Working PaperFirst publicationPublished version DOI: 10.48548/pubdata-2225 Handle: 20.500.14123/10553

Can worker codetermination stabilize democracies? Works councils and satisfaction with democracy in Germany

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Chronological data

Date of first publication2023-05
Date of publication in PubData 2025-08-26

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Part of ISSN: 1860-5508
Working Paper Series in Economics

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Abstract

Many citizens are relatively dissatisfied with the democratic regimes they live in, which can be a threat to political stability. This paper reports empirical evidence that workers in firms with works councils are on average significantly more satisfied with the democracy as it exists in Germany than workers in firms without such a participatory workplace institution. This result holds in regressions for subsamples, in panel regressions accounting for unobserved individual heterogeneity, and in endogenous treatment regressions. It gives support to the “spillover thesis” that participatory workplace characteristics have a broader effect on society. Consequently, strengthening worker codetermination might help to increase the overall satisfaction with the democratic regime and foster political stability.

Keywords

Democracy; Codetermination; Satisfaction; Spillover Thesis; Works Council

Number of the series contribution

420

More information

DDC

330 :: Wirtschaft

Creation Context

Research