Abstract
Public sector industrial relations in Germany consist of two parts. On the one hand, wages and working conditions for civil servants are unilaterally determined by law, and on the other, there is a completely developed industrial relations system for non-civil servants (employees) working in the sector. Remarkably, although they have no right to take industrial action, civil servants are not in a worse situation than employees. In view of a simple concept of industrial relations where employers and workers are in complementary labour market roles, this seems difficult to explain. Indeed, public sector industrial relations are more complex. The article suggests that bargaining in the public sector is less an economic procedure than a dispute over the political, societal and statutory recognition of public services and an adequate participation of employees. Being aware of this special character of public sector industrial relations, the United Services Trade Union (Ver.di) tries to back strikes by organising societal support, whereas the German Federation of Civil Servants (DBB) operates more by lobbying in the political sphere and by recourse to the constitution. In spite of a general decline in collective bargaining and trade union density, and long years of austerity, both types of industrial relations are relatively stable.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the Hans-Böckler-Foundation (Germany) for generous support and helpful discussions.
Notes
1. Empirically, this article is primarily based on document analysis and interviews conducted in Germany during the research project ‘Crisis, State and Labour Relations: Austerity Policy and Public Sector Labour Relations’ at the Forschungsinstitut für Arbeit, Technik und Kultur (FATK).
2. For details see article 18 TVöD and Schmidt, Trittel, and Müller (Citation2011b).
3. In addition to the above-mentioned unions, further DGB affiliates are the IG Metall, the Industrial Union of Mining, Chemistry, Energy (IG BCE), the Trade Union Food, Restaurants, Consumption (NGG) and the Industrial Union Construction, Agriculture, Environment (IG BAU).
4. Keller (Citation1981, p. 352), speaks of a latent and a manifest form of threat.
5. Ver.di is not a pure public sector trade union, because several different unions have merged to build Ver.di (cf. Keller, Citation2005).