Case-bargaining strategy in major league baseball


Assignment:

Review the case-Bargaining Strategy in Major League Baseball

What are the major developments in the history of the labor-management relationship within Major League Baseball?

What is "free agency?" How did the demise of the reserve clause and the rise of free agency in the 1970s fundamentally change the nature of

labor-management relations in baseball? How is this related to the issue of a salary cap? Why were these issues still important to contract negotiations at the time of this case (2005-2006)? More generally, how does the history of a bargaining relationship affect current negotiations?

What is the "luxury tax"? How is it related to the issue of the salary cap?

What is the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890? How is it relevant for companies and labor unions generally, and for MLB, specifically?

What "weapons" does the union have at its disposal in the 2006 contract negotiations?

Should Donald Fehr take a "hard line" in negotiations? Or should he be conciliatory toward the owners in light of either tough or conciliatory bargaining stances by the owners? How can one apply the findings from "prisoner's dilemma" research to this case?

What issues should the union view as "top priority" issues (worth striking over)?

Instructions:

All word documents will contain a standard CTU title page. Standard APA format is See CTU library web site and this course content section on the student portal for an example title page and APA guidance. The length of the individual project paper will be 400 to 600 words not counting the title and references pages. A reference page may be required based on the task. Unless otherwise specified, all individual projects will be delivered via upload under the specific assignment/task to the student portal. The IP paper will have a minimum of two references and two in-text citations.

Solution Preview :

Prepared by a verified Expert
Case Study: Case-bargaining strategy in major league baseball
Reference No:- TGS01874024

Now Priced at $40 (50% Discount)

Recommended (92%)

Rated (4.4/5)