Deck 12: Comparative Labor Relations

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Question
In Canada,strike replacements are often not considered part of the bargaining unit and are not,therefore,entitled to vote on union matters.
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Question
Mexico's constitution was the first to address both social and economic rights of workers.
Question
In many industrialized countries,most employees are covered by a collective bargaining agreement even though they are not members of a union.
Question
The degree of hostility toward unionization that is present in the U.S.is unique among democratic,industrialized countries.
Question
The most influential union federation in Mexico is called the Confederacion de Trabajadores Mexico or the Confederation of Mexican Workers.
Question
Mexican workers are well protected by strong enforcement of Mexican labor laws as outlined in the Mexican Constitution.
Question
Establishing and maintaining a union is easier under Canadian law than under U.S.law.
Question
The Confederation of Mexican Workers was a strong opponent of the longtime ruling party in Mexico.
Question
Although more of a social movement in the past,Canadian unions are moving toward the American business unionism model.
Question
In Canada ,each province has its own labor laws that governs their labor relations.
Question
While globalization,decentralization and the need for greater flexibility are important pressures in U.S.industrial relations,they are relatively unimportant issues for most other industrialized countries.
Question
The labor relations system in Canada has generally been more stable that the labor relations system in the U.S.
Question
In Mexico,a union does not need to represent a majority of employees before it can engage in collective bargaining but it does need majority representation if it wishes to use the strike weapon.
Question
In most industrialized countries,there is little support for unionization,significant employer resistance to unions,and weak support for a socialist movement.
Question
Collective bargaining agreements are not legally enforceable in Mexico.
Question
There is a common set of labor laws governing labor relations across each of Canada's provinces.
Question
Outside North America,collective bargaining is dominated by employer associations,rather than individual companies.
Question
Collective bargaining agreements in Mexico automatically include the minimum provisions that are set in the Mexican constitution.
Question
Canadian union representation elections are conducted in the same manner as those in the U.S.
Question
Many Canadian workers are represented by U.S.unions in their dealings with their employer.
Question
As their power has declined with the legal reforms of the Conservative government,British unions are starting to look more toward the European Union as a way to improve labor standards and public policy favoring workers and their representatives.
Question
In Great Britain,collective bargaining agreements are not legally binding.
Question
The Irish system of labor relations was built on the U.S.model following World War II.
Question
Labor legislation passed by Margaret Thatcher during the 1980s resembled many of the provisions included in the Taft-Hartley and Landrum-Griffin Acts passed in the U.S.20 to 30 years earlier.
Question
The Trades Disputes Act of Great Britain gives labor unions immunity from lawsuits over breach of contract and striking.
Question
Just like in the U.S. ,company dominated unions are illegal in Great Britain.
Question
Mexican workers have more rights under law than U.S.workers.
Question
In Mexico,collective bargaining agreements are sometimes said to be more a function of government economic policy than independent union collective bargaining.
Question
Contrary to the experience of the U.S. ,union membership in Great Britain has risen substantially since the 1980s.
Question
The influence of the government on labor unions in Mexico is minimal.Most Mexican unions operate independent of the federal and local governments.
Question
In Great Britain,collective bargaining has traditionally occurred only when both management and labor voluntarily agree to engage in negotiations.
Question
The social partnership arrangement in Ireland provides significant voice opportunities for workers at the workplace level.
Question
For Great Britain to move toward a works council model and a more European style of labor representation,significant changes would need to be made to its current labor law and culture.
Question
The key difference between Great Britain's labor relations system and that of Ireland is that Ireland includes peak-level negotiations on social and economic issues.
Question
Britain's system of labor relations is particularly susceptible to swings in economic conditions that favor either the employer or employees.
Question
The concept of exclusive representation applies to Great Britain.
Question
Voluntarism is an institutionalized system of employee voice in which employees are entitled to participate in workplace decision-making.
Question
Although the social partnership and peak-level negotiations in Ireland address a variety of issues,the result is greater instability and unpredictability for the economy as a whole,as well as the workplace.
Question
Company dominated unions are a particular problem for Mexican Labor relations.
Question
Ireland's system of centralized bargaining through social partnership addresses broad social and economic concerns rather than more immediate economic or workplace agreements.
Question
Codetermination includes employee representation on corporate supervisory boards and workplace level committees appointed by management.
Question
For a German works council to be put in place,a labor union must have won representation rights of workers at a given company.
Question
In Germany,sector bargaining takes place at the regional level in a pattern bargaining fashion.
Question
In France,employees have several forms of workplace-level employee representation such as employee delegates and work committees.
Question
French union federations have a business unionism philosophy that is much like that of the U.S.
Question
In Germany,each major industry has a dominant employer association and union that conduct industry-wide bargaining for all companies in the industry.
Question
Collective bargaining and workplace representation have increased in France since the 1980's but they have declined in the U.S.
Question
Strikes during the life of a contract are illegal in Germany.
Question
To protect the interests of workers,French unions use political pressure to get the government to enact favorable labor policies,rather than participating directly in policy-making.
Question
Codetermination is a formal system of employee voice that entitles employees to participation in workplace decision-making.
Question
French law mandates exclusive representation as a condition of collective bargaining.
Question
A key feature of the labor-management relations in France is the stability of the social partnership arrangement between labor,management,and the government.
Question
Communist and socialist unions have not always supported collective bargaining because signing a contract limits worker freedom and legitimizes capitalism.
Question
French labor law includes industry level agreements that can be extended to all companies in the industry regardless of the bargaining unit size.
Question
French unions tend to be more militant and reformist than unions in other industrialized countries.
Question
The fundamental purpose of German co-determination is to provide national stability and consistency in labor contracts.
Question
Under French labor laws,collective bargaining takes place solely at the company level.
Question
The German labor relations system has responded to the competitive pressures of globalization by increasing its standardization of contracts within and across industries.
Question
Due to concerns about monopolistic power,French law does not allow industry level agreements to be extended across companies within the same industry.
Question
The German labor relations system includes industry-wide bargaining between employer federations and employer associations.
Question
Stalinist unionism refers to a labor relations system in which unions are controlled by the government and play a dual role to protect state and labor's interests.
Question
In the United States,unions occasionally obtain a single seat on a company's board of directors,but significant board-level representation is mandated by law in Germany.
Question
Works councils have a clear,positive impact on economic efficiency of German companies and the German economy as a whole.
Question
German works councils have the right to information about the firm's financial situation,including investing and marketing plans.
Question
In general,labor relations systems in Sweden and other Nordic countries are similar to those in Germany.
Question
For Europeans,the decision to join a union is often driven by the need or desire for higher pay and better benefits than a demonstration of worker solidarity.
Question
Lifetime employment,job rotation,seniority based pay,and broad job classifications increase Japanese employees' sense of identification with their employer,rather than with their job
Question
When a works council has been granted codetermination rights,the employer must work with it to determine work rules,discipline,daily work hours,and other conditions of employment.
Question
The main feature of labor relations in Australia has been a centralized system of arbitration awards that specify minimum standards for pay and working conditions.
Question
Based on the Swedish experience,it can be hypothesized that U.S.unions might be less resistant to workplace change if U.S.unions were more protected both culturally and as a matter of law.
Question
Traditionally,all workers in Japan enjoy the security of lifetime employment which prohibits employee layoffs.
Question
In the Japanese system of enterprise unionism,unions represent all employees in a single company,including white-collar workers and low level managers.
Question
Shunto refers to an annual wage negotiation process in Japan where uniform wage increases across companies are bargained.
Question
Japanese labor law was established by the U.S.and occupation authorities at the end of World War II and based on the U.S.and model of labor relations.
Question
According to German labor law,works councils must meet with employers on a regular monthly basis,at a minimum.
Question
Since the 1980s,Australian labor relations has become more centralized,focused more on national labor policy than on individual company-level bargaining.
Question
Strikes and independent unions were illegal in the Soviet Union.
Question
The Japanese system of enterprise unionism is embedded in a broader system of lifetime employment,seniority and firm-based wages,and broad job classifications.
Question
Labor relations systems in the former Soviet Union are beginning to take on characteristics similar to the U.S.labor relations system.
Question
Japanese employers are far more likely to utilize collaborative bargaining and joint consultation than U.S.employers.
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Deck 12: Comparative Labor Relations
1
In Canada,strike replacements are often not considered part of the bargaining unit and are not,therefore,entitled to vote on union matters.
True
2
Mexico's constitution was the first to address both social and economic rights of workers.
True
3
In many industrialized countries,most employees are covered by a collective bargaining agreement even though they are not members of a union.
True
4
The degree of hostility toward unionization that is present in the U.S.is unique among democratic,industrialized countries.
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5
The most influential union federation in Mexico is called the Confederacion de Trabajadores Mexico or the Confederation of Mexican Workers.
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6
Mexican workers are well protected by strong enforcement of Mexican labor laws as outlined in the Mexican Constitution.
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7
Establishing and maintaining a union is easier under Canadian law than under U.S.law.
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8
The Confederation of Mexican Workers was a strong opponent of the longtime ruling party in Mexico.
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9
Although more of a social movement in the past,Canadian unions are moving toward the American business unionism model.
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10
In Canada ,each province has its own labor laws that governs their labor relations.
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11
While globalization,decentralization and the need for greater flexibility are important pressures in U.S.industrial relations,they are relatively unimportant issues for most other industrialized countries.
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12
The labor relations system in Canada has generally been more stable that the labor relations system in the U.S.
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13
In Mexico,a union does not need to represent a majority of employees before it can engage in collective bargaining but it does need majority representation if it wishes to use the strike weapon.
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14
In most industrialized countries,there is little support for unionization,significant employer resistance to unions,and weak support for a socialist movement.
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15
Collective bargaining agreements are not legally enforceable in Mexico.
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16
There is a common set of labor laws governing labor relations across each of Canada's provinces.
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17
Outside North America,collective bargaining is dominated by employer associations,rather than individual companies.
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18
Collective bargaining agreements in Mexico automatically include the minimum provisions that are set in the Mexican constitution.
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19
Canadian union representation elections are conducted in the same manner as those in the U.S.
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20
Many Canadian workers are represented by U.S.unions in their dealings with their employer.
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k this deck
21
As their power has declined with the legal reforms of the Conservative government,British unions are starting to look more toward the European Union as a way to improve labor standards and public policy favoring workers and their representatives.
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Unlock for access to all 201 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
In Great Britain,collective bargaining agreements are not legally binding.
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23
The Irish system of labor relations was built on the U.S.model following World War II.
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24
Labor legislation passed by Margaret Thatcher during the 1980s resembled many of the provisions included in the Taft-Hartley and Landrum-Griffin Acts passed in the U.S.20 to 30 years earlier.
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25
The Trades Disputes Act of Great Britain gives labor unions immunity from lawsuits over breach of contract and striking.
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k this deck
26
Just like in the U.S. ,company dominated unions are illegal in Great Britain.
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27
Mexican workers have more rights under law than U.S.workers.
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28
In Mexico,collective bargaining agreements are sometimes said to be more a function of government economic policy than independent union collective bargaining.
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29
Contrary to the experience of the U.S. ,union membership in Great Britain has risen substantially since the 1980s.
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30
The influence of the government on labor unions in Mexico is minimal.Most Mexican unions operate independent of the federal and local governments.
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31
In Great Britain,collective bargaining has traditionally occurred only when both management and labor voluntarily agree to engage in negotiations.
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32
The social partnership arrangement in Ireland provides significant voice opportunities for workers at the workplace level.
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33
For Great Britain to move toward a works council model and a more European style of labor representation,significant changes would need to be made to its current labor law and culture.
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34
The key difference between Great Britain's labor relations system and that of Ireland is that Ireland includes peak-level negotiations on social and economic issues.
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35
Britain's system of labor relations is particularly susceptible to swings in economic conditions that favor either the employer or employees.
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k this deck
36
The concept of exclusive representation applies to Great Britain.
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37
Voluntarism is an institutionalized system of employee voice in which employees are entitled to participate in workplace decision-making.
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38
Although the social partnership and peak-level negotiations in Ireland address a variety of issues,the result is greater instability and unpredictability for the economy as a whole,as well as the workplace.
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k this deck
39
Company dominated unions are a particular problem for Mexican Labor relations.
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k this deck
40
Ireland's system of centralized bargaining through social partnership addresses broad social and economic concerns rather than more immediate economic or workplace agreements.
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k this deck
41
Codetermination includes employee representation on corporate supervisory boards and workplace level committees appointed by management.
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42
For a German works council to be put in place,a labor union must have won representation rights of workers at a given company.
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k this deck
43
In Germany,sector bargaining takes place at the regional level in a pattern bargaining fashion.
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k this deck
44
In France,employees have several forms of workplace-level employee representation such as employee delegates and work committees.
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k this deck
45
French union federations have a business unionism philosophy that is much like that of the U.S.
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k this deck
46
In Germany,each major industry has a dominant employer association and union that conduct industry-wide bargaining for all companies in the industry.
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k this deck
47
Collective bargaining and workplace representation have increased in France since the 1980's but they have declined in the U.S.
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48
Strikes during the life of a contract are illegal in Germany.
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49
To protect the interests of workers,French unions use political pressure to get the government to enact favorable labor policies,rather than participating directly in policy-making.
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k this deck
50
Codetermination is a formal system of employee voice that entitles employees to participation in workplace decision-making.
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51
French law mandates exclusive representation as a condition of collective bargaining.
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52
A key feature of the labor-management relations in France is the stability of the social partnership arrangement between labor,management,and the government.
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53
Communist and socialist unions have not always supported collective bargaining because signing a contract limits worker freedom and legitimizes capitalism.
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54
French labor law includes industry level agreements that can be extended to all companies in the industry regardless of the bargaining unit size.
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k this deck
55
French unions tend to be more militant and reformist than unions in other industrialized countries.
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k this deck
56
The fundamental purpose of German co-determination is to provide national stability and consistency in labor contracts.
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k this deck
57
Under French labor laws,collective bargaining takes place solely at the company level.
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k this deck
58
The German labor relations system has responded to the competitive pressures of globalization by increasing its standardization of contracts within and across industries.
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k this deck
59
Due to concerns about monopolistic power,French law does not allow industry level agreements to be extended across companies within the same industry.
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k this deck
60
The German labor relations system includes industry-wide bargaining between employer federations and employer associations.
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k this deck
61
Stalinist unionism refers to a labor relations system in which unions are controlled by the government and play a dual role to protect state and labor's interests.
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k this deck
62
In the United States,unions occasionally obtain a single seat on a company's board of directors,but significant board-level representation is mandated by law in Germany.
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Unlock for access to all 201 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
63
Works councils have a clear,positive impact on economic efficiency of German companies and the German economy as a whole.
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k this deck
64
German works councils have the right to information about the firm's financial situation,including investing and marketing plans.
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k this deck
65
In general,labor relations systems in Sweden and other Nordic countries are similar to those in Germany.
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k this deck
66
For Europeans,the decision to join a union is often driven by the need or desire for higher pay and better benefits than a demonstration of worker solidarity.
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k this deck
67
Lifetime employment,job rotation,seniority based pay,and broad job classifications increase Japanese employees' sense of identification with their employer,rather than with their job
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Unlock for access to all 201 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
68
When a works council has been granted codetermination rights,the employer must work with it to determine work rules,discipline,daily work hours,and other conditions of employment.
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Unlock for access to all 201 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
69
The main feature of labor relations in Australia has been a centralized system of arbitration awards that specify minimum standards for pay and working conditions.
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k this deck
70
Based on the Swedish experience,it can be hypothesized that U.S.unions might be less resistant to workplace change if U.S.unions were more protected both culturally and as a matter of law.
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Unlock for access to all 201 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
71
Traditionally,all workers in Japan enjoy the security of lifetime employment which prohibits employee layoffs.
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k this deck
72
In the Japanese system of enterprise unionism,unions represent all employees in a single company,including white-collar workers and low level managers.
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k this deck
73
Shunto refers to an annual wage negotiation process in Japan where uniform wage increases across companies are bargained.
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k this deck
74
Japanese labor law was established by the U.S.and occupation authorities at the end of World War II and based on the U.S.and model of labor relations.
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k this deck
75
According to German labor law,works councils must meet with employers on a regular monthly basis,at a minimum.
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k this deck
76
Since the 1980s,Australian labor relations has become more centralized,focused more on national labor policy than on individual company-level bargaining.
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k this deck
77
Strikes and independent unions were illegal in the Soviet Union.
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k this deck
78
The Japanese system of enterprise unionism is embedded in a broader system of lifetime employment,seniority and firm-based wages,and broad job classifications.
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Unlock for access to all 201 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
79
Labor relations systems in the former Soviet Union are beginning to take on characteristics similar to the U.S.labor relations system.
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k this deck
80
Japanese employers are far more likely to utilize collaborative bargaining and joint consultation than U.S.employers.
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k this deck
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