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Battle for Worker Organizing Rights is Engaged

EPI News
                  MARCH 25, 2009            The Battle for Worker Organizing Rights is Engaged
 EPI has long argued that restoring the right to form or join a union would  go a long way toward returning balance to labor markets, where bargaining power  has been heavily weighted toward employers in recent years. That imbalance has  contributed greatly to recent historic increases in income and wealth  disparities between the very rich and everyone else.
     This month, legislation that would enhance workers' organizing rights --  known as the Employee Free Choice Act -- was introduced in both houses of  Congress. The law would impose real penalties on employers who harass or fire  union sympathizers, or otherwise try to scare workers away from a union.  If a majority of employees at a workplace sign cards favoring a union, the  act would require an employer to recognize it, rather than  undertaking a long, costly and destructive battle. The act  also would bring in a third-party arbitrator to produce a  fair contract if the two sides can't agree on one within a year.
   EPI prepared a question-and-answer document to explain the Employee Free Choice Act, and has been instrumental in  making the economic argument in its favor. EPI President Lawrence Mishel, along with Richard  Freeman of Harvard and Frank  Levy of MIT, authored a statement signed by 40 prominent economists,  including three Nobel Prize winners, who agreed that the reform would be an  overall benefit to the economy, and would provide a boost to workers when they  need it most. Now they are inviting other economists to add their voices by signing the same statement.
   Over the years, EPI's staff economists and associated scholars have  conducted extensive research on unions and the economy.. A partial list of  significant studies and analysis follow:
 State of Working  America 2008/2009, excerpts from select chapters  This signature publication by EPI, which has documented the economic  well-being of American workers since 1988, contains a wealth of information on  union benefits for members and non-members, especially for  African-Americans, Hispanics and Asians.
 Still Open for  Business: Unionization Has No Causal Effect on Firm Closures, by John DiNardo, 2009  DiNardo, a University of Michigan professor and  research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research, offers  overwhelming evidence that unionization does not cause businesses to fail.
 Squandering the Blue  Collar Advantage, by Josh Bivens, 2009 Bivens shows why unions are not to blame for the loss  of U.S. manufacturing jobs, and that in fact, the real culprits are manipulated  currency rates that make U.S.-made goods overly expensive.. A dysfunctional  health care system that burdens responsible employers with outsized costs, and  high executive and managerial salaries, also contribute to any lack of  competitiveness.
 Organizing  Prosperity, by Matt Vidal with David Kusnet, 2009 Using twelve case studies from a variety of industries, including nursing,  meatpacking and janitorial, the authors show how unions can benefit workers and  communities while making companies more productive. They also illustrate  the damage inflicted when union representation is removed.
 Unions, the Economy,  and Employee Free Choice, by Harley Shaiken,  2007. Shaiken, a professor at UC Berkeley, found that  "The yawning gap between the robust demand to join unions and the anemic  membership numbers reflects the fact that, for many Americans, joining a union  has become a risk rather than a right."
 Do Workers Still Want  Unions? More Than Ever, by Richard Freeman, 2007. In this paper, Freeman, a noted labor economist at Harvard University, writes  that an overwhelming majority of workers say in surveys that that want a stronger  collective voice on the job, and believe that the move would be good for their  firm as well.
 A New Social Contract:  Restoring Dignity and Balance to the Workplace, by Thomas Kochan and Beth Shulman, 2007 The authors note that at a time of soaring productivity, workers were not  sharing in the profits. "People are working harder and smarter, but they  are not sharing in the gains from their efforts."
   We have recently gathered our resources on unions and the economy to  one page, epi.org/laborpolicy,  and will be adding --- message truncated ---

 

Posted on: 03/25/2009


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AFSCME, Council 65 Organizers
Dean Tharp 651-439-5113
dean.tharp@afscmecouncil65.org