Competition and Labour Law in Canada: Demarcating and Patrolling the Boundaries

The Cambridge Handbook of Labour in Competition Law (Forthcoming)

Osgoode Legal Studies Research Paper

25 Pages Posted: 11 Jan 2022

See all articles by Eric Tucker

Eric Tucker

York University - Osgoode Hall Law School; Cleveland State University - Cleveland State University College of Law

Date Written: June 1, 2021

Abstract

In Canada, as in most advanced capitalist countries, the right of workers to engage in collective action has been partially immunized from competition law, one of the basic norms of capitalist legality. The “zone of toleration”, however, has been contested over time and poses a recurring regulatory dilemma that stems from labour’s commodity status in capitalism. In the capitalist utopia, workers are commodified and atomized, each one competing against all others. But in capitalist reality, such an arrangement produces the tragedy of atomism. In Polanyian terms, labour is a false commodity and treating it as such results socially dysfunctional consequences, producing a counter movement. In Marxist terms, labour is embodied in human beings who resist their commodification and atomization, in part by uniting with other workers and acting collectively to improve their conditions and, perhaps, one day to create a different social order in which labour ceases to be a commodity. Viewed in either light, the zone of legal toleration within competition law is the product of recurring conflicts and struggles whose outcome is shaped and reshaped over time. In Canada, this conflict has been resolved by granting workers a legal immunity from liability under competition law for engaging in approved collective action to improve or defend their terms and conditions of work. However, the zone of toleration is contestable at three margins, explored in this chapter. First, is the margin between those workers who are covered by the exemption and those who are not; second is between the sale of labour power and the sale of the commodities it produces; and the third is between the means that covered workers can lawfully use to make their combinations effective and those that take them out of the zone of toleration. The chapter explores the history of the construction of the zone of toleration and conflicts over its margins.

Keywords: Labour Law, Competition Law, self-employed, dependent contractor, strikes

JEL Classification: K1, K21, K31

Suggested Citation

Tucker, Eric, Competition and Labour Law in Canada: Demarcating and Patrolling the Boundaries (June 1, 2021). The Cambridge Handbook of Labour in Competition Law (Forthcoming), Osgoode Legal Studies Research Paper , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3970972 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3970972

Eric Tucker (Contact Author)

York University - Osgoode Hall Law School ( email )

4700 Keele Street
Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3
Canada

HOME PAGE: http://https://works.bepress.com/ericm_tucker/

Cleveland State University - Cleveland State University College of Law ( email )

2121 Euclid Avenue, LB 138
Cleveland, OH 44115-2214
United States

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