Corporatism in Industrial Relations: A Formal Model: Colin Crouch
Corporatism in Industrial Relations: A Formal Model: Colin Crouch
Corporatism in Industrial Relations: A Formal Model: Colin Crouch
Corporati sm in Industrial
Relations: a Formal Model
Colin Crouch
Introduction
When classifying industrial relations systems in terms of cor-
poratist theory, it is useful to think of a continuum, starting at
one extreme with contestative relations, moving through plural-
ist bargaining and bargained corporatism, and ending at
authoritarian corporatism. Elsewhere (Crouch, 1983b) I have
defined the poles of this continuum in terms of the role of
representatives being, respectively, purely representative and
purely disciplinary. But this tells us very little of the inner
dynamics of different ideal typical systems. How do these
different kinds ofindustrial relations 'work'? In particular, how,
in detail, do pluralist and corporatist forms ofbargaining differ?
This can be done most clearly if the argument is set out formally.
There is nothing that can be called mathematics in this, but
readers who have a horror of formal analysis can skip the
symbols, as everything is contained within the verbal account.
Our starting point is a relationship between two actors in a
capitalist economy: organised labour (L) and (organised)
capital (C). The relationship between Land Cis a sub-set of a
wider relationship between labour and capital. Only some
aspects of that wider relationship become issues between the
organisational representatives. For them to do so means that
they have become politicised and must be resolved through
some political exchange, deal or bargain. The remainder of the
wider relationship is arranged by labour receiving orders from
capital in exchange for payment of a wage (the wage-effort
relationship), although usually orders are modified by personal
give and take. The parentheses around 'organised' in the case of
W. Grant (ed.), The Political Economy of Corporatism
Macmillan Publishers Limited 1985
64 Corporatism in Industrial Relations: a Formal Model
~c + ~~ = 0 (1)