Viewpoint: The Decline of Unions Is Your Problem Too

"Last week came news that the share of America’s workforce that’s unionized hit a 97-year low. A mere 11.3% of workers now belong to a union, and a great chunk of those are in the shrinking public sector. In the private sector, unionization fell to an abysmal 6.6%, down from a peak of 35% during the 1950s.

Most Americans yawned at this news. On one level that’s understandable. After all, most Americans aren’t in a union. It’s a vicious cycle: as unions decline, fewer people see their fates as bound up with unions, which just accelerates the decline.

But on another level, America’s non-reaction is striking. We remain in the wake of the Great Recession. Inequality and wealth concentration are at levels not seen since just before the Great Depression. This would seem as ripe a time in modern memory for a revival of organized labor. Instead, a basic assumption now shapes most Americans’ mindset about labor: the belief that the death of unions isn’t my problem because I’m not in a union. That assumption is wrong in two critical ways.

(MORE: What the Current Economic Outlook Means for American Families)

First, the fact is that when unions are stronger the economy as a whole does better. Unions restore demand to an economy by raising wages for their members and putting more purchasing power to work, enabling more hiring. On the flip side, when labor is weak and capital unconstrained, corporations hoard, hiring slows, and inequality deepens. Thus we have today both record highs in corporate profits and record lows in wages..."

http://ideas.time.com/2013/01/29/viewpoint-why-the-decline-of-unions-is-your-problem-too/
 
SCOTUS 4-4 decision hands public sector unions a victory

scotus.jpg


http://www.cnn.com/2016/03/29/polit...nds-public-sector-unions-a-victory/index.html
 
Maybe people don't see unions as offering them any value. So why shell out to them? In the public sector it's different. Unions get their stooges elected and then they force workers to support the union bosses.
 
with cronies pushing for more open borders and cheap labor... I am in favor of private unions... not public employee unions. Just as our politicians no longer represent those who vote for them... the same thing has happened to unions.

When their leaders go ahead and support democrats who bring not only a million more legal immigrants a year... but also illegal immigrants...

the union workers lose.
 
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"Last week came news that the share of America’s workforce that’s unionized hit a 97-year low. A mere 11.3% of workers now belong to a union, and a great chunk of those are in the shrinking public sector. In the private sector, unionization fell to an abysmal 6.6%, down from a peak of 35% during the 1950s.

Most Americans yawned at this news. On one level that’s understandable. After all, most Americans aren’t in a union. It’s a vicious cycle: as unions decline, fewer people see their fates as bound up with unions, which just accelerates the decline.

But on another level, America’s non-reaction is striking. We remain in the wake of the Great Recession. Inequality and wealth concentration are at levels not seen since just before the Great Depression. This would seem as ripe a time in modern memory for a revival of organized labor. Instead, a basic assumption now shapes most Americans’ mindset about labor: the belief that the death of unions isn’t my problem because I’m not in a union. That assumption is wrong in two critical ways.

(MORE: What the Current Economic Outlook Means for American Families)

First, the fact is that when unions are stronger the economy as a whole does better. Unions restore demand to an economy by raising wages for their members and putting more purchasing power to work, enabling more hiring. On the flip side, when labor is weak and capital unconstrained, corporations hoard, hiring slows, and inequality deepens. Thus we have today both record highs in corporate profits and record lows in wages..."

http://ideas.time.com/2013/01/29/viewpoint-why-the-decline-of-unions-is-your-problem-too/
I wonder if the below graph and free trade agreements have anything to do with that.

manu_zpssypakuco.jpg
 
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So let's artificially drive up the cost of labor! o_O

Forward, comrades!!!!
don't be silly! We have by greed and avarice driven it down. The only antidote to human instinct and our appalling, learned behavior, may be something artificial.
 
don't be silly! We have by greed and avarice driven it down. The only antidote to human instinct and our appalling, learned behavior, may be something artificial.
low wages open up the flood gates for immigrants willing to work for them. $7.25 is a lot of money for most people in the world. But $7.25 is too much for many low margin manufacturers.
 
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