Union Monopoly Bargaining Harms Millions of American Workers

Union Contracts ‘Reduce Wage Dispersion … by Reducing Pay of the Most Productive Workers’

 

 Apologists for compulsory unionism often suggest, with little or no evidence, that employees who oppose unionization of their workplace have no good reason for believing they would be harmed by a Big Labor takeover.  In a recent op-ed opposing passage of an Indiana Right to Work law written for the South Bend (Ind.) Tribune, for example, Notre Dame professors Barbara Fick and Marty Wolfson simply assume, without making an argument or citing any facts, that union nonmembers subject to “exclusive” (monopoly) union representation in the workplace thereby “enjoy … benefits.”  

As popular as this assumption is with union officials and their allies in academia, it is far from substantiated.  Moreover, in examining labor-management relations outside the context of the ongoing debate over state Right to Work laws, which prohibit the firing of employees for refusal to pay dues or fees to an unwanted union, a number of proponents of forced unionism have acknowledged, tacitly or explicitly, that unionization is detrimental to the economic interests of many employees.

  Take, for example, Richard Rothstein.  He is a longtime research associate with the Washington, D.C.-based Economic Policy Institute (EPI).  Each year, the officers of a broad spectrum of labor unions funnel millions of dollars from their forced dues-funded treasuries into the EPI, which they obviously regard as an ideological ally.   Yet Rothstein has made no bones about the fact that workers whose productivity is above-average typically get paid less when they are unionized:

In [unionized] firms, wages of lower paid workers are raised above the market rate, with the increase offset . . . [in part] by reducing pay of the most productive workers.  If firms with this practice are rare, competitors will be able to bid away their best workers.  

Rothstein’s understanding of how union contracts work is perfectly standard.  In fact, in the passage cited he is actually summarizing an article coauthored by another prominent pro-forced unionism academic, Laura D’Andrea Tyson.   And both Rothstein and Tyson are simply echoing the views of Harvard economist Richard Freeman, arguably the leading academic apologist for forced unionism in the U.S.   Freeman has actually commended union officials for being “remarkably successful in removing performance judgments as a factor in determining individual workers’ pay.”  

Of course, Rothstein, D’Andrea Tyson, Freeman, and other likeminded analysts of labor policy do not regard the fact that monopoly union representation routinely lowers the pay of employees with above-average productivity as an argument against it.  On the contrary, they commend such “compression of wages” as a blow for employee “solidarity.”

Do Notre Dame professors Fick and Wolfson dissent from the consensus as expressed by Freeman and other major figures in their field that workers who stand to benefit economically if their employer takes their personal performance into account stand to lose if a union contract prevents their employer from doing so?  If they do, they should explain why, rather than pretend the consensus does not exist.

On the other hand, if Fick and Wolfson do acknowledge that union contracts normally reduce the pay of “the most productive workers,” then it makes no sense for them to oppose enactment of an Indiana Right to Work law on the grounds that union nonmembers invariably “benefit” from unionization!

So-called “compression of wages” is just one of a number of ways in which large numbers of employees are economically harmed by union contracts.  To take another example, extensive research has shown that unionized firms “shed jobs more frequently and expand less frequently than nonunion firms.”   Inevitably, that means rank-and-file employees looking for promotion opportunities will find far fewer of them at unionized firms.  And in addition to economic damage, many employees suffer noneconomic, but genuine, harm when they are forced to associate with a union whose moral and political values they do not share.

In short, there are multiple sound reasons why an independent-minded employee might consider having a union as his monopoly-bargaining agent to be a detriment, rather than a benefit.  And the individual employee, rather than anyone else, including Notre Dame academics, is the best judge of whether he or she benefits.  Right to Work laws acknowledge this truth.  And it is the best single reason for making Indiana a Right to Work state.

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Nothing here is to be construed as an attempt to aid or hinder the passage of any bill before Congress or any state legislature.


“‘Right to Work’ Law Leads to Lower Wages For All,” December 4, 2011.

See the EPI’s 2008-2009 Annual Report, p. 27, and “About the EPI” at http://www.epi.org – the “think tank’s” web site.

“Productivity Forever,” The American Prospect, Summer 1993, pp. 36-37.

“Participation, Productivity, and the Firm’s Environment,” published in Alan Blinder, ed., Paying For Productivity, Brookings Institution, Washington, D.C., 1990, pp. 183-243.

“Union Wage Practices and Wage Dispersion Within Establishments,” Industrial & Labor Relations Review, October 1982, pp. 3-20.

James Sherk:  What Unions Do:  How Labor Unions Affect Jobs and the Economy,” Backgrounder #2275, Heritage Foundation, May 21, 2009.


Out-Migration not a creditable remedy for unemployment

Pro-Forced Unionism New Hampshire Governor Wrong to Boast About His State’s Job Climate

Pro-Right to Work citizen groups who are now close to securing sufficient legislative support to pass new laws prohibiting the termination of employees for refusal to join or pay dues to an unwanted union in several states, including New Hampshire, argue that one important benefit of such laws is that they facilitate private-sector job growth. From 2000 to 2010, despite the unusually severe recent recession, private-sector employment in the 22 states that already have Right to Work laws on the books actually grew by 0.3% overall, even as it fell by an aggregate 5.5% in the 28 forced-union-dues states.

Union officials and their allies nevertheless insist that forced-unionism states’ employment climates aren’t vastly inferior. To back up that claim, they rely heavily on a single gauge: relative state unemployment rates. For example, in his May 2011 message defending his veto of H.B.474, legislation that would make New Hampshire America’s 23rd Right to Work state, union-label Gov. John Lynch (D) boasted that the Granite State has “one of the lowest unemployment rates … in the nation.”

Unfortunately, Mr. Lynch’s defense of forced-unionism New Hampshire’s economic track record ignores one blindingly obvious and highly relevant fact … (see pdf file attached for full report)


Will Big Labor Score a Pyrrhic Victory Over Wisconsin’s Private Sector?

Restoration of Teacher and Other Government Union Bosses’ Forced-Union-Dues Privileges Would Quash Business Employment Growth, Undermine Public Institutions

This month, top officials of the National Education Association (NEA), the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME/AFL-CIO), and other government unions hoped to take a major step in their ongoing campaign to overturn the public-sector Right to Work law approved by the Wisconsin Legislature and signed by GOP Gov. Scott Walker early this year.

Wisconsin’s Act 10, commonly referred to as the Budget Repair Act of 2011, took effect in late June after withstanding a Big Labor-inspired state court challenge. A second legal bid to invalidate Act 10, filed by Badger State affiliates of the NEA, AFSCME and other government unions, is now pending in federal court.

Act 10 represents a comprehensive effort to rein in long-term, unsustainable spending growth by the state of Wisconsin and its localities. Key provisions abolish all forced union dues and fees for teachers and many other public employees and limit the scope of union monopoly bargaining in most government agencies.

From the beginning, forced-unionism apologists have publicly claimed Act 10 is unnecessary to put Wisconsin’s budget in order. But the evidence is clear both that government spending has excessively burdened Wisconsin’s private-sector employees and businesses and that restoring public servants’ Right to Work without being fired for refusal to pay dues or fees to an unwanted union will go a long way toward correcting the problem.

From 2000 to 2010, total taxpayer costs for compensation of Wisconsin state and local employees grew by an inflation-adjusted 9.2%, to a total of $19.83 billion last year. By 2010, state and local government compensation swallowed up the equivalent of nearly 17% of all private-sector wages, salaries, bonuses and benefits in Wisconsin. And over the past decade Badger State government employee compensation grew more than two-and-a-half times as fast as private-sector employee compensation, in percentage terms.

This happened even as the markets for several key public employee services were shrinking. From 1999 to 2009, for example, the number of K-12 school-aged Wisconsinites (that is, 5-17 year-olds) declined by nearly 7%, and the school-aged share of the state’s total population shrank by nearly 14%.

Private-sector compensation growth in Wisconsin could be realigned with government compensation growth over time by accelerating the former, decelerating the latter, or some combination thereof. And there is strong empirical evidence that protecting the Right to Work of public-sector employees spurs faster private-sector economic growth.

As of 2010, 29 states either had Right to Work laws on the books banning all forced union dues, or at least had no statute explicitly authorizing public-sector forced unionism. Over the past decade, private-sector business outlays for employee compensation in these 29 states increased by an average of 10.1% in real terms. That’s nearly triple Wisconsin’s private-sector compensation growth, and 10 times the average for the 21 states with public-sector forced-unionism statutes. Nine of the bottom 11 states for private-sector compensation growth have public-sector forced-unionism laws.

To download the complete Fact Sheet, click here.


Forced-Unionism Apologists Can’t Get Their Story Straight

Even Some Big Labor Allies in Academia, Media Admit That Right to Work States Have Superior Long-Term ‘Output and Income’ Growth

“[I]t is true that both output and income have grown faster in right-to-work states than in other states over the last decade … .” “[T]he decision to move production to anti-union [Right to Work] states has become … commonplace … .” “[O]ne important force [behind the decline of private-sector unionization] is the flight of companies to ‘right-to-work’ states where workers cannot be required to join a union.”

In Indiana, New Hampshire, and other states where citizens who want to protect employees’ personal freedom of choice and promote economic growth are fighting to pass Right to Work laws, Big Labor and its friends often claim that such laws, in the words of pro-forced unionism Indiana economics professor Marty Wolfson, “aren’t likely to be a factor for companies deciding where to locate within the United States.”

Inconveniently for Dr. Wolfson and other forced-unionism apologists who make similar claims, a number of their ideological allies are less dismissive of the facts than they are. Three examples are the anti-Right to Work authors of the statements quoted two paragraphs above, all made this year and all contradicting Dr. Wolfson. They are, respectively, John Miller, an economics professor at Wheaton College in Illinois, Washington Post economics pundit Steven Pearlstein, and the editors of the New York Times editorial page.

For more, download this Fact Sheet.


Why Are Big Labor and the Obama Administration Targeting Boeing?

Union Bosses Determined to Block Exodus of Private-Sector Employees and Their Paychecks From Forced-Unionism States

The highly controversial complaint brought by National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) Acting General Counsel Lafe Solomon against Boeing, in which he asserts that the aerospace company committed an “unfair labor practice” when it opted in 2009 to open a new aircraft assembly line in Right to Work South Carolina, represents a double-edged sword for Big Labor.

Mr. Solomon, whose nomination to be the NLRB’s top lawyer has yet to be confirmed by the U.S. Senate and who holds his position due to a temporary appointment by President Obama, filed his complaint at the request of International Association of Machinists (IAM/AFL-CIO) union officials.  Machinists union chiefs wanted Boeing’s new production line for its 787 Dreamliner to be built in their Seattle-area stronghold, and not in South Carolina, where Boeing employees had rejected IAM union monopoly bargaining. 

Officials of other unions have vociferously defended Mr. Solomon’s action.  For example, during a May 20 media event in Washington, D.C., AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka preemptively declared Boeing guilty of having “violated” the law and recommended that Mr. Solomon apply the same arguments he had made in the Boeing complaint to go after other businesses.

(To read more, click to download the full Boeing Fact Sheet)


Forced-Unionism States’ Young-Adult Population Virtually Stagnant Since 1980 Meanwhile, 33% Increase in Right to Work States

One key advantage that the United States enjoys over other wealthy countries in Europe and Asia is that the number of young adults in the American workforce has increased in recent decades, albeit at a pace substantially slower than our country’s overall population growth. In 1980, there were 37.076 million 25-34 year olds living in the U.S. By 2009, the most recent year for which age-specific state population data are available, the number of American residents in the same age bracket had climbed to 41.566 million. That amounts to a 12.1% increase.

Economists and ordinary citizens alike understand it is far easier for a country or region to promote sustained growth with the help of an expanding pool of potential workers, rather than through productivity increases alone. As the U.S. economy faces a number of serious challenges over the next few decades, the fact that our young-adult population has grown significantly since 1980 and is projected to continue growing in the future will be a key point in our favor.

However, the benefits of a growing young labor force are not being evenly distributed among the 50 states. Even as the total U.S. adult population aged 25-34 increased by 12.1% from 1980 to 2009, the number of young adults fell in nearly half of the states, and in a number of cases the declines were steep.


Right to Work States Benefit From Faster Growth, Higher Real Purchasing Power

Right to Work States Benefit From Faster Growth, Higher Real Purchasing Power – 2010 Update

 

For the full National Institute for Labor Relations Research Fact Sheet, download the NILRR FACT SHEET RTW States Benefit 2010.pdf attachment below.


Forced-Unionism Expansion Would Hurt Young Employees the Most

Low Union-Monopoly States Furnish ‘Safety Valve’ For Americans Aged 25-34 Who Can’t Find Decent Job Opportunities in High Union-Monopoly States, Census Bureau Data Show

The newly published 2010 edition of the U.S. Census Bureau’s Statistical Abstract of the United States shows that, in 2008, there were 40.932 million U.S. residents aged 25-34 living in one of the 50 states or Washington, D.C. That represents a 5.6% increase over the total 25-34 year-old population in 1998. In absolute terms, the U.S. population in this age bracket increased by 2.158 million over the past decade.

The overall U.S. population from 1998 to 2008 increased by 12.5%, well over double the growth rate for the young-adult population. The relatively slow growth in the number of 25-34 year-olds is widely recognized as a significant impediment to economic growth because of the group’s high participation in the labor force. Among males aged 25-34, 92.2% had jobs or were seeking them in 2007, compared to just 73.2% of all males 16 and over. Among females in the 25-34 age bracket, 74.5% were labor-force participants, compared to 59.3% of all women 16 and over.

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