What happens if America loses its unions
By Harold Meyerson,
Are American unions history?
In the wake of labor’s defeated effort to recall Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) last week, both pro- and anti-union pundits have opined that unions are in an all-but-irreversible decline.
Privately, a number of my friends and acquaintances in the labor
movement have voiced similar sentiments. Most don’t think that decline
is irreversible but few have any idea how labor would come back.
What
would America look like without a union movement? That’s not a hard
question to answer, because we’re almost at that point. The rate of private-sector unionization
has fallen below 7 percent, from a post-World War II high of roughly
40 percent. Already, the economic effects of a union-free America are
glaringly apparent: an economically stagnant or downwardly mobile middle
class, a steady clawing-back of job-related health and retirement
benefits and ever-rising economic inequality.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
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