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  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.70008
The Impact of a Rising Wage Floor on Labour Mobility Across Firms
  • Jul 21, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • John Forth + 6 more

ABSTRACT In April 2016, the National Living Wage (NLW) raised the statutory wage floor for employees in the United Kingdom aged 25 and above by 50 pence per hour. This uprating was almost double any in the previous decade and expanded the share of jobs covered by the wage floor by around 50%. Using a difference‐in‐differences approach with linked employer–employee data from the UK's Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings, we examine how the introduction and uprating of the NLW affected the likelihood of minimum‐wage employees changing firms. We find some evidence that the NLW reduced the rate of job‐to‐job transitions among such workers, consistent with predictions that an increase in the wage floor discourages job search. However, we find no evidence that the NLW affected differences in job mobility between minimum wage workers and their co‐workers in the same firm. Together, these findings suggest that the increased wage floor made quits less attractive to minimum‐wage workers in firms with limited opportunities for progression.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.70006
Performance Appraisals, Works Councils and Employees’ Presenteeism Behaviour
  • Jul 14, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • Christian Grund + 1 more

ABSTRACT Presenteeism behaviour, that is, working despite illness, is a common phenomenon worldwide and can have severe consequences for employees and firms alike. In this study, we investigate the relationship between the use of company performance appraisals and employees’ presenteeism behaviour. We use linked‐employer–employee data (the German Linked Personnel Panel) and apply pooled Poisson as well as linear fixed effects panel estimations. We show that the use of performance appraisals is associated with significantly lower annual presenteeism days in the amount of half a day, which corresponds to a 10% difference from the base rate. The results are driven by performance appraisals that are linked to performance‐related pay, in particular. In addition, the significantly negative relationships between performance appraisals or performance pay and presenteeism only emerge when a works council is present at the workplace. Our study contributes to the understanding of employment relation‐specific behavioural consequences of management practices.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.70007
Solidarity Betrayed. How Unions Enable Sexual Harassment—And How They Can Do Better
  • Jul 7, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • Cécile Guillaume

  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.70005
The Elgar Companion to Regulating Platform Work: Insights From the Food Delivery Sector
  • Jul 3, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • Angel Martin‐Caballero

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.70003
Occupational Autonomy and Wage Divergence: Evidence From European Survey Data
  • Jun 23, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • Thomas Rabensteiner + 1 more

ABSTRACT Wages across occupations in Western Europe have diverged, resulting in increased wage inequality. However, existing theories such as routine‐biased technological change (RBTC) or task offshoring fail to explain this trend. We propose a new explanation based on occupational autonomy. Autonomy measures workers' control and influence over their work process based on the tasks required in an occupation. Analysing individual‐level data from the EU Survey of Income and Living Conditions, we reveal a rising autonomy wage premium, that is, higher wage growth for occupations with higher autonomy, which accurately predicts the observed occupational wage divergence. We also find that the autonomy premium increases more rapidly in countries and industries with greater employee monitoring and outsourcing, as well as in countries with declining minimum wages. These findings imply that low‐autonomy occupations have been disadvantaged by recent socioeconomic trends that have altered power relations in the workplace. Notably, our analysis does not support previous explanations for occupational wage trends based on RBTC or task offshoring.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.70002
Does Team Production Rely on More or Fewer Employee Selection Procedures?
  • Jun 13, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • Alberto Bayo‐Moriones + 2 more

ABSTRACT Teamwork has become widely embraced in recent decades; however, its adoption carries significant implications that require thorough understanding. In this article, we study the relationship between teamwork and a number of selection procedures. The use of teams may increase the value of investing in comprehensive selection, as it facilitates the identification of workers with complementary skills. However, teamwork may also substitute intensive selection if team members engage in mutual monitoring. Using data from a representative sample of Spanish manufacturing plants, we find a significant negative association between the number of selection procedures and teamwork that is aligned with the mutual monitoring hypothesis.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.1111/bjir.70000
Challenging the Hypothesis of Neoliberal Convergence in Industrial Relations: The Swedish Conundrum
  • Jun 10, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • German Bender

ABSTRACT This paper investigates the hypothesis of neoliberal convergence in Swedish industrial relations, focusing on whether Sweden has shifted towards more liberalized economic models in the past three decades. The debate in comparative political economy is divided, with some scholars arguing that Sweden has seen increased employer discretion and income disparity, while others maintain that its industrial relations system has been stable and remains coordinated and egalitarian. The empirical evidence and reviewed literature suggest that despite growing income inequality, and although there has been some decentralization, the effects on wage inequality and employer discretion have been modest, challenging accounts of a clear neoliberal shift. This Swedish conundrum implies that egalitarian outcomes can be preserved through gradual institutional adaptation. Plausible explanations are discussed, drawing on the power resources approach and varieties of capitalism. The study contributes to a broader discourse on the resilience of coordinated market economies in the face of global neoliberal trends, by highlighting the importance of distinguishing between formal and functional stability in assessing trajectories of political‐economic institutions.

  • Journal Issue
  • 10.1111/bjir.v63.2
  • Jun 1, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations

  • Addendum
  • 10.1111/bjir.70001
Correction to “A Tale of Two Centuries? Expanding Constitutional Labour Rights in Canada and Their Impact on Legislation, Conflict and Wages”
  • Jun 1, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations

  • Research Article
  • 10.1111/bjir.12892
Make Work Fair: Data‐Driven Design for Real Results
  • May 13, 2025
  • British Journal of Industrial Relations
  • Deepa Kylasam Iyer + 1 more