All Posts Tagged With: "Employment Contracts Act"

Back Toward Serfdom in New Zealand

In the September 2000 issue of this magazine I reported that the Labour Party in New Zealand, at the behest of labor unions, had repealed the 1991 Employment Contracts Act (ECA), which had abolished compulsory unionism there. In its place was substituted the Employment Relations Act (ERA) to help unions reverse their drastic decline in [...]

1Apr2004 | Charles W. Baird | 0 comments | Continued

A Light Goes Out in New Zealand

I have often referred to New Zealand’s 1991 Employment Contracts Act (ECA) as a model of voluntary unionism that we in the United States would be wise to emulate. Notwithstanding its shortcomings—including its mandatory personal grievance provisions, its creation of the specialist Employment Court, and its failure to do anything about the minimum-wage law—the ECA [...]

1Sep2000 | Charles W. Baird | 0 comments | Continued

Unions and Antitrust: Governmental Hypocrisy

Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act states that “every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy, in restraint of trade or commerce . . . is hereby declared to be illegal.” Notwithstanding that the antitrust laws have been used to favor particular competitors rather than the competitive process, the Act [...]

1Feb2000 | Charles W. Baird | 0 comments | Continued

Freedom-for-Labor Day in New Zealand

May 15, 1991, is a day that shall live in glory in the history of the world-wide struggle to free working men and women from the shackles of compulsory unionism. On that date the New Zealand Parliament enacted the Employment Contracts Act (ECA), a piece of legislation that, notwithstanding its two faults, could be used [...]

1Oct1996 | Charles W. Baird | 0 comments | Continued
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