ABSTRACT
Two key factors said to create conditions in which forced labor occurs are a lack of information regarding fair pay, and a lack of bargaining power for laborers. In short, employers can take advantage of laborers through favorable information and power asymmetries. If this is the case, then we might suspect that in those states where labor unions are stronger, trafficking for the purpose of forced labor should be less likely as they are able to mitigate both factors. Logistic regressions testing just such a relationship provide support, at both the individual and state level, for the assertion that where union density is greater labor trafficking is less likely to occur. While not addressing the socio-economic roots of labor trafficking, these findings do suggest a market-side response to this crime.
Disclosure Statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 While reporting the original data sources and the coding procedures from their respective documentation, the control variables were each obtained via the University of Gothenburg’s Quality of Government (QoG) Institute’s data repository (Dahlberg et al., Citation2022).
2 As represented by five year age-groups.