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Human-Centered or Biorobotized Automation?: Technological Codetermination in an Innovative Mining Company
Blekinge Institute of Technology, Faculty of Engineering, Department of Industrial Economics.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5560-1124
(English)Manuscript (preprint) (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

The impact of algorithmic systems on workers is a growing research topic in the fields of industrial relations and human resource management. However, extant research has largely neglected rapidly evolving and technologically advanced sectors where worker voice is strong, implying a significant and salient research gap. In contrast, we conduct a case study on technological bargaining in the highly unionized Swedish mining industry, offering findings that can address a noted puzzle in industrial relations research, namely the heterogeneity in strategies and outcomes among firms implementing algorithmic technologies. Drawing on 26 in-depth interviews and pertinent documents, we employ process tracing to analyze the drivers and determinants of collective bargaining on digital automation at the local level. Theoretical contributions include a multi-tier process model linking endogenous local power resources to exogenous meso- and macro-level power resources, influencing positive-sum versus zero- or negative-sum outcomes. Our paper highlights how the design of the Swedish industrial relations system can foster trust and influence the implementation of digital automation for the benefit to workers, firms, and society writ large.

National Category
Economics and Business Peace and Conflict Studies Other Social Sciences not elsewhere specified
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:bth-26204OAI: oai:DiVA.org:bth-26204DiVA, id: diva2:1858226
Available from: 2024-05-16 Created: 2024-05-16 Last updated: 2025-02-20Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. Essays on exit, voice, and technology: Industrial relations in modern Swedish labor markets
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Essays on exit, voice, and technology: Industrial relations in modern Swedish labor markets
2024 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic)
Abstract [en]

This dissertation explores current topics of the Swedish industrial relations system and how labor market institutions affects the behavior and outcomes of firms and workers, using qualitative and quantitative methods to explore the role of bargaining power in modern labor markets.

As the dissertation is composed of four independent papers, it begins with a customary ”kappa”, which conceptually binds together and summarizes the four papers. The kappa provides the reader with a primer to the Swedish industrial relations system, presents the exit-voice framework as a fruitful model to study sources of bargaining power, discusses how technologies are shaped by bargaining power, and concludes with a discussion of how the Swedish IR system is particularly suited to address current labor market challenges within the so-called Rehn-Meidner framework. The kappa is concluded by summary of each paper.

Paper 1 explores the strategies and interactions of gig platforms with Swedish and Danish labor market institutions, including unions, government agencies, and legislators. We discuss platform rationales and strategies that lead to evasion or integration in the industrial relations system via the collective bargaining model. Chapter 2 is a case study on how technologies can be shaped to produce positive-sum outcomes in the rapidly advancing Swedish mining industry. The study considers how power resources within the industrial relations system’s web of rules inform and enforces constructive dialogue between unions and employers in technological bargaining. Paper 3 explores wages and the competitiveness of labor markets, considering impacts to the wage bargain from individual bargaining power, derived through labor demand in local labor markets, or by collective bargaining power through Sweden’s centralized model of wage formation. We find comparatively modest negative effects from employer concentration in Sweden, but that blue collar wages are positively impacted by increased employer concentration. The paper validates popular wage-concentration models, showing an ability to separate individual and collective bargaining power effects on wages. Paper 4 compares how lower and higher skill healthcare and welfare workers are impacted by privatization, by analyzing wage and income effects from reductions in employer concentration, and by treating privatization as a domestic outsourcing event. The results find a significant negative impact to incomes for (blue collar) care workers, but no significant effects to (white collar) nurses.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Karlskrona: Blekinge Tekniska Högskola, 2024. p. 208
Series
Blekinge Institute of Technology Doctoral Dissertation Series, ISSN 1653-2090 ; 08
Keywords
Industrial Relations, Labor Economics, Structural Change
National Category
Economics
Research subject
Industrial Economics a nd Managemen
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:bth-26146 (URN)978-91-7295-481-6 (ISBN)
Public defence
2024-06-12, J1630, Campus Karslkrona, Karlskrona, 13:15 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2024-04-25 Created: 2024-04-25 Last updated: 2024-05-23Bibliographically approved

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Söderqvist, Carl Fredrik

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