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Towards a Regionalization of Industrial
Relations*
PAOLO PERULLI
In this paper ‘industrial relations’ are considered in a much wider sense than is usual among
industrial relations scholars. Formal collective bargaining is just one aspect of the complex
relationships among social actors which take place at national, regional and local levels.
These include, among other things, the sharing of norms and practices regarding human
resources training and management, labour market and economic development policies.
These relationships often involve state agencies, public sector officers and various interorganizational networks which give different contexts and meanings to industrial relations.
Our hypothesis is that the regional dimension is particularly appropriate to observe
how these relationships are currently evolving into different contexts. The region as a
unit of analysis has recently been relaunched, after a long historical prevalence of the
national (and/or the enterprise) level. As neo-industrial systems tend to decentralize and
territorially agglomerate their structure, the main competitive advantages (skills, R & D,
flexibility, technological innovation diffusion) are likely to be found at the regional level.
However, the new regional dimension is the result of economic organizational processes
and institutional frameworks which are largely shaped by national habits and constraints.
This is why apparently rather similar regional dynamics - currently defined as ‘network
organizations’ - remain different with respect to institutional and, in this wider sense,
industrial relations contexts.
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The role of the region in industrial decentralization
The role played by the region in capital/labour relations, be they conflictual or cooperative,
has become increasingly importance since the crisis of the 1970s and the subsequent
restructuring and reorganization throughout the western world. During the previous 30
years of postwar stability, the envisaged convergence towards a single model of industrial
development (the so-called taylorist/fordist model) produced, among other things, a lack
of interest in the various aspects of regional differences in capitalAabour relations.
By the 1960s, the region had become at most a derivative category of analysis and a secondary
locus of economic activity. Despite continuing differences in national industrial structure, there
was widespread agreement that the most effective production unit was the giant corporation,
which at the limit integrated in one physical structure the activities of independent firms in the
industrial districts. (Sabel, 1988)
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*I want to thank Angelo Pichierri, Jean Saglio and the IJURR referees for their comments on an earlier version
of this paper. Support from the Commission of the European Communities/SPES and the University of Warwick
project on ‘Centralisation and Decentralisation in the Euro-Company’ is also acknowledged.
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The prevailing economic theories described/prescribed the processes of industrial
localization according to the model of the product life-cycle. There were appropriate
locations for the enterprise for each stage of the cycle: start up, maturity and decline (for
a critical analysis see Pichierri, 1986). The sociological aspects, in particular regarding
conflict and cooperation in capital/labour relations, were practically out of the picture.
The crisis of the dominant industrial model, which actually exploded in capital/labour
relations, later gave rise to a new interest in the various possible local forms of social
and labour regulation, different from the dominant model. During this phase of rediscovery
of a ‘plurality of industrial forms’ (Bonazzi, 1989), awareness of the regional implications
of different production regimes increased. These developments fall within three interrelated
research programmes.
A first area of study is that of local economies. The focus here is on the discovery
of a persistence of local and regional societies where mass production never dominated
and peculiar social phenomena took place (small and medium-size entrepreneurship,
networks of trust relations linking social actors as firm owners and workers, local
government, employers and trade unions). These local and regional economies performed
very well during the crisis of the 1970s as their social climate favoured industrial adjustment.
In this period, capital/labour relations reached new heights of conflict in almost all
the industrialized countries, but the conflict was greatest in those areas dominated by large
firms and mass production. The search for more favourable, less conflictual production
areas led many firms to opt for decentralization and delocalization, whether or not this
was a conscious choice. In this case, it was large ‘central’ firms looking for less conflictual
places with a larger, flexible low-cost labour force available in ‘peripheral’ regions.
The implementation of new production units did not always mean the decentralization
of low-tech phases. Generally speaking, ‘the “decentralized” departments work at the
same technological level as the central factory. Obviously, those phases of the production
process that are not as strategic or technologically sophisticated are usually transferred
to the outside’ (Bagnasco, 1988). In other cases, there was an increase of endogenous
firms, born in regions characterized by small-firm local economies and destined in some
cases to become a market leader in their sector.
These same phenomena were also studied on an international scale; this was mainly
the subject of a second research programme. In particular, the French school of ‘regulation’
(Boyer, Mistral, Lipietz etc.) stressed the ‘planetary’regional aspects of the process. Lipietz
(1984) described it as a ‘geographic separation of three levels in the division of labour.
Level 1 : planning; level 2: skilled production; level 3: unskilled assembly. ’ Whereas the
first two tended to remain for the most part in the centre, the third level could be moved
to new areas of expansion (in industrialized or newly industrialized countries) according
to a model of ‘peripheral fordism’. In this case, the crisis of the fordist paradigm was
seen as giving place to a variety of different mixed patterns: ‘Future may be a more fuzzy
situation, with a coexistence of many types of capital-labour relations, even in a single
country: a configuration of complementary patterns of industrial relations’ (Lipietz, 1990).
A third area of study which recognized the importance of the regional variable is that
of ‘flexible specialization’. Piore and Sabel (1984) distinguish between areas dominated
by mass production and flexible specialization areas, characterizing the former by the
predominance of fordist and neo-fordist production methods and the latter by the prevalence
of flexible relations among enterprises (non-vertically-integrated industrial organization)
and between management and workers. Subsequent studies, guided by these new examples,
looked for common characteristics in industrial organization even in areas very different
from one another - from the high-tech American regions to the French technopoles, from
Italian and German ‘industrial districts’ to the Japanese cities of automobile and electronic
production (Scott, 1989; Esser and Hirsch, 1989).
If there is a common link among different areas of research (in disciplines ranging
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from sociology to economics to industrial organization to geography), it may be the
recognition that capital/labour relations do not depend solely on technological and organizational factors within the firm (an obvious consideration nowadays, but one that dominated
in the social sciences in the past). External factors play a significant role in determining
whether capital/labour relations are cooperative or conflictual. These factors are institutional
and cultural in nature, and vary greatly according to the locality.
The role of the region becomes an important topic of research in this context. We
can summarize the ‘rediscovery’ of the region along these lines of argument:
( 1 ) The persistence and the economic success of local and regional economies based on
the ‘industrial district’ principle. The industrial district as the privileged unit of analysis,
instead of the industry or the corporation, means that population density, infrastructures
and ‘industrial atmosphere’ are referred not to the industry but to the region. It is
a complex network of external economies, cost connections, historical and cultural
heritages, which cover both interfirm and interpersonal relations (for the ‘rediscovery’
of Marshallian industrial districts, see Becattini, 1987).
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(2) The decentralization pattern emerging in large firms, particularly multinationals. This
means that both industrial organization and capital/labour relations are reorganized
in decentralized units with more or less autonomy. In neo-fordist firms, decentralization
does not give rise to fully autonomous business units, whereas this is the case in
postfordist firms. Industrial relations are normally devoluted to plant-level organizations.
( 3 ) As small-firm industrial districts mature and large multinational firms decentralize,
a pattern of convergence through mutual adjustment can take place. Alliances and
subcontracting relations characterize at least some industrial regions. Small firms look
for coordination structures at local level, and large firms encapsulate their local business
units in the regional economy.
(4) Partly as a consequence of the new industrial developments at local level, local and
regional governments are induced to develop intervention in the local economy through
assistance to small firms, new infrastructures and support agencies, vocational training
programmes etc. This process has taken place in most regions during the 1980s, also
in part as a consequence of the breakdown of ‘nation-state’ policies in the field of
welfare and industrial policies.
( 5 ) Social actors, such as employers and trade unions, have developed new pragmatic
approaches to industrial adjustment at local and regional levels. Whereas at national
level these actors often tend to maintain rather conflictual roles, at local level a practice
of (often informal) cooperation to solve employment problems prevails.
Conditions external to the firm which favour cooperation
In the pluralist theories of industrial relations, ‘while each partner pursues its own interests,
both admit their mutual dependence’ (Bakke, 1945, cited in Fox, 1973).
This philosophy of mutual behaviour was put to the test during the explosion of industrial
conflict in the 1970s. In fact, according to the pluralists, mutual dependence meant that
there was a sharing not only of rules for handling conflict, but also of values and even
ideologies of mutual survival (Kerr, 1954), whereas in the 1970s the extreme division
of labour which characterizes industrialized societies produced ‘low trust’ relations, which
in turn produced social instability (Clegg, 1975). On the other hand, high trust relations
seem possibly only if there is a change in the division of labour upon which industrial
economies are based. The problem, unresolvable as far as enterprise-based industrial
relations are concerned, is easier to handle if one considers that the partners refer to trust
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relations and develop mutually dependent relationships, not only at enterprise level (the
only one considered by pluralists), but also in the local society and economy where firms
are located.
In his book on citizenship, T.H. Marshall (1976) pointed out that cooperation in labour
relations depends on how much the worker trusts the state (how it handles industrial conflict,
guarantees social security etc.) and the managers of the firm he works for (the microcosm
of the citizenship). In another part of his essay, Marshall stated that ‘the national community
is too big and remote to create this type of trust and make it a constant motivating force.
This is why many think that the solution to the problem lies in the development of more
limited trust in the local community and in the work group in particular’. In this last respect,
Marshall was one of the first to idedify four levels (information, consultation, delegation,
participation in control) as stages during which modem industrial democracy actually
developed. But the local community as a place where industrial citizenship develops is
not given as much weight. This underestimation is probably justified by the fact that in
sociology the community is identified with productive relations and forms of division of
labour that are backward and premodern, hence insignificant in explaining the dynamics
of modern capitalist productive relations.
The literature on industrial relations has grossly ignored the local and regional
dimensions, limiting itself to the workplace and national institutions. Another significant
factor which may explain this neglect is that industrial relations as a discipline was born
and developed in Anglo-Saxon countries with a majority of large firms and highly
decentralized labour relations at plant level, whereas local and regional labour regulation
systems were weak or non-existent. In this extremely fragmentary context, the firm (if
not the plant) was the real level upon which capital and labour were evaluated, particularly
as the discipline of postwar industrial relations grew stronger.
Equally important is the fact that during this period the union organizations consolidated
into large national unions with bargaining power and political influence. ‘In this era of
large firms and unions, most unions are large organizations. But this was not always the
case. The first unions were small, local organizations, and for a certain length of time
they stayed that way’ (Olson, 1983). This observation is related to his theory of collective
action, whereby small groups can procure collective goods more easily than big groups.
Following this line of thought, one could maintain that after a period of initial
development of local unionism (small unions able to procure collective goods more easily)
and a traditional phase of general unionism (based on standard rules in effect in the large
firm and on internal labour markets), opportunities opened up again for local regulation,
in which cooperation is the product of participation in (and identification with) local
institutions and regulation systems. This idea, among others, was recently set out by Streeck
(1985) in his paper on the management of uncertainty. Managers are said to feel that
external labour markets can work properly, i.e. provide for flexible job placement and labour
mobility among different production units, only if there is a set of shared rules that standardizes
the merchandise being handled, regulates the basic terms of the exchange, limits the size and
area of competition both among buyers and sellers of the labour force, and allows participants
in the market to develop stable, long-term expectations.
The question of cooperation can also be examined using the tools of game theory.
According to Elster (1989), some forms of cooperation are based on externalities created
by individual action, for example, participation in group action, a production cut in an
individual firm if it belongs to a cartel, a solidaristic wage policy. These behaviours are
often, though not necessarily, tied to some sort of mutual behaviour. Every act of cooperation
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1 . An additional consideration concerns Japan, the country of enterprise unionism. In this case, enterprise
cooperation seems to depend on the late nature of the country’s industrialization, which led to the precocious
formation of internal labour markets in large firms. In addition, Japanese industrial relations were literally
‘written’ according to the American model.
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brings some small benefit to everyone, including the cooperator. Although the direct benefits
for the cooperator are too small to motivate him to act, given that there are also the costs
of cooperation, it is better for all if everyone (or at least some) cooperate rather than
no-one. Under conditions of generalized cooperation, everyone reaps the many small benefits
of the cooperation of others, which all told outweigh the cost of this cooperation.
The ‘regionalization’ of cooperation is concerned with the presence of externalities.
External factors are those which cannot be produced by the single enterprise nor, within
the single enterprise, by means of the cooperation between capital and labour. We will
consider here three main policy fields where cooperation can be improved at the regional
level: (a) manpower policies and vocational training institutions; (b)wage policies in regional
labour markets; and (c) industrial relations policies. We need to remember that in all three
cases formal policies (and formal industrial relations regulations) are only one side of
the story. On the other side, we find also informal conventions and practices which are
of the utmost importance. As an example, retraining and relocation of the workforce which
is involved in a redundancy process often take place as a result of informal cooperation
among employers and trade unions at local level. Solidaristic wage policy at local level
means that both employers and workers’ representatives will respect unwritten guidelines
which limit wage differentials. The involvement of the workforce in decision-making
concerning industrial organization (i.e. subcontracting, organizational and technological
innovation, training) is often the result of a largely informal local culture which is diffused
among and shared by the different social actors.
We turn now to a systematic treatment of the three fields of cooperation.
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Regional systems of cooperation
Three types of cooperation are considered here: capital-capital, that is between different
enterprises belonging to the same area; labour-labour,when groups of workers or individuals
cooperate (or not); capital-labour,with reference to industrial relations in the strict sense.
We are looking here at cooperation as influenced (i.e. favoured or inhibited) by
normative systems rooted in local culture and institutions. In his recent book on collective
bargaining, Elster (1989) gives some examples of this kind of norms. Norm of equality
means equal pay for everyone, regardless of type of work. Norms of equity range from
norms of proportionality of the form ‘to each according to his X’ to the norm of ‘equal
pay for equal work’. Reference-level norms give a privileged position to the status quo.
Norms of fair division are rules for sharing the surplus between workers and the firm
(ibid.: 215-16).
A first area to consider concerns training in general and/or specific professional skills,
which industrial development and technological innovation have made increasingly important
Table 1 Types of cooperation
Collective
Capital-capital
Labour-labour
Forms of cooperation
Individual
Training paid for and
carried out jointly by
enterprises and the
state
Solidaristic wage
Noncooperation
In-house training
Poaching
Efficiency wages
Job evaluation
Human relations
Neo-taylorism
policy
Capital-labour
Mutual recognition
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for enterprises. Each firm can resort to the market, poaching those professional figures
most in demand by paying them more. The phenomenon of ‘poaching’ is widespread,
especially in the USA and Britain. The ‘inflationary’ effects of these policies are well
known, as well as the spread of a culture of opportunism and low-trust relations among
partners. Alternatively, the firm can train ‘in-house’ and not consider the skills as a collective
good. But in this case, the firm, because it is concerned about making an investment to
train workers it is destined to lose (which often happens when the worker moves to another
firm or goes freelance), will often underinvest in training. Lastly, when there is cooperation
among firms, unions and the state, which will normally occur at local level, training is
considered to all intents and purposes a collective good for which enterprises cooperate,
and for which unions and the state assume responsibility.
This can be seen as a case of fair division of costs to enhance general productivity.
This has been the case through legislation in Sweden and in the German Lander, and more
informally (but also formally through collective bargaining) in the industrial districts of
the Third Italy.
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Germany
In Germany, the system of vocational training in small business (Handwerk)is a particularly
good example. It is the product of cooperation among employers’ voluntary associations
(guilds) at county level, regional chambers of commerce (which are public law institutions
with compulsory membership) and trade unions (through collective bargaining). The result
is that in Germany the training contracts for apprentices, particularly in small firms,
increased up to 700,000 (1984 figures), with a yearly number of 200,000 artisanal
apprentices entering the labour force at a high level of qualification. ‘To the extent that
the ability of the owners and operators to discover market niches, use advanced technology,
ensure high product quality, and manage an enterprise efficiently has contributed to the
sector’s employment performance, the latter is at least in part explained by the Handwerk
training system’ (Streeck, 1986). Since many of the apprentices later move to large firms,
the artisanal training system benefits not only the small firms but also the economy
at large.
It should be noted that the incentives for small firms to train people are not only
monetary, i.e. cheap labour. In fact, approximately 66% of the total costs of the dual
vocational training system is assumed by business, with the federal government, Lander,
chambers of commerce and labour authorities providing the rest. In this context, why
should firms train more people than they directly need, as actually happens? The answer
is that ‘in many sectors of the crafts, it is necessary for a single firm to train more workers
than it needs simply because it must replace not only older workers who retire but also
skilled workers who leave for industry, and because some of the apprentices switch to
unrelated occupations or better paid unskilled and semiskilled activities in industry’ (Maier
et a l . , 1986).
Note that the German training system is voluntary in nature, as government does not
interfere directly in firms’ choices; however, the credible threat of government intervention
in the field (as it was envisaged in the 1970s and 1980s to avoid skilled labour bottlenecks)
can be enough to move the private economy and the parties in the industrial relations system
to provide such a collective good as training. Sometimes, apportionment of the costs of
training through collective bargaining (having all firms in one sector pay contributions
into a common fund for supporting firms which train apprentices) has taken place. Moreover,
technological innovation diffusion and the trend among small firms to customize their
products and services seem to be major reasons for sustaining the training effort (Maier
et al., 1986).
The apprentices have full status in the firms: they are considered to be employees,
they are members of the work council and they participate in collective bargaining.
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Italy
In Italy, training policies have been devolved to the regions since 1971. This process gave
rise to a huge variation in regional performances in the field. In 1985, a national law
transferred small firm training to the regions.
The evolution of the vocational training system during the 1980s is the product of
two distinct channels: the traditional apprenticeship and the new workhraining contracts.
Apprenticeship decreased during the 1970s and 1980s, but still accounted for 554,000
people (1984 figures), 66% of them in craft firms. It should be noted that the regional
distribution of apprenticeship is changing, for although most apprentices are employed
in northern regions, the relative percentage has declined (from 63.7% in 1980 to 56.6%
in 1984),while the percentage of apprentices in southern regions has increased (from 18.9%
in 1980 to 23.5% in 1984).
To understand these data, it is useful to remember that the law gives the firm the
possibility of employing apprentices without increasing the size of the firm itself this
is a strong incentive for a firm to hire apprentices while remaining an artisan firm, i.e.
maintaining strong economic and legal (particularly in the field of labour law) incentives.
This is why unions tried to regulate the phenomenon through collective bargaining. Recent
legislation (1990) introduced for the first time a regulation of individual layoffs in artisan
firms. Collective bargaining agreements to apply the new norms were signed in 1991 only
in Emilia-Romagna, Piedmont and Lombardy . However, the status of the apprentice is
still weaker than that of the firm’s employees.
On the other hand, a new workhraining contracts system was introduced in 1984,
extending to these new forms of hiring system the economic incentives of apprenticeship.
Workhraining contracts have to be approved by a regional tripartite body including
employers, unions and public officers (Commissioni Regionali per I ’Impiego).The number
of employees involved, largely in small firms, grew to 152,000 (1985 figures); 54% of
them were in northern regions, 35 % in central regions and only 11% in southern regions.
After that there was a spectacular increase until 1990, with a peak of 400,000 new contracts,
and a decrease in 1991 to 238,000, probably due to economic recession. The geographical
distribution still favours the northern and central regions (80% of the total contracts).
Small firms with less than 50 employees account for 71% of the contracts.
This distribution is possibly due to the fact that these contracts are better suited to
meet a strong labour demand, and require some organization capability, which small firms
don’t have but their associations do, particularly in northern and central regions. The
consequence, according to some observers, is that they have been used to stabilize ‘illegal’
or ‘black’ forms of employment existing in the small-firm industrial districts (Brusco and
Villa, 1987). Workhaining contracts have permitted small firms to hire cheap labour
and so adjust flexibly to economic cycles, while the real training effort sustained by the
firms is a debatable question.
It is possible to conclude that in Italy incentives to train people are particularly strong
in terms of financial, fiscal and legal incentives. Employing cheap labour permitted through
legislation is the major incentive, but regional patterns vary greatly and much scope is
left to regional actors. As no uniform national system of vocational training (such as the
German one) exists, there are dramatic regional differences in the quality, scope and
sponsoring institutions.
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France
In France, the training system is still highly centralized and fragmented among different
public bodies, with a very weak relationship with enterprises and social actors. Particularly
weak are the roles of local and regional actors, which are normally delegated by central
employment agencies. This is why the creation of autonomous regional actors responsible
for employment and training policies has been strongly recommended (Commissariat Gknkral
du Plan, 1989). Moreover, small and medium enterprises are not the focus of a training
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system which is currently much more oriented towards the implementation of short-term
employment contracts. Though they recently increased, apprentices number only 150,000,
which means that only one-fifth of all skilled workers receive their training through
apprenticeship.
One of the reasons for the weak regional system of training in France may be the
structure and context of collective bargaining. In France, the traditional structure of collective
bargaining is based on the branche and takes place at national (40%),regional (20%)
or departmental (40%) level. However, the regionaUdepartmenta1negotiations involve
only one-third of the employees covered by collective bargaining and, in most cases, they
are ‘frasred’ into national contracts. More often local or regional before the second world
war, the branche negotiations have been more and more centralized since then. Moreover,
the branche negotiation itself has been weakened over the last few years and a trend towards
enterprise negotiations has taken place (Ministbre du Travail, 1989). This trend seems
to exacerbate the large firmhmall firm gap. In fact, only 5 % of enterprise contracts are
signed in small firms (i.e. with less than 50 employees) and the employees in small firms
account for only 0.3%of total French employees covered by enterprise contracts. If we
consider that almost 80% of the employees covered by enterprise contracts are in a firm
with more than 500 employees, it is obvious that the current trend towards enterprise
bargaining in France is a process which excludes the SMEs (Ministbre du Travail, 1989).
It is interesting to note that this is also the complaint of the ‘modernist’ section of French
employers: ‘It is possible that a contradictory evolution between large firms and SMEs
will occur: large firms will maintain their structures of personnel collective representation,
whereas the SMEs will be lacking in any collective representation’ (Enterprise et Progrks,
1988).
Furthermore, training negotiation increase at enterprise level has been negligible: from
0.9%of enterprise contracts in 1984 to 3.9% in 1988. This weakness, which is a major
obstacle to industrial modernization and labour mobility, gave rise to the strong suggestion
made by the French Commission on Social Relations and Employment for the Plan 1989-92
of developing collective bargaining at the local level (nkggociation locale de branche).
In 1988, a national agreement between employers and unions on ‘industrial modernization’
decided that branche negotiations should be concerned with training needs in SMEs, due
to the introduction of new technologies through the development of solidarity among firms.
Moving in the same direction, French modernist employers ask for cooperation at the
local level: ‘The privileged terrain for this kind of action is the employment district. It
is actually at local level that networking among enterprises of every size can be naturally
developed without excessive administrative obstacles, as well as solidarity with any voluntary
partner’ (Enterprise et Progrbs, 1988). From these different sides it is possible to conclude
that, in the French case, the lack of a local culture of cooperation seems to be a major issue.
Wage policy
We turn now to the area of wage policy. A first alternative here is to fix a salary for
each job position by means of rigid job descriptions. Besides being part of the traditional
job evaluation policy of the taylorist/fordist era, this wage solution has recently been
relaunched in line with the philosophies of individual bargaining in many countries: the
USA in particular, but also the UK and France. This situation was helped by the breakdown
of indexation systems or automatic increases and by concession bargaining by the unions.
A consequence of these policies is certainly a strong social and labour polarization within
the firm and at local level as well. Among the undesired effects is the reduction in the
degree of internal job flexibility. Firms of this type resort to external flexibility, i.e.
numerical, based on the freedom to change the number of employees through hiring and
firing (but see also the remarks made by Piore, 1986).
As an alternative solution, efficiency wage policies have been experimented with;
that means salary levels higher than those on the market and based on the efficiency of
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the firm. The aim of these firms is to make labour productivity ‘endogenous’ and raise
it above market levels, hence not transferable to other firms. The human relations systems
that prevail in these firms tend to use incentives, not just economic but social and psychological (group work, autonomy etc.), which motivate work and link it to that particular
enterprise. In this case, there is still that ‘paradox of the democracy of work’ described
by Aoki (1988) with reference to Japan: that is, the surplus of productivity resulting from
the workers’ performance concerns the firm alone, and the workers and firm management
join together against competitors and outsiders.
In some cases, these firms develop models of ‘full employment’ that include ‘a complex
package of psychological contracts, training, mechanisms of participatory management,
career incentives and production bonuses in which the expectation of a long-term
commitment between workers and management is of primary importance’ (Doeringer,
1989).
The third model, based on a solidaristic wage policy, tends to introduce criteria of
equity in the treatment of labour, instead of divisions among different skill levels (as in
the first model) and commitment to a single enterprise or ‘firm egoism’ (as in the second
model). Although a solidaristic policy has been fully implemented only in Sweden, norms
of equity came to the fore in countries such as Germany and in some Italian regions. The
unit of analysis here is not the single firm but the local and regional economy as a whole.
As an example related to the small firm sector, both in Germany and in the Third
Italy, artisanal and small industrial firms are involved in a system of collective bargaining
at regional level. In fact, given the smallness of these firms, collective bargaining at firm
level cannot take place. The result is that small firm wages in these regions are considerably
higher than in regions and systems where no contractual relations exist at regional level,
and the small findlarge firm wage differentials are less dramatic than, for example, between
large and small firms in the United Kingdom (Doran, 1984). This ensures that wage
competition cannot be a disruptive practice among small firms and that large firms cannot
easily exploit small firms as low cost subcontractors.
In this model, the advantages of the workers being part of an overall regional economy
are stressed, with positive effects, for instance on horizontal and ‘external’ (among different
firms) labour mobility: a considerable source of flexibility when the demand is not steady
and industrial readjustment is ongoing (Regini and Sabel, 1989). If we recall the points
previously made about the French collective bargaining system, we can reach the same
conclusion concerning the lack of local regulation at branchhegional level.
Industrial relations
As far as the area of industrial relations is concerned, the literature has developed three
models which largely correspond to our typology presented in Table 1 .
The first model is identified in neo-taylorist/fordist industrial systems (‘external
flexibility associated with a direct hierarchical control’, according to Lipietz, 1990) or
neo-liberalist (‘neo-liberalism permits the firms to resort to the external labour market,
minimizing the workers’ status as “members” of the firm and relying on the contract as
the main tool for defining the terms of the exchange between management and worker’,
according to Streeck, 1985). The second model is based on the individual worker’s
involvement (sometimes as a member of a group) in the performance of the firm. Worker’s
status is basically permanent and the labour relationship is handled not only on the basis
of the contract, but according to a set of policies for human resource management (which
can be implemented with or without the unions, but in all cases on a strictly enterprise
basis). Lastly, the third model, with its mutual recognition and joint participation, implies
cooperative relations between enterprises and unions at local economy level. The step
beyond taylorism and fordism here implies that ‘the involvement is bargained at the level
of the entire society, with workers and entrepreneurs bargaining social guidelines and
production organization at the regional or national level’ (Lipietz, 1990).
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The extreme variability and segmentation of industrial relations and labour regulation
regimes make any scheme or typology a temporary and in many respects an inadequate
tool. The intention here is to offer an interpretation of processes of capital/labour relations
as greatly influenced by institutional, social and cultural variables in the broad sense. The
development of these variables has been studied more often at the single enterprise or
national level and seldom at the regional level.
This is not to say that we do really find ‘neo-taylorist/fordist’ regions, ‘individual
worker’s involvement’ regions, ‘postfordist’ regions. We can rather expect to find some
correlation between the industrial organization and the industrial relations which prevail
in each regional economy. As Leborgne and Lipietz have pointed out, there are regions
where forms of horizontal ‘quasi-integration’ among firms is correlated with workers’
involvement in the firms, and regions where vertical disintegration is developed in
conjunction with neo-taylorism. However, we must expect to find rather mixed situations.
As an example of the neo-taylorist/fordist pattern we can consider old industrial areas,
where large firms based on mass production predominate. Vertical integration and
hierarchical relations among firms are the rule here. The workforce is largely semiskilled
or deskilled, given the mass production organization. Often decentralization takes place
as a matter of production decentralization towards low labour cost regions. Strict contractual
relations with the workforce into the firms are developed.
As an example of the ‘individual worker’s involvement’ pattern we can consider some
high-tech areas in the United States (the so-called Californian model). They are predominantly characterized by recent industrial development, small and medium-size high-tech
firms, non-union environment and union-avoidance employment policies based on
individualized practices.
High-tech enterprises have often been thought of as a type of enterprise with very
similar worker and, even more so, management behaviour, i.e. as non-union firms based
on individualized personnel policies. On the other hand, the same type of high-tech
enterprises behaves rather differently in the USA, where employment policies are developed
‘at will’ (high salaries in exchange for high performance but with no expectations of
enterprise loyalty), or in a region like Baden-Wurttemberg, where policies of management
by objectives, once limited to managers or white-collar workers, are extended to workers.
Another contrasting phenomenon, outsourcing, has often been presented as an example
of cooperative relations among enterprises on a regional scale, but it can have different
meanings according to its context. Whereas in the Italian or German industrial districts
(Sabel, 1988) or in some French regions (Lorenz, 1989) outsourcing means dense
community and trust relations, in the USA it is used mainly by enterprises with no union
affiliation (Harrison and Kelley, 1990).
Finally, as examples of mutual recognition, the postfordist pattern is usually considered
as a region where small and medium-size firms predominate, with dense networks of
productive and social relations and a mostly qualified labour force. Large firms in these
regions are interested in developing cooperative relations with small firms, as a source
of skills and incremental innovations, although opportunistic behaviour is not excluded.
Three case studies: Baden- Wiirttemberg, Emilia-Romagna and RhBne-Alpes
The regions considered here, Baden-Wurttemberg, Emilia-Romagna and RhBne-Alpes,
are among the European ‘success regions’ in terms of economic performance indicators.
They are often considered in the literature on regional economies as examples of areas
of ‘flexible specialization’. They also correspond to a current stereotype which underlines
the ‘southern European’ regional dynamism as opposed to the deindustrialization of ‘northern
European’ old industrial regions (Reclus/DATAR, 1989). However, comparative research
would make clear that many differences exist, as well as much confusion among various
forms of ‘old local systems’, industrial districts and new forms of flexibly specialized
industrial organization (Ganne, 1991).
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Table 2 Three European ‘success regions’
Baden-W urttemberg
Flexible specialization
SMEs, particularly
medium size
+
Emilia-Romagna
SMEs, particularly
small size
Rh6ne-Alpes
Some SME
districts
Large national
groups
Important large national
and multinational
groups
Interest organization
Strong at regional/
sector level
Strong at regionall
district level
Weak at regional
level
Industrial relations
Strong at regionall
sector level
Regional collective
bargaining for
SMEs
Weak at regional
branche level
Some SMEs
enterprise
bargaining
No SMEs
bargaining
Strong regional
structure
Weak regional
structure
Local systems of
concertation
Strategic public
planning
Human capital
policies
Dual system
+
Strong regional
structure
Key actors
Network of public/
private bodies
In particular, industrial structure varies among these regions more than the ‘flexible
specialization’ literature has admitted, and much more so the organization structure and
institutional relationships. This is particularly true for industrial relations. The EmiliaRomagna case seems to be characterized by a regional system of industrial relations which
is unknown in the RhGne-Alpes case, whereas in Baden-Wiirttemberg the regional variations
in industrial relations are less pronounced if compared to the national German system.
The three regions have strong industrial structures and an important share of total
employment is in manufacturing. The relative share is 36.7% in RhGne-Alpes, 39.1 %
in Emilia-Romagna and 47.9% in Baden-Wurttemberg (1985 figures). In other terms a
process of deindustrialization has not characterized these regions during the 1980s. It should
be noted, however, that this is particularly true for Baden-Wurttemberg, and at a lesser
extent for RhGne-Alpes, with Emilia-Romagna in an intermediate position.
As far as the dimensional structure of the industrial enterprises is considered, small
and medium-size firms are highly represented, particularly in Baden-Wurttemberg and
Emilia-Romagna. In Baden- Wiirttemberg, 50.6%of the workforce is employed in firms
with less than 500 employees. Note that this percentage is 47.4 in Germany and only 33.2
and 40.6 in the northern old industrial Lander of Bremen and Hamburg. The mediumsize firms are particularly strong in Baden-Wurttemberg. Looking at firms with over 20
employees, only 8.9% of total employment is in firms with 20-49 employees; 41.7%
is in firms with 50-499 employees; and 49.4%is in firms with more than 500 employees.
Medium-size firms are not only subcontractors but also autonomous market agents.
In mechanics and optics, medium-size firms (100-499 employees) account for 43% of
the total export of their sectors. In chemicals, electro-technics and plastics, the export
percentage of medium-size firms is between 20 and 30%of the total export of their sectors.
However, the Land, and especially the Stuttgart region, also contains some of the most
important German and multinational enterprises such as Daimler Benz, Bosch, IBM,
Porsche, SEA, Kodak and Hewlett-Packard.
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The technological excellence of Baden-Wurttemberg is sustained by a strong R & D
base: the relative expenditure is 3.5% of the Gross Regional Product, a percentage which
is the highest among the industrial nations. R & D infrastructure is particularly decentralized
through a regional system of innovation and technology diffusion centres. The efficiency
of this system for SME is confirmed by data concerning the technology transfer: over
18,000contacts were made with firms in 1988,90% of which referred to firms of less
than 200 employees.
Vocational training policies are particularly developed in the Land. Out of a total
$00 are trained in the vocational school system and 89,000
employment of 1,700,000,271
of those are in small and artisan firms (1989figures). As a consequence, the percentage
of skilled labour force in manufacturing industry grew from 34% in 1970 to 48% in 1990.
Among the components of the regional structure is the collective bargaining and
industrial relations system. Baden-Wurttemberg is characterized by pilot agreements in
the collective bargaining field, particularly in skill and training matters. Unpublished research
conducted by C. Deutschmann of Tubingen University has shown that ‘soft’ factors in
labour relations, such as personal networks, fringe benefits and trust relations, are highly
developed amongst the Baden-Wiirttemberg firms.
In Emiliu-Romagnu the small firms’ role is even higher, given that a large-firm sector
is very limited. Not only is a substantial share of the total workforce employed in small
and medium-size firms in traditional sectors, but the small high-tech entrepreneurship is
also diffused.
Out of a total working population of 1.5 million, 55,000are entrepreneurs and 376,000
are independent or self-employed. In terms of productive specialization, not only is EmiliaRomagna a leader in some consumer goods sectors, but it also ranks fourth (after Lombardy,
Piedmont and Lazio) in high-tech sectors such as machine tools, chemical-pharmaceutics
and industrial automation. Emilia-Romagna also ranks fourth among the Italian regions
as far as R & D expenditures as a percentage of Gross National Product are concerned
(Malerba and Onida, 1990). In other terms this region seems to be the first, among the
regions of the Third Italy, to have successfully advanced towards a more innovative
neo-industrial pattern.
As far as vocational training is concerned, 35,000are trainees in the provincial schools
(1987 figures) and 17,000 are on-the-job trainees through workkraining contracts.
Apprentices in Emilia-Romagna number 52,000,10% of the total Italian apprenticeship;
50% of the male apprentices in the region are in engineering, 60%of the female apprentices
are in the textile and tertiary sectors.
Collective bargaining plays a major role in skill and on-the-job training promotion.
Research conducted by ISFOL (the Italian Ministry of Labour Agency) during the mid-1980s
showed that the propensity to negotiate vocational training at enterprise level was much
higher in Emilia-Romagna provinces (in Modena 47% and in Ferrara 40% of the sampled
enterprises had negotiated vocational training) than in any other Italian region (average
propensity 17%). The role of regional collective bargaining is particularly important for
small and artisan firms. Emilia-Romagna is the only Italian region where regional contracts
for small-firm sectors have been applied since the 1970s. In 1992, a regional contract
involving the small-firm sectors was signed for the fourth time, whereas other Italian smallfirm regions like Veneto have signed it only for the first time. This has led to a certain
wage differential among small firms in different regions, but more generally to a ‘normative
practice’ concerning wage equality and work rules in small firms, in which Emilia-Romagna
seems typical of other Italian small-firm regions.
In the RhBne-Alpes case, the regional economic structure is traditionally more characterized by large firms (40% of the regional employment). Chemicals, electric plants, electrometallurgy and similar sectors were created during the second industrial revolution and
still form the base of the industrial economy. Moreover, the role of national and multinational
groups in the Lyon economy is high: 70% of total employees work in firms with their
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headquarters in Paris, and foreign firms located in the Lyon region number 103, with
28,000 employees - 15% of total industrial employment.
However, the crisis of the 1970s has provoked a new interest in small-firm districts
more decentralized in the RhBne-Alpes (Oyonnax in plastics, Val d’Arve in metal turning),
which have a long historical tradition. In the meantime, attempts have been made to turn
the Lyon economy towards new high-tech development (as in biotechnology) and four
new technopoles in the Lyon area have been designed. Partly due to the recent dynamism
of local government and the economic elite in promoting Lyon as an ‘international
city’, a trend towards the location of high-tech firms in the Lyon region has been
observed.
Almost 1500 firms classified as ‘innovative’ (in sectors such as industrial machinery,
pharmaceutics, machine tools, software etc.) employ 40,000 employees, that is, 27% of
total industrial employment in the Lyon region. However, the small firm development
of the region is not its central feature.
Another difference between RhBne-Alpes and regions like Emilia-Romagna and BadenWurttemberg is the weakness of regional actors. The collective economic actors, such
as employers and union organizations, are very weak, particularly at department and regional
level. Only recently an attempt to develop a social dialogue, for example at the Economic
and Social Regional Council level, has been developed. A regional policy to develop human
resources and training is not established, although the RhBne-Alpes region has the reputation
of having a well-developed system of general education and a diversified vocational training
system.
In ‘postfordist’ regions, local and regional institutions are supposed to play a significant
role in strengthening their regional and local economies in fields like training, industrial
infrastructures, financial support, real services etc. This is a very important aspect of the
typology. In fact, both in the neo-taylorist/fordist and in the ‘individual worker’s
involvement’ patterns, local and regional institutions play a very limited role, in the first
case because of the predominance of mass-production large firms which tend to internalize
these functions, and in the second because local institutions are much weaker than market
forces and each firm is interested in its internal labour market.
In other words, in the first case ‘hierarchy’ predominates, in the second ‘market’ is
the ruling institution. In both cases, little space is left to intermediate forms of regulation
in which local and regional actors can flourish. This is the case in the third pattern developed
here. Regions such as Baden-Wurttemberg, Emilia-Romagna and, to a lesser extent,
Rh8ne-Alpes, have developed a set of industrial policies at regional or local level to
promote their industrial structure. These policies are often part of a larger cooperation
among local government, industrialists’ associations and unions, and they are at least
partly related to a good industrial relations climate. This is particularly true in the
German and Italian cases, where the social actors have strengthened their links and
cooperate in a number of local institutions. This is less true in the French case, where
the interests’ representative system is weaker at regional level and still corresponds to
the previous industrial phase, with each local interest responding to its national centralized
structure.
Among other factors, these regions seem better suited to utilize the trend taking place
in Europe towards the weakening of the nation-states compared to the increased role, through
alliances and new decision-making networks, of regional actors (Schmitter, 1990). This
trend (at least functionally) corresponds either to a demand for autonomy on the part of
local actors or to an interest on the part of the European Community in forming alliances
with local actors in order to avoid the rigidities of national institutions. Some regions,
particularly if their productive structure is internationally competitive and their social actors
tend to cooperate, can try to develop a regional economic policy which will increase their
competitive success.
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Conclusions: towards new conflicts?
A trend towards the regionalization of industrial relations has been observed in different
national contexts during the last two decades. However strong are the unifying forces at
work, like the new network organization of firms - in which ‘local’ and ‘global’ are
no longer in conflict - and local actors are motivated to play a more direct regulatory
role, substantial differences emerge even among the so-called ‘postfordist’ regions.
Looking at sorriz common features of the postfordist models of flexible accumulation,
it must be emphasized that :hey are differently shaped by institutional context and structural
constraints.
First of all, consider industrial organization as it concerns large firm-SME relationships, and contracting relationships in particular. Clusters of firms where spatial proximity
is a condition for participation in changing product design and manufacturing are a common
example here. However, contractual relationships may be different if (a) there are large
firms with their headquarters and/or other production networks external to the region;
(b) there are large firms strongly linked to the regional networks; (c) there are mostly
non-hierarchical relationships among SMEs; (d) there are various combinations of the
three. It should be noted that as far as a regional production apparatus is considered, it
is normally a complex ‘superset’ of production systems (Storper and Harrison, 1991).
We have found such a difference in contrasting RhBne-Alpes, Baden-Wurttemberg and
Emilia-Romagna.
A second issue concerns the labour skill base of the region. The literature has often
underlined the richness of informal sources of skills through on-the-job training as a common
feature of flexible specialization regions (Piore and Sabel, 1984: 274ff.). However, these
sources are more and more weakened by social factors (mobility, changes in family- and
firm-based ties, cultural propensity towards industrial jobs etc.) and technological/
organizational factors as well (the knowledge base required for handling new technological
systems, designing or marketing new products, is somewhat different from that needed
for mastering craft tasks). The traditional sources need to be strengthened by vocational
and school training, which is provided in different ways by regionalhational training
systems. Small-firm districts need to develop new organizational forms for providing such
goods (Trigilia, 1991).
Thirdly, work attitude and commitment to ‘sustaining product quality are often
considered as part of postfordist models. However, they vary greatly as far as local
institutions, traditions and practices of labour management relations go.
Fourthly, wage-setting has to combine incentives that reward individual initiative and
norms of equity which preserve collective identity and cooperation. But to define this
compromise, legal protections, welfare and collective bargaining structures are relevant.
If such structures and institutions are well developed, as in Germany and to a different
extent in the Third Italy, the regional economy will be different than in the USA, UK,
France and Japan, where a strong dualism between large and small firms is the rule.
Finally, we have considered trends towards the creation of local/regional levels of
industrial relations regulation. This same process may also present another aspect, that
of deregulation. A significant example is that of social dumping in Europe, defined as
‘recourse to working conditions and social norms which are substandard with respect to
the productivity levels that the economy could normally justify’ (Observatoire social
europten, 1990). In other words, free capital and labour mobility in Europe could enhance
regional differences in labour costs, social security programmes and collective bargaining.
In their decisions to localize their investments, enterprises (especially the multinationals)
would be attracted by the existence of different regional regulation regimes, not only for
capital but for labour too. In fact, certain firms might be attracted by regions where
cooperation between capital and labour has produced the accumulation of skills, outsourcing
networks, specialized resources, social consensus - though most probably this argument
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concerns only those investments which use qualified labour, technicians, researchers and
managerial and professional elites sensitive to certain social and environmental conditions.
It is interesting to note that both in Baden-Wurttemberg and in Rh8ne-Alpes a substantial
amount of new industrial employment has been created in the last years by foreign companies
(often multinationals), particularly in high-tech sectors. These companies have localized
their European headquarters and their R & D plants in these regions. However, other firms
(or the same firms with regard to their production plant location) consider it more worth
while to settle in areas with low labour costs, because there is flexible legislation o r
substandard union agreements.
Considering the growing importance for firms of indirect labour costs (insurance,
welfare etc.), what has been defined as ‘regime shopping’ could prove to be an occasion
for a widening of regional differences, especially in southern Europe. The threat of
delocalization o r further deindustrialization of areas considered ‘socially rigid’, the creation
of ‘free enterprise zones’ o r enclaves (at the periphery of Europe o r even outside the
borders), in which immigrant workers carry on activities under the same conditions as
in their country of origin, could be the consequence.
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Paolo Perulli, DAEST, Istituto universitario di archittettura di Venezia, Ca’tron, S. Croce 1957,
30125 Venezia, Italy
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