Labour Regulation and Competitive Performance in the Port Transport Industry: The Changing Fortunes of Three Major European Seaports

Although the European Commission has sought to promote competition in the port transport sector and recommended the adoption of `common principles' and a uniform `management philosophy', significant differences between ports persist in terms of management and labour regulation on the one hand, and operational efficiency and international competitiveness on the other. Through a social-institutional perspective, we demonstrate how labour regulation facilitated change and international competitiveness in Antwerp, but retarded the potential of technological and other productivity-enhancing developments, in different ways, in London and Le Havre. This demonstrates that, contrary to neo-liberal economic theory and the preferred (deregulatory) policy of the European Commission and many individual Member States, institutionally saturated patterns of labour regulation are more efficient than institutionally minimalist forms of organization.

[1]  F. Suykens,et al.  Ports should be efficient (even when this means that some of them are subsidized) , 1986 .

[2]  Jose L. Tongzon Systematizing international benchmarking for ports , 1995 .

[3]  R. Locke,et al.  Apples and Oranges Revisited: Contextualized Comparisons and the Study of Comparative Labor Politics , 1995 .

[4]  D. Sapsford,et al.  Persistent Militants and Quiescent Comrades: Intra-Industry Strike Activity on the Docks, 1947–89 , 1996 .

[5]  P. Meiksins,et al.  System, Society and Dominance Effects in Cross-National Organisational Analysis , 1995 .

[6]  W. Roche The End of New Industrial Relations? , 2000 .

[7]  N. Lamoreaux,et al.  Business Organization and the Myth of the Market Economy by William Lazonick (review) , 1992, Technology and Culture.

[8]  W. Streeck National Diversity, Regime Competition and Institutional Deadlock: Problems in Forming a European Industrial Relations System , 1992, Journal of Public Policy.

[9]  H. Katz,et al.  Converging Divergences: Worldwide Changes in Employment Systems , 1999 .

[10]  Charles Woolfson,et al.  Peter Turnbull, Charles Woolfson and John Kelly: Dock Strike: Conflict and Restructuring in Britain's Ports , 1992 .

[11]  Wolfgang Streeck,et al.  Social Institutions and Economic Performance: Studies of Industrial Relations in Advanced Capitalist Economies , 1992 .

[12]  R. Hyman Industrial Relations in Europe: Theory and Practice , 1995 .

[13]  P. Turnbull,et al.  Hitting the bricks: an international comparative study of conflict on the waterfront , 2001 .

[14]  Richard Goss Economic policies and seaports: The diversity of port policies , 1990 .

[15]  P. Edwards,et al.  Workplace industrial relations and the global challenge , 1996 .

[16]  R. Locke The Demise of the National Union in Italy: Lessons for Comparative Industrial Relations Theory , 1992 .

[17]  W. Streeck The Internationalization of Industrial Relations in Europe: Prospects and Problems , 1998 .

[18]  D. Jones,et al.  Social Grading of Occupations , 1950 .

[19]  Richard M. Locke,et al.  Employment Relations in a Changing World Economy , 1997 .