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Trade unions and the social contract: British and Swedish style

TOM GORE (Assistant Rector, Liverpool Polytechnic)

Industrial and Commercial Training

ISSN: 0019-7858

Article publication date: 1 December 1974

119

Abstract

The problem facing the British economy is to curb inflation, reduce the deficit on the balance of payments, now running at £4,000 million a year, raise company profits to improve new capital investment, improve efficiency and productivity and to contain wage demands. The competitive power of British exports in the world will depend to a large extent on labour costs and managerial competence. Labour costs largely depend on the attitudes and actions of the trade unions, and in full employment their power is considerable. It can have far reaching social and economic effects. Their failure in the past two decades to readjust their philosophy, their organisations and institutional arrangements, created in times of mass unemployment, to conditions of full employment is partly the reason for the present state of industrial relations: backward, inward looking and divisive.

Citation

GORE, T. (1974), "Trade unions and the social contract: British and Swedish style", Industrial and Commercial Training, Vol. 6 No. 12, pp. 561-566. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb003436

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1974, MCB UP Limited

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