Big Labor has a friend in the White House. And a lot of
friends throughout the federal bureaucracy in Washington. But
this political clout cannot make unions relevant
economically. To the contrary, politics is about all today’s
labor unions have going for them.
Reported the New York Times:
The long decline in the number of American workers belonging to
labor unions accelerated sharply last year, according to data reported on
Wednesday, sending the unionization rate to its lowest level in
close to a century.
The Bureau
of Labor Statistics said the total number of union members fell
by 400,000 last year, to 14.3 million, even though the nation’s
overall employment rose by 2.4 million. The percentage of workers
in unions fell to 11.3 percent, down from 11.8 percent in 2011, the
bureau found in its annual report on union membership. That brought
unionization to its lowest level since 1916, when it was 11.2
percent, according to a study by two Rutgers economists, Leo Troy
and Neil Sheflin.
Workers should be free to organize unions if they wish.
But they should not be able to use the political system to railroad
workers who don’t want to join. Proposals for “card check”
and the like would encourage selection by intimidation.
Moreover, even workers who see unions as the best means to win
good benefits should be skeptical of organized labor’s political
agenda. Unfortunately, most union leaders see the
economy as a fixed pie, so workers can win only by getting
politicians to redistribute wealth from others. No surprise,
this process tends to empower politicians and enrich union leaders,
but leave everyone else worse off. In
fact, workers are best off in a growing economy where
there is more for everyone, And in which all people,
including workers, are economically free, rather than
controlled by Washington.
Bob K| 1.25.13 @ 9:43AM
Workers in government unions have learned how to get economic relevance for themselves.
Simon Templar| 1.25.13 @ 11:00AM
These government unions are really not unions but rather organized party members akin to the party members working in socialistic governments.
Simon Templar| 1.25.13 @ 11:01AM
If this health care system gets taken over by the government as proposed you will see this system "unionized" as well.
fmm| 1.25.13 @ 12:20PM
With the ongoing stimulus spending going to support unions they don't need the numbers of members they have had in the past to retain political clout. This is one powerful reson that the broken budgetary system in congress needs fixed with thehighest priority.