Monopsony in Labour Markets: The Corporate Law Contribution

45 Pages Posted: 9 Jan 2025 Last revised: 9 Jan 2025

See all articles by David Cabrelli

David Cabrelli

University of Edinburgh - School of Law

Ewa Kruszewska

University of Essex - School of Law

Date Written: January 09, 2025

Abstract

Labour economists have in recent years attributed wage stagnation to employers' monopsony or oligopsony powers, which may be a consequence of corporate mergers. Traditional competition law cannot see the problem because it focuses on the effects of mergers on output markets (goods/services) and not input markets (labour). This article draws a parallel with company law (including takeover regulations), which it argues is oblivious to the adverse labour market effects of mergers because it narrowly focuses on capital (shareholders) and not labour (workers). These blind spots mean that horizonal mergers that lead to concentrated labour markets but not concentrated products markets remain unregulated, exacerbating the wage stagnation. The article examines possible changes to takeover regulations that may address this problem, and concludes that the prevailing shareholder-centric DNA of company law is an obstacle to any measure that might favour employees. As long as company law remains fixated on one input (capital), the only viable primary line of assault on monopsonistic/oligopsonistic labour markets, it seems, is a reorientation of competition law (e.g. expansion of what counts as the public interest in a merger review). In short, in the absence of a holistic ‘enterprise’ law, the political-economic backgrounding of corporate law presents a formidable obstacle to change, since corporate law is incapable of putting its own house in order.

Keywords: Labour Market Monopsony, Corporate Law, Corporate Takeover Law, Competition Law, Wage Stagnation, Economic Inequality

Suggested Citation

Cabrelli, David Louis and Kruszewska, Ewa Maria, Monopsony in Labour Markets: The Corporate Law Contribution (January 09, 2025). Edinburgh School of Law Research Paper No. 2025/01, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5089907 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5089907

David Louis Cabrelli (Contact Author)

University of Edinburgh - School of Law ( email )

Old College
South Bridge
Edinburgh, EH8 9YL
United Kingdom

Ewa Maria Kruszewska

University of Essex - School of Law ( email )

Colchester, Essex CO43SQ
United Kingdom

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
35
Abstract Views
318
PlumX Metrics