There is an inherent imbalance of bargaining power between employers and employees. There is, however, a pervasive assumption in economics, political science, law, and philosophy that this is a relationship of equal power. This wrong assumption diminishes our freedoms in and out of the workplace and undermines our legal protections in the workplace. It generates wage stagnation and inequality. And it undercuts civic engagement and representative democracy.
With the Unequal Power project, the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) sets out to shatter this assumption. To do this, EPI is bringing together new research across disciplines arguing that economic policy, employment law, philosophy, and political science need to return to the fundamental understanding of today’s workplace reality of unequal bargaining power.
We need to shatter the assumption of equal power because…
The Unequal Power initiative will directly address all these faulty assumptions and establish the need to center workplace power in legal, economic, policy, political science, and philosophical analyses. This transformational shift is required to advance democracy, freedom, and economic fairness.