Social Sector Reform in Latin America and the Role of Unions
Preprint
- 1 July 2001
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper analyzes the reaction of teachers' and doctors' unions to a series of social sector reforms in the region, including administrative decentralization, provider payment mechanisms, and the introduction of performance evaluation and private provision. It combines the literature of economics and political science to understand the conditions that shape different patterns of union behavior and their effect on policy implementation. The paper suggests that the main conditions influencing union behavior in the health sector are related to the structure of the market (size and level of competition) due to the predominance of the private-public mix in its employment. In education, where the public sector is the main employer, political alignments and the organizational features of teachers` associations also play an important role in explaining the behavior of providers' organizations. Considering the exogenous character of most of these variables, the paper concludes by making some policy suggestions to align the objectives of unions and policymakers through regulatory reforms.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- From Populism To Neoliberalism: Labor Unions and Market Reforms in Latin AmericaWorld Politics, 2000
- Recovering Political Dynamics: Teachers' Unions and the Decentralization of Education in Argentina and MexicoJournal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs, 1999
- The Political Fate of Market Reform in Latin America, Africa, and Eastern EuropeInternational Studies Quarterly, 1998
- Latin American Unions and the Reform of Social Service Delivery Systems: Institutional Constraints and Policy ChoiceSSRN Electronic Journal, 1996
- Cristián Aedo and Osvaldo Larrañaga (eds.), Social Service Delivery Systems: Sin Agenda for Reform (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, Distributors. Published by the Inter-American Development Bank, ILADES, 1994), pp. 151, £15.50 pb. - Juan Carlos Navarro (ed.), Community Organisations in Latin America (Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press for the Inter-American Development Bank & IESA), pp. 157 pb.Journal of Latin American Studies, 1995
- The Effect of Fixed Payment on Hospital CostsJournal of Health Politics, Policy and Law, 1995
- Development Policy and Its Determinants in East Asia and Latin AmericaJournal of Public Policy, 1994
- Was Latin America too rich to prosper? Structural and political obstacles to export‐led industrial growthThe Journal of Development Studies, 1992
- Government Partisanship, Labor Organization, and Macroeconomic PerformanceAmerican Political Science Review, 1991
- DEMAND INDUCEMENT AND THE PHYSICIAN/PATIENT RELATIONSHIPEconomic Inquiry, 1988