Back to Search Start Over

New Zealand's Meat Board, Markets and the Killing Season: A Twentieth-Century Labour History of Unintended Consequences.

Authors :
Curtis, Bruce
Source :
Labour History; May2018, Issue 114, p93-112, 20p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

From its beginnings (in 1923), the New Zealand Meat Producers' Board, a statutory agency representing the collective interests of farmers, unintentionally and indirectly empoxoered meatworkers and their unions. This empowerment ivas instituted despite farmers and the Board being inherently hostile towards labour organisation. Through the Board, farmers exercised a self-interested collective control in local and international product markets that also benefited meatworkers in localised labour markets. The Board used its statutory powers to limit the scale and scope of meat companies and, by limiting their powers in the product markets of central concern to farmers, made these companies commensurately weak in labour markets. This analysis oioes much to the insights of Fligstein and Fernandez (1988) regarding weak employers. Farmers' unintended empowerment of meatxvorkers as militant unionists was a remarkable irony given the often bitter antagonism between the two groups over industrial relations in New Zealand. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00236942
Issue :
114
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Labour History
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
130127716
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5263/labourhistory.114.0093