The Prince George Citizen

Unions a weapon against inequality

- JARED BERNSTEIN, DEAN BAKER Washington Post

The topic of economic inequality can appear complex, with many nuanced causes and outcomes. But while the two of us actively engage in that debate, we also strongly believe that there is one overarchin­g factor that must not be, but often is, overlooked: worker bargaining power. On Labour Day, this problem of the long-term decline in workers’ ability to bargain for a fair share of the growth they have helped generate deserves a closer look.

There is, of course, a direct link between less worker clout and the decline in union coverage. In addition to directly empowering workers at the workplace, unions have played a central role in the drive for a wide variety of policy measures to ensure that everyone benefits from prosperity, which is the opposite outcome of rising inequality. This list includes social security, medicare, paid family leave, civil rights legislatio­n, fairer tax policy and higher minimum wages.

This view has been further buttressed by recent research using new data showing a strong connection between union strength and a more equal distributi­on of income, a link that makes the sharp decline in union membership over the past four decades particular­ly disturbing.

This decline has not been an accident. The political right has quite explicitly targeted unions with an array of anti-union policies, the most recent of which have been “right-to-work” laws. These prohibit contracts that require all the workers at a unionized workplace to share in the cost of representa­tion.

The impact of anti-union policy can be seen by the differing experience­s of Canada and the United States over this period. While the unionizati­on rate in the United States dropped from roughly 20 per cent in the late 1970s to just over 10 per cent most recently, unionizati­on rates in Canada have edged down only slightly over this period and still exceed 31 per cent.

That unions continue to thrive in a country with a very similar culture and economy indicates that there is nothing inevitable about the decline in unions in the United States. It was deliberate policy.

Given that powerful, vested interests are behind the decline in unions, reversing this decline will be a serious challenge, one that requires worker-friendly policies and new forms of worker representa­tion, such as centralize­d bargaining. For example, instead of organizing one restaurant at a time, unions must push for collective bargaining rights for restaurant workers across their industry. It also will require reaching out to all types of workers, not just those in constructi­on, factories or lower-paid services.

Two decades ago, we worked together at the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). EPI was and is a great place to work, but we felt it was important for the staff to gain an institutio­nalized voice.

We helped organize a union that affiliated with the Internatio­nal Federation of Profession­al and Technical Engineers.

We are well aware that in a labour force of more than 150 million, 500 workers isn’t exactly a game-changer. But the journey of 1,000 miles starts with one step. It is essential that unions make inroads into the types of workers organized by NPEU if they are to regain the sort of influence and power they had in prior decades.

Unions will continue to be important in traditiona­l stronghold­s such as manufactur­ing and constructi­on. But as the workforce becomes more educated, a powerful union movement will need to include many workers with college and advanced degrees.

If that sounds peculiar, in countries such as Denmark and Sweden, which have a far more equal distributi­on of income than the United States, more than 70 per cent of the workforces are represente­d by unions. In these countries, it is the norm for people working in white-collar jobs, including many with college degrees, to be represente­d by unions.

The United States may never approach Scandinavi­an rates of unionizati­on, but if we are even going to get back to 1970 rates, unions will have to make inroads into new areas. Part of that story has to mean organizing profession­al workers.

This week in particular, we proudly recall our small contributi­on to this effort.

Bernstein is a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and author of The Reconnecti­on Agenda: Reuniting Growth and Prosperity. Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

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