See MitchellDaniel J. B., “Incomes Policy and the Labor Market in France,”Industrial and Labor Relations Review, Vol. 25 (April 1972), pp. 315–335.
2.
GalbraithJohn Kenneth, The New Industrial State (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1967), pp. 247–261.
3.
An elaboration of this approach may be found in MitchellDaniel J. B., “A Simplified Approach to Incomes Policy,”Industrial and Labor Relations Review, Vol. 22 (July 1969), pp. 512–527.
4.
See U.S. President, Economic Report of the President (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1972), pp. 22.
5.
UlmanLloydFlanaganRobert J., Wage Restraint: A Study of Incomes Policies in Western Europe (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1971), p. 244.
6.
See FriedmanMilton, “What Price Guideposts” in ShultzGeorge P.AliberRobert Z., Guidelines: Informal Controls and the Market Place (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1966), p. 21.
7.
See MitchellDaniel J. B., “Union Wage Policies: The Ross-Dunlop Debate Reopened,”Industrial Relations, Vol. 11 (February 1972), pp. 46–61.
8.
Data on the characteristics of the two sectors were drawn from Employment and Earnings, Directory of National Unions and Employee Associations, 1971, and Pay Board computer records.
9.
Data obtained from Cost of Living Council, Bi-Weekly Summary, January 1–12, 1973.
10.
Data from Current Wage Developments (June 1973), p. 48.
11.
The results of the search were reported in Pay Board staff paper number OCE-103.
12.
Bureau of National Affairs, Inc., Collective Bargaining Negotiations and Contracts (Washington: BNA, 1973), pp. 18:935–18:938.
13.
Data on representation elections appear in Annual Reports of the National Labor Relations Board. Monthly summaries are available from the NLRB. The win rate for Phase II was calculated for the period December 1971-December 1972.