TY - GEN T1 - Toward a "Tender Offer" Market for Labor Representation AU - Kovvali, Aneil AU - Macey, Jonathan AB - American workers are not sharing in the robust growth of the economy. Traditionally, large numbers of workers sought to improve their lot by bargaining collectively through unions. But this strategy does not seem to be working for enough workers. Despite some recent renewed activity, private-sector unionization rates remain below ten percent and the unions that are in place have struggled to perform well, either in avoiding scandals or in delivering significant returns to workers in the form of job security or wage growth. This Article proposes a radical fix to the problem of declining unions. Drawing inspiration from corporate governance and its success in delivering financial returns to shareholders, the Article proposes allowing pro-worker investors to offer workers cash upfront for the right to represent them. If an investor succeeds in persuading a majority of workers in a workplace, the investor would be certified as the exclusive bargaining representative for the workers, and would be entitled to a percentage of any wage gains it obtained for the workers through collective bargaining. The resulting market for union representation would deliver cash to workers upfront, allow investors to demonstrate their capacity for delivering concrete results to workers, and attract resources to the cause of improving workers' conditions of employment. This new methodological approach also provides a lens for a constructive reevaluation of the objectives and tactics of American labor law. DA - 2022-10-31 PY - 2024 PB - unav JO - Boston College Law Review IS - 7 VL - 63 SP - 2111-2168 ER -