by Beverly Aston (Author), Tim Morris (Author), Paul Willman (Author)
It is fashionable to speak of trades unions in the UK as organisations in decline. However, it is their organisation and, in particular, their financial status, which ultimately dictates unions' ability to survive, recruit, and influence employers. This book provides the first systematic picture of union financial status for thirty years, and reveals a dramatic picture. Though, overall, unions have become financially less healthy in the post-war period, many unions experienced an improved financial position during the membership contraction of the Thatcher years. It also shows that the long term financial decline of unions has been more affected by competition between unions for membership than by the effects of traumatic industrial disputes.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 268
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 26 Feb 1993
ISBN 10: 0521417252
ISBN 13: 9780521417259
Book Overview: A study of the impact of financial organisation on trades unions during the Thatcher years.