of worker militancy—it was not just that the ASE was incapable of
sanctioning its own members; it was the ASE felt that after the passage of years and
especially after WWI, it could gain the upper hand in re-opening conflict about control
over worker autonomy.
But unlike the SAF, the EEF‘s collective capabilities in forcing discipline were
far more limited (Wigham 1973). The problem was that after 1922 the EEF had
difficult in maintaining its collective strategy. In fact, even though membership in the
EEF increased after the 1898 lockout, it had difficulty getting member associations
and firms to comply with organizational rules. There was concern about moves
toward centralization. EEF head Alan Smith suggested that it was unlikely that the
EEF‘s membership would support a national lock-out over district-level wage
disputes. An EEF subcommittee reported that the obstacle to a successful national
lockout was ―want of common interest on the part of firms…textile machinery might
be very busy when marine depressed. Similarly with other branches of trade a serious
difficulty would accordingly arise in the way of getting the Federation to act as a body
337
on a wage question‖ (Zeitlin 1991, 62). The EEF neither was unable to successfully
negotiate an enforceable agreement with the ASE after 1922, nor was is it able to
sanction its own members, due to heterogeneity of interests between its own member
sectors. In fact, EEF members expressed concern about financing strikes that they did
not want to participate in; membership fell from 810 to 744 firms in the years before
WWI (Zeitlin 1991). Ultimately, the EEF could not consolidate its position after
WWI, indicated by the change in firm strategies in the dashed line of Figure 8-2.
Even after the success of the 1922 lockout, the EEF had no desire to merge
with other employer organizations and give the executive powers of the newly formed
National Confederation of Employer Organization (NCEO) more authority over firms
(Zeitlin 1983). They also rejected other legislative measures that would have
impinged upon managerial authority. At this point in time, the Labor government had
not interfered much in industrial affairs, and the unions and labor party—in contrast to
those in Sweden in the run-up to WWI—did not pose as high a revolutionary or
extreme distributive threat. This suggest that the EEF had little incentive to
accommodate and opt for more centralized collaborative strategies with the main
unions (Wigham 1973).
The EEF is an example of a collective repressive strategy in response to a low
threat from workers—a redistributive threat that engages firms to respond, but not
enough such that a collaborative strategy becomes preferable to repression. We
observe through the EEF a collective repressive strategy that had occasional success,
but was unable to sustain long-term collective action. The ultimate evolution with the
338
advent of labor was a change from initially collective repressive strategies to
individual repressive, and finally to individual collaborative strategies.
Denmark
Figure 8-3 shows the same key variables and change in firm strategies for
Denmark. The development of the Danish Employers‘ Confederation
(Arbejdsgiverforeningen, or DAF) and its relationship with the Danish Labor
Confederation (DSF) is consistent with the predictions of the theory. The Danish case
is also characterized by the existence of initial repressive firm strategies and the
incentives for firms to switch and stay collaborative. The first vertical (solid) line
indicates the foundation of the first peak level organization of employers, the DAF.
The second vertical (dashed) line indicates the September Agreement which
recognized workers‘ rights to strike, but also managerial autonomy. The third vertical
(dashed) line indicates the 1933 Kanslergade agreement, which substantively
expanded labor rights. The Danish evidence supports the idea that firm strategies
were initially repressive, but organizations switched strategies that resulted in
recognition of managerial rights and centralization of union authority. As in Sweden,
firms engaged in repressive strategies—lockouts—with one repressive goal: to lower
wages of militant workers in protected sectors (generally in construction or building).
But to achieve that, they had to give central unions the authority to sanction their own.
As in Sweden, this was because it was too costly to engage in total repression. The
main difference is that this transition occurred much faster in Denmark.
Employers in the building and metal trades formed the Danish Employers‘
Confederation in 1896. This initial organization had repressive tactics and goals: they
339
were formed in response to organized labor demands, and engaged in lockouts with
the goal of reducing union penetration in plants. Its predecessor sector-level
organizations (in building and manufacturing) had successfully won concessions on
managerial authority and resisted local strikes at the local level, but still faced militant
unions. As an ultimatum measure, in 1899 the DAF issued a multi-industry lockout
that initially targeted carpentry workers who had gone on strike, and then workers in
other industries. Importantly, these other potential targets were ―innocent‖ industries
that had not yet experienced higher wage demands from workers, such as engineering
industries. The result of this conflict was the 1899 September Agreement with the
DSF (preceding Saltsböjaden by nearly 40 years) (Galenson 1952).
This agreement is hailed as a cross-class agreement, but as with others, unions
conceded the concept of ―managerial authority.‖ The agreement attained the DAF‘s
main goals with the lockouts: unions agreed to sanction their own defectors
(particularly workers in unskilled unions). After the September compromise of 1899,
there were concerted efforts by the DAF to force centralization of DSF behavior to
make strikes more difficult to authorize. Ultimately, these repressive strategies
became collaborative—unlike Sweden or the United States, this repressive period was
far shorter. But, the DAF did resort to lockouts still throughout the 1920s and 1930s,
pushing for eventual higher centralization of the DSF in the 1930s (Swenson 1991;
Swenson 1991; Schiller). As with the Saltsböjaden and Stinnes-Legien Agreements,
the 1899 agreement was done with minimal state monitoring or interference, and done
so preemptively.
France
340
In France, as in Britain, we observe initial collective repressive firm strategies
that were not sustainable. These initial employer organizations ultimately reverted to
individual collaborative firm strategies as enforceability of collective strategies
decreased, and the threat from the left-wing parties increased. Figure 8-4 displays this
trend. The secular decline in wage dispersion in the first half of the century would
seem to predict increasing collective action capability among French employers, but in
fact they had difficulty engaging in any kind of collective strategy despite multiple
attempts. The vertical solid line indicates the advent of collective repressive
strategies. The dashed solid line indicates that such strategies ultimately became
individual collaborative after World War I.
After a generation of repression of workers, in 1884 the Waldeck-Rousseau
Act legalized trade unions, and there was an increase in city-level subsidized trade
unions. Employer resistance to improving working conditions helped lead to a major
mining strike in 1890. In 1892, the French government passed laws allowing for state
intervention in labor disputes. The early twentieth century saw increasing
unionization and support for the Socialist party. These trends posed a direct threat and
spurred initial spikes in employer organizational activity at the local level.
The period 1889-1914 saw a parallel development of sector-level employer
associations that had initially repressive strategies. Sector-level employer associations
had formed early in the 1800s. The Sainte Chapelle group represented builders; the
cotton industry had an organization in 1835. Prominent associations included
manufacturing and mining associations (Confederation des groups commerciaux et
industriels and Union des industries metallurgiques et minieres, both formed in 1901).
341
These associations had their largest membership concentrations in large cities and
areas with high socialist political activity and unionization. The resistance to trade
unionism and government intervention provided the most compelling reasons to unite.
Their initial goals were to defeat unions in strikes; as with other employer
organizations, their instruments included using strikebreakers and organizing lockouts.
But, these organizations were not as well coordinated as their German and
Scandinavian counterparts: by 1910, over 80 percent of such associations had almost
no central funds to support lockouts and member activities. Only 12 percent provided
strike assistance. They were generally too weak to actually affect industrial dispute
outcomes, and there was nothing approaching a multi-industry lockout in the cards for
these firms. Local level employer associations in fact had little impact on the
resolution—positive or negative—on industrial disputes in the early twentieth century
(Friedman 1991).
Local level employer associations were directly set up against socialist
organizations and aimed to reduce SFIO vote share. But such associations, while
capable of acting at the local level, never successfully engaged in national-level
lockouts to compel and undermine French labor unions. As Friedman concludes,
when French firms did decide to organize in response to radical unions, they did so
―too late,‖ and such efforts proved insufficient. This partially accounts for the
contemporary fractured and ―intermediate‖ nature of French industrial-relations
institutions: fairly uncoordinated employer organizations from before WWI. French
employer organizations were even weaker than their British counterparts, who had
similar difficulties in defeating unionism. The French case demonstrates that even in
342
the face of rising costs of repression and a credible threat from left-wing parties,
employers may not be able to collectively act.
Australia
Australian firms never faced a high threat of expropriation from the labor
party, or high costs of repression due to a historically weak labor movement that was
dependent on the state for support. This absence facilitated initial collective repressive
strategies. However, high heterogeneity and differences among sectors made
sustaining peak-level organizations difficult. As Figure 8-5 shows, there was much
volatility in wage dispersion in the early twentieth century. This helped undermine
collective repressive strategies. The first solid vertical line indicates the initial
collective repressive strategies, but they did not exist long. Even though there was
increasing support from the state for organized labor throughout this period, the threat
from support for labor was not large enough to give sector-level organizations
incentives to switch to collaborative strategies. Thus the main trend we observe is
initially collective repressive strategies transitioning to individual level repressive
strategies. Australian employer organizations never formed a sustained peak
organization that could wield national lockouts. Similarly, there was not a strong
enough expropriation threat from the left-wing party to induce a full shift to
collaborative strategies.
The initial modal strategy in Australia was a collective repressive strategy in
response to the threat of trade unionism. Such organizations started initially as trade
associations formed to lobby for tariffs, and later became employer organizations in
response to local demands for the eight-hour day and local unionism. Dufty
343
documents a pattern, consistent with that described above, of employer organizations
forming in the late nineteenth century in response to local threats from workers and
strikes, successfully putting them down and reducing union growth, and then
dissipating once the initial union threat had been neutralized. The largely
decentralized nature of Australian government helps explain the initial autonomy of
individual regional associations (Dufty 1984). As an example of this regional-sector
level organization, the Victoria Boot and Shoe Manufacturers formed in 1883 to
counter union wage claims in that industry. The Iron Trades Employers Association
(ITEA) formed in New South Wales for the same reason. Most other associations,
including those facing craft unions (the Master Bakers‘ Association, Printing and
Allied Trade Employers‘ Association) had similar anti-union goals.
Australian national-level employer associations had similar goals to these local
level associations—they countered organized labor and also lobbied against initial
compulsory arbitration legislation (at the state and federal level). Collective
repressive strategies arose to keep unions down and to prevent state interference in
individual firm affairs. The Federal Council of the Chamber of Manufactures (which
later became the Associated Chambers of Manufactures of Australia, the ACMA), was
founded in 1903 because employers wanted a centralized body to lobby against
enforcement of the recently passed arbitration legislation, which was perceived to
grant workers more organizing rights and permission of state intervention. Another
peak organization, the Central Council of Employers of Australia (ACEF), had similar
anti-union and state intervention intentions. Both ―pro-labor‖ legislation and the
concurrent repressive employer organizations developed before the formation of the
344
Australian Labor Party in 1910 (Plowman 1989). After the party began contesting
elections, the employer organizations also expended much of their resources
challenging arbitration court decisions, and tried to limit the federal jurisdiction of the
courts. The Australian government played a pivotal role in granting workers‘ rights,
and established compulsory arbitration tribunals: employers organized to counter the
activities of the state as well as those of unions. Throughout this battle, Australian
employer associations never tried to engage in any systematic collaborative strategies
with workers.
However, these initial collective repressive organizations could not build on
these efforts to form more well-coordinated peak institutions. During the 1920s, there
were several failed attempts at cooperation between sector-level employer
organizations (similar to such failed attempts in the US after the initial success of the
Open Shop Movement in the 1920s). The Central Council of Employers (ACEF)
proposals to merge with other organizations were rejected, on the simple grounds that
there was not enough commonality of interests to continue merging organizational
apparatus. In 1937, the Australian Council of Employers‘ Federation tried to form a
permanent committee representing all national employers‘ bodies, but another major
organization—the Associated Chamber of Manufacturers—rejected that proposal on
similar grounds. This cursory summary indicates that Australian firm strategies had
fragile collective repressive strategies, which before World War II, became more
individualistic in nature. The second vertical (dashed line) indicates the transition of
these collective repressive to individual repressive strategies during the inter-war
period (Plowman 1989, 1985).
345
Japan
In Japan, the absence of a strong labor party and labor unions through the
twentieth century helps explain the general repressive strategies of firms until after
WWII. With the Japan case we can examine what strategies firms pursued in an
industrializing state in the absence of a strong redistributive threat from a workers‘
party. (Unfortunately, wage dispersion data for this time period are not available).
The strategies through the early twentieth century were generally repressive at the
individual firm and sector level, as labor unions were attacked by both businesses and
the state. The general consensus is that incipient industrial unions were continually
weakened throughout the first half of the twentieth (Tolliday and Zeitlin 1991; Levine
1984).
Japan also is characterized in the early twentieth century by sector-level
employer organizations that tried to manage labor markets and control wages without
labor unions. Hundreds of local and sector-level employer associations existed in the
late nineteenth century. Early business associations were intended to appropriately
―segment‖ the labor market and prevent worker poaching among firms. For example,
the Japan Federation of Cotton Spinning Trades Companies formed in 1888; this
Federation and other similar organizations established agreements among member
firms to avoid excessive competition in worker recruitment. They divided the labor
market into company-assigned territories (Crawcour 1978).
These early employer associations also generally opposed early government
intervention to expand workers‘ rights. In 1884 these chambers opposed a
government proposal to legislate minimal working conditions; in 1891 they also
346
opposed legislation from the Ministry of Agriculture to establish health and safety
standards for workers. While the 1911 Factory Act supposedly guaranteed workers
the right to organize in the workplace, it was not rigorously enforced—firms use an
array of techniques, including lockouts and strikebreaking, to undermine unions. In
1917, major sector-level organizations and the zaibatsu managers formed the first
truly national organization called the Japan Economic Federation (Nihon Keizai
Renmei), principally for the purpose of preventing recognition of labor unions (Levine
1984). (The zaibatsu managers argued, in addition, that unionism was contrary to
―Japanese values‖ and that a labor movement would lead to radicalism and disorder).
The Federation made a point of vowing to defeat union ―rights‖ (Levine 1984, 321).
Up until after WWII, then, Japan is characterized by consistent repressive strategies
individually, and then collectively. While we do not have enough evidence to test the
role of initial heterogeneity, the formation of key sector-level organizations indicates
that individual repression played a critical role in stunting the growth of the Japanese
labor movement.
Section 3: Conclusions
In this chapter I show test the theory with descriptive evidence from other
advanced industrialized states. The evidence shows the validity of the new
explanation for employer coordination and firm strategies that focuses on the decisions
of firms in response to demands and threats from worker institutions, and the
enforceability of such responses. Existing theories that focus on the mechanism of
joint investment in skills and electoral systems are a critical step forward, and can
account for the emergence of a specific kind of coordination within some industries.
347
However, they are less able to explain other important sub-national, cross-national,
and temporal variation over a wider set of firm strategies. The theory here accounts
for why firms are able to collectively act to form employer organizations, and
sometimes why we observe the failure or collapse of such collective action. In
particular, it explains why firms sometimes engage in repressive strategies against
workers. The proposed theory does not arbitrate between the older ―traditionalist‖
view of industrial relations as a product of pure class conflict (such as that posed by
Korpi and Shalev) and the newer perspective which recognizes incentives of firms to
work with unions in the provision of social policy or labor market outcomes. Rather,
it provides an explanation for why we would observe both within a state (at the
regional or sector level), and why we would observe bargains at the national level that
explain the modal firm strategy. The case evidence presented indicates that the
formation and evolution of initial employer organizations is a consequence of changes
in the costs of repression as well as in the enforceability of institutions.
348
Table 8-1: Dates of firm strategies and electoral systems
Country Year of
Collective
Strategy
Founding
(major EO)
Year of
Collective
collaborative
strategy switch
Date of PR
adoption
Denmark 1895 1899 1918
Germany 1905 1918 1918
Britain 1896 None None
United States 1899 1933 None
Sweden 1904 1938 1909
Japan 1916 None None
Australia 1904 None None
France 1895 None 1945
349
Figure 8-1: Changes in Firm Strategies in Sweden
350
Figure 8-2: Changes in Firm Strategies in Britain
351
Figure 8-3: Changes in Firm Strategies in Denmark
352
Figure 8-4: Changes in Firm Strategies in France
353
Figure 8-5: Change in Firm Strategies in Australia
354
Chapter 9: Conclusions
In 1941, the American labor scholar Whiting Williams and the head of the San
Francisco Employers‘ Council Almon Roth had an exchange in the magazine Rotarian
that debated the responses of employer associations and firms to increasing
enforcement of the Wagner Act and labor militancy on the west coast. The specific
debate was if US employers should attempt a national confederation similar to those
observed in Britain and Sweden. Both writers expressed sympathy for such a project,
though Roth ultimately favored the idea while Williams opposed it. Williams argued
that an attempt at federation would backfire, simply because obligating different local
associations to confirm to national organizational strictures would sow discontent; the
resulting defections would do more damage to dealing with unions. Roth countered
that absent such organization, unions would succeed in defeating local employer
federations. He wrote, ―The question…is…whether we shall curtail the power of
highly organized existing pressure groups by setting up organizations to create that
balance of power which is so essential…‖ (7). He argued that the threat from workers
necessarily implied, ―What else can the employer do but organize to protect his
business against local, state, and national organizations of employees…?‖ (6).
Williams had a different view of the degree of threat that firms faced: he concluded,
―…every well wisher of the American employer and employee alike will continue to
hope that no similar crisis may come to enough factor gates throughout the land to
force similar federation on a national scale‖ (5). In his essay, Williams contrasted the
relative weakness of the US movement relative to its higher militancy in Britain and
Sweden, and argued that such militancy explained and justified the coordinated
355
responses of those firms, but that the absence of it in the United States meant that local
level employer associations did not have the same urgency as their European
counterparts (Roth 1941; Williams 1941).
The arguments in this exchange nicely illustrate the central dynamics spelled
out in this dissertation, about the development of different regimes and degrees of
collective action of firms. Williams and Roth clashed over the main issues of how to
enforce agreements in localities and sectors that might be different (and differences
within each), and whether the threats unions posed to firms merited such a drastic
national response. In this dissertation I have proposed a new range of strategies that
encapsulates the kind of responses these authors discusses, and outlined a
parsimonious theory that can account for the immense cross-national and historical
variation in firm strategies. I argue that the outcomes previous scholars have studied
regarding the formation of different degrees of employer coordination should be
studied as firm choices to choose strategies that can be collective or individual, or
repressive or collaborative. I show that the redistributive threat posed by workers
affected firms‘ decisions to repress, as the greater the threat meant more costly
repression. Beyond a certain point, collaboration was pursued as a less costly option.
Similarly, I argue that structural conditions that inhibited collaborative action—best
characterized by initial degrees of industrial heterogeneity—affected collaborative
action because of higher variances in the cost of repression. This explains why such
collective action was difficult in the United States and why exogenous changes in
those structural conditions, from war-time interventions to the state to technological
change—affect collective action.
356
I have used in-depth tracing of substantively and theoretically import cases—
Germany and the United States—to confirm the theory. In addition, I leverage sub-
national variation in both states to test observable implications and mechanisms of the
theory. Finally, in a set of other states, I demonstrate that the proposed theory can
make better sense of the industrial outcomes we observe.
In posing this new theory and providing some exhaustive testing, this
dissertation hopes to resolve some of the previous debates about the origins of modern
divergence in capitalist systems. The most recent scholarship about the development
of different coordination regimes takes as its starting point an assumption of
cooperative coordination between firms and workers as the outcome to be explained.
This research, operating on innovative theorizing about joint incentives of firms and
workers to invest in co-specific assets, focuses on a theory of skill formation and links
that to institutions. This same pattern of scholarship also assigns an important role to
electoral systems in promoting such co-investment. This literature links directly too to
the modern conception of ―coordinated market economies‖ as synonymous with a set
of institutions which protect those investments. An older generation of literature on
the descriptive features and development of corporatism had a similar set of
conclusions, though the logic was not based on skill-formation. Rather, it assumed
that the ease of collective action of unions and associations in small states necessarily
implied positive cross-class collective action.
The recent scholarship in some ways challenges the previous generation of
literature which focused on the ability of the ―left‖ broadly conceived to impose its
will. While these accounts have been convincingly challenged by authors showing
357
that firms in some cases shared preferences for social protection or collective
bargaining, this literature also gave short shrift to the strategic incentives of firms and
the issue of the costs and variance in costs of repression across an economy. In
particular, it ignored the collective action problem among firms and took the formation
of employer organizations for granted.
In the dissertation the proposed theory helps reconcile these literatures and
shows how each one is insufficient to explain the range of firm strategies. As
discussed in the empirical chapters on Germany, and in the cross-national chapter, the
logic of joint investment in skills applies only to a subset of industries and regions.
The proposed theory can better explain the important outcomes of repression and
provide an alternative logic of why we would observe collaborative strategies in some
areas. With respect to the older literature on the threat posed by workers, the
dissertation accounts for the outcome of the failure of collective action on the part of
firms and demonstrates the symmetric strategic from the firm‘s perspective.
The variables and mechanisms discussed and tested here were particularly
relevant for a historical time period in which there was great uncertainty about the
redistribution consequences of the mobilization of workers. Further, given the
upheavals wrought by WWI, increased state intervention in economies, and economic
crises in the inter-war period, a plausible argument can be made that the kind of
strategies this theory can explain are limited to a particular era. Yet efforts should still
be made to test this theory on a broader sample of cases, in particular on middle-
income developing states. First, the kind of repressive logic extensively documented
is extant in employer associations across Latin America, East Asia, and Eastern
358
Europe. Second, given increased public sector intervention in these economies and
competition from trading partners, it is clear that there will be exogenous changes in
the ability for associations to maintain membership and continue effective collective
action. Such problems face modern contemporary economies as well, with trade
competition and de-industrialization.
I now consider some theoretical omissions and suggest possible extensions.
As previewed in chapter 3, future work should address concerns about endogeneity
and demonstrate that the threat posed by workers and conditions that affect the
enforceability of agreements affect firm strategies do have a causal impact on firms‘
choices, and that the actions of firms themselves have less of an impact on these
independent variables. No doubt, as the case evidence displays, there is a dynamic
process at work: successful repression can reduce the redistribute threat posed by
workers; certain types of collaboration can of course reduce wage dispersion, thus
increasing the enforceability of collective strategies. But the assumption of the theory
has been partially proven by the evidence in the case studies: in each case, firms
reacted to varying degrees of demands from workers (in some cases exogenous crises
and shifts in the threat due to war-time conditions). With respect to collective versus
individual strategies, the historical literature documents a frequent time lag between
changes in worker efforts to mobilize and firm responses. Often employer
associations do form in response to worker demands, and the responses are
conditioned on the kinds of demands. There are important exceptions to this rule—for
example, the Swedish SAF‘s encouragement of centralization of union authority
359
across industrial sectors—but the theory is partially confirmed by the noted ―lag‖
between unionization and employer response.
Still, a fuller version of the theory would incorporate the dynamic process—
initial firm strategies that subsequently influence labor conditions and heterogeneity,
which makes other kinds of firm strategies possible. In Chapter 3 I outlined a set of
conditions under which workers will still incur costs to pose a redistributive threat, but
a strategic setting that takes both actors equally seriously is warranted.
A second theoretical extension would be to seriously consider the interactive
effect between industrial heterogeneity and the threat posed by workers. As discussed
in Chapters 6 and 7 about the development of union incentives in Germany and the
United States, there may be asymmetries in the capacity of employer associations and
unions to sanction defectors, or to organize in the first place. Other factors, such as
ethnic heterogeneity and fractionalization, may have an additional inhibiting impact on
the organization of workers. In some sense this suggestion is a return to the ―two
logics of collective action‖ that Offe and Wiesenthal expounded upon, wherein they
argued collective action among workers could be more difficult.
A third potential fruitful area of research is clarifying conditions under which
firms and the state will share the costs of repression or enforcement of collective
strategies. Throughout the cases, we observe a common impulse of firms, when
forming organizations preemptive agreements with workers, to initially minimize state
intervention. And yet under forms of collective repression and collaboration, the state
ends up playing a role in management of both strategies. Under what circumstances
was the state willing to bear more of the costs? If the state was willing, did this
360
necessarily imply that collective repressive organizations were less necessary? A
similar question applies to collaborative arrangements. If one of the logics of the
collaborative arrangement is that the state can assist in enforcement, why did employer
organizations sometimes resist such intervention? There is an interesting disjuncture
here between current models and the actual strategies that employer organizations
pursued that should stimulate more historical gathering of evidence on firm
preferences regarding state intervention. I have omitted discussion of electoral
politics, wherein a set of voters may prefer further state intervention in the face of
uncertainty.
A fourth extension is empirically demonstrating that the instances of collective
collaboration we observe—the assumed form of collective action that previous
scholars study—are the result of a switch from repression, and not co-investment in
assets from firms and workers. While this is evident at the national level in many
states, in individual sectors or regions this might not be the case. It would be
particularly useful to apply the theory to the development of worker training
institutions and demonstrate that their advent was because other costs of repression
were too high.
Fifth, the logic of discussion between different factions of capital—between
collaborative and repressive sectors—remains underspecified. It may be the case that
certain structural conditions not identified here induce asymmetries in the capacity of
collective action. Some firms may be able to collectively act, due to conditions in the
sector, but others fail to. This creates an asymmetry where one ―faction‖ is able to
impose its preferences. Similarly, if sectors with different costs of repression are able
361
to bargain on another dimension, higher differences in those costs need not impede
collective action.
Another possible extension is more consideration of how broader kinds and
purposes of coordination among firms effects industrial regimes. I suggest two. First,
coordination on product markets—legal cartels—may facilitate collective action in the
labor market. This was demonstrated at least in the German case; in the US inter-war
period, strict judicial enforcement of anti-cartels did not inhibit mergers or repression
by other means. Testing if these findings travel to other states would be a useful
extension. Second, collective action in firms in developing states can have rent-
seeking purposes. In fact, as discussed in Chapter 4, the initial employer associations
in Germany developed out of protectionist preferences. The nature of rent-seeking
and corruption as a result of employer coordination remains unexplored.
The broader agenda that this dissertation raises, beyond providing a new
explanation for the emergence of different capitalist regimes, is about how certain
economic actors use repressive strategies and institutions to inhibit democratization.
Existing accounts link some initial conditions, such as inequality, to democratization
and redistribution through electoral channels. For example, a common mechanism is
that these conditions affect demands of the median voter for spending. These accounts
ignore, however, important non-electoral channels—the actions of firms—that affect
the welfare of citizens. This dissertation hopefully will open up an agenda of more
analytical and empirically rigorous examination of the relationship between firm
strategies, democratization, and inequality.
362
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