Except that all of those raw statistics can be shown to prove any point you would like….
The simple fact is that union representation is not large enough in any US state to have a meaningful influence on the salaries and benefits or any other statistic you cite on a statewide level.
There is an article in the Wall Street Journal Wednesday with a compilation of studies over the benefits of RTW vs not at the state level and they said the same thing – and I posted the same thing elsewhere on this site last week.
I’m sure the WSJ is not a top read for the labor movement but the fact that they cited supporters for both sides and still came up w/ a “not likely to make a difference” is further evidence that what is happening in MI is significant for the labor movement but really isn’t for America one way or the other.
The truth is, with depressed wages comes less consumer spending (the *real* job creator), which in turn stunts economic recovery and/or growth. As wages go, so too, does an economy, and as 700's poster notes, RTW doesn't do anything to raise the floor.
The other inconvenient truth is that with depressed wages come a smaller tax base, and silly little things like education & transportation budgets get slashed. All that does is further the disconnect between what a business owner may be looking for, and the skill set the local employment pool possesses. Also kinda hard to move goods quickly/efficiently on an outdated network of roads/rail/airways, but that seems to be lost in ALEC's zest to demonize anyone that dare try and organize.
3rd world here we come!
First paragraph cited is accurate until you get to that “RTW doesn’t do anything to raise the floor” - but the fact is that unions haven’t done anything to keep the floor from falling out or in pushing wage rates up… if they were successful, they would have people standing in line willing to pay for union representation and benefits… it’s all economic – and includes the public’s perception of whether unions deliver a valuable service or not.
while US infrastructure needs to be upgraded, you need to travel outside of the US or even look at statistics at how efficient the US is and how well its infrastructure works.
There are a whole lot of countries that would take the worst US state's infrastructure if they could.
A large part of the US' advantage in the global marketplace is because of the outstanding transportation and communications systems that we have... some of which have been built by the gov't and some by private enterprise but untouched by anything else in the world.
Btw, airlines and their standard practice of putting employees at bottom of pay scale regardless of experience or work ethic is bad for the airlines. Not much better than rtw laws
And yet there is no willingness of any airline I have ever heard to replace seniority with a merit system…
States constantly undercutting one another (corporate welfare) is a much larger factor than whether or not a state is RTW or not...
The basis of the US which is different from many other countries is that gov’t at the closest level to the citizen is best capable of deciding what is in their people’s best interests….
MI couldn’t help but react given that IN was attracting business based on its own RTW laws…. It is business that creates jobs and business goes where risk is lower and return is greater.
Nope. Capital. They convinced a good chunk of middle class
America to work against their own best interest(s), and now they sit in their proverbial ivory towers and laugh and laugh while we fight each other...
People decide what is in their own best interest… not sure why it is ok to think that you can make that choice correctly for yourself but others can’t.
The real killer of American jobs is American consumerism which seeks the lowest price… doesn’t help that the US spent billions rebuilding Asia and Europe after WWII and Japan’s economic success has been copied by other Asian countries.
Suppose we would be better off if we just left the rubble there?
Unions seemed to haveout sight of their purpose which in mg opinion was to me a safe work place for people and have a fair salary. They now seem to only care about getting as much money as can be extorted out of the company and getting as much dues as they can. Why should an unskilled FA or person on a UAW assembly line get paid as much as they do? That is not a fair wage in my opinion.
Unions are on their way out. I don't know that what is left in their absence will be better.
The gov’ts of most western countries have laws that are far more strict than what unions pushed for at one time…. Thus, laws accomplish much of what unions once did.
With the exception of a very few jobs for which there is no competition, the marketplace DOES decide. If you don’t like what one employer offers, there are others who do it better – or else unions aren’t going to make a difference either. Labor can’t do what the marketplace cannot or will not do.
When is organized labor leaders and the AFL-CIO going to admit that they are running a failing strategy by reliance upon political campaign financing and lobbying?
Truth is the unelected, unaccountable, idiots do not have what it takes to be real union leaders. They are cowards, full of threats and buzz words.
Dismantle to the AFL-CIO, dismantle the campaign financing, and stop assaulting those that disagree with your position. Go back the old method of witholding production and shut the economy down. Only then will you begin to advance and stop retreating.
Very well said…. The reality is that there are people on here who would make excellent leaders for the labor movement – unless some of them step forward, they will be explaining the concept of unions to their grandchildren not much differently than we talk about vacuum tubes and 8 tracks – good ideas at the time but replaced by something far better.
" In fact, public-sector employment (i.e. federal, state, and local government jobs) declined in 10 of the past 12 months, in sharp contrast to 29 consecutive months of private-sector job growth. Indeed, falling public employment has been among the largest contributors to unemployment in the United States since the end of the Great Recession."
I guess we need another Republican president to bring back more big government. The charts show a big reason why the unemployment numbers were stagnant over the last 4 years.
http://www.brookings...eenstone-looney
You might want to note that a couple big reasons for the drop in gov’t workers is due to major reductions in US military activity and the reduction in local and state employment since those levels of gov’t actually have to balance their budgets.
And in this instance I'll echo what WT said. Like it or not, companies are looking at ways to avoid unions and they lose flexibility and control over how to run their business as they see fit. This is the direction things are going in, unions can accept it and change or continue to lose members and get dragged out of existence.
Thank you.
As noteworthy as the respiratory system or not, unions have to decide they will create an environment in which they are willing to seek the best interests of all involved… and that has historically been something the labor movement has been unwilling or unable to do.
In the airline industry, WN has built legendary success on top of high unionization because all parties know what works best for the company and figure out how to make it work for the company.
B6 and DL do the same thing … they just happen to figure out how to allow employees to win better in their model than employees do at other airlines – and thus provide little to no incentive for employees to seek unionization.
Labor is not the only side that has to choose to cooperate but it is as obvious as the air we breathe that the traditional labor-mgmt relationship which is based on each side contentiously seeking what is best for them regardless of the impact on the other side is dead and will only result in further declines for the labor movement… which is more vulnerable than business or the taxpayer.
In my case, I didn't- my employer merged with yours, and you shouldn't be surprised that people are working to regain representation for the combined entity.
And all you have to do is convince enough of them that the labor mgmt model is superior to what they have…. With DL expecting its profits to continue to grow and its employees to see increased wages, it will be very hard to expect those employees to give up what they have for something that is not producing anywhere close in comparison….