
handle: 10419/302669 , 10419/301036 , 10419/302727 , 10419/302440
We study the descriptive and substantive representation of workers through worker representatives, focusing on the selection of German works council representatives and their impact on worker outcomes. Becoming a professional representative leads to substantial wage gains for the elected, concentrated among blue-collar workers. Representatives are positively selected in terms of pre-election earnings and person fixed effects. They are more likely to have undergone vocational training, show greater interest in politics, and lean left politically compared to the employees they represent; blue-collar workers are close to proportionally represented among works councilors. Drawing on a retirement-IV strategy and event-study designs around council elections, we find that blue-collar representatives reduce involuntary separations, consistent with blue-collar workers placing stronger emphasis on job security.
Worker representatives, ddc:330, representation, J01, P16, worker representatives, blue-collar worker, unions, J5, linked administrative and survey data, works-councils, J51, J53, works councils
Worker representatives, ddc:330, representation, J01, P16, worker representatives, blue-collar worker, unions, J5, linked administrative and survey data, works-councils, J51, J53, works councils
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