Sorry I've been posting so many articles lately guys...http://www.newsobserver.com/622/story/1116367.htmlUnions don't take root here
9/7/2008 9:16:07 AM
Sally Field sucks.
9/7/2008 9:35:38 AM
I am proud of North Carolina's anti-unionism. It is the lack of unions which has driven North Carolina's development from "a once poor rural state trying to attract Northern industry" to a modern, urban, industrial and technological giant. We rank high on lists of the best places to live, best places to work, and best places to do business. As a result, workers flock from all across the country for jobs in our non-union companies. In some years, Raleigh's population has grown as much as 10%. Meanwhile, the most pro-union states in the north-east tend to be losing population as workers flee high unemployment and poor living conditions. So, thank God the people of North Carolina understand that while unions may seem like a good idea on paper, in practice they are a policy disaster.
9/7/2008 9:38:01 AM
State still manages to be doing pretty well overall despite the lack of Unions. Doesn't really bother me.
9/7/2008 9:39:26 AM
^^ In practice, unions increase wages for union workers. The lower the pay, the greater the gain from unionization.
9/7/2008 9:41:47 AM
here is what i think of unionsI was on a job in NY State, near BinghamtonEveryone was going slow as fuck, so I pitched in to helpevery single person out there complained to the manager that I was doing their jobsso basically, if you are in a union, you can work slow and do piss poor workIm sure its different in other places, but this is the only one I ever saw first hand
9/7/2008 9:47:01 AM
9/7/2008 9:48:10 AM
^ It's not just the bosses. Union workers make more.
9/7/2008 9:54:37 AM
^ yes they do. To the detriment of the rest of society. That is ignoring the other shoe of unionization, reduced work ethic, which curtails worker productivity at the same time that the union is curtailing worker participation. End result: less production of goods and services, which means there is less to go around. Society suffers.
9/7/2008 9:59:35 AM
^ That part is debatable. The fact that unions increase wages isn't. In any case, do you seriously believe NC workers are rejecting higher wages to benefit society? Just like sugar producers oppose quotas and all sorts of farmers oppose subsidies?
9/7/2008 10:03:03 AM
Even in the most unionized state in the union, unions still cover only a small fraction of the workforce. As such, it is not voters voting in favor of lower wages, but voters voting against higher wages for a minority of workers and lower wages or unemployment for the majority of workers. So, yes, now that we know unionization is a policy desaster, voting against unionization can be a purely self interested vote. Afterall, how are voters to know whether they will be on the winning or the losing end of unionization when the losing end is so much more populous than the winning end?
9/7/2008 10:34:22 AM
broad based increased wages for unskilled labor will simply adjust by localized inflation. It's why everything costs "more" in heavily unionized areas.------Here's a counterexample where employees are smart enough to understand that unionization will fuck them rather than help them.
9/7/2008 10:36:18 AM
9/7/2008 10:42:21 AM
9/7/2008 11:32:31 AM
Unions falsley inflate the costs of business by requiring companies to pay benfits and higher salaries than would be normal based upon the market.Eventually, the companies can't afford it and either have to fire workers or go out of business. Just look at the maufacturing and auto industry in the Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Michigan areas.
9/7/2008 5:50:33 PM
That would make sense in theory, but all the countries we compete with in the auto industry have unions as well, don't they? I believe they all also have universal health care.
9/7/2008 6:34:02 PM
Where I work (which is in NC) had a union vote recently. It was voted down almost 7 to 1
9/7/2008 7:26:37 PM
^^The also have higher unemployment rates.
9/7/2008 7:37:51 PM
9/7/2008 8:08:37 PM
you mean ppl actually do their jobs in state govt?? lol
9/7/2008 8:14:42 PM
Some do...
9/7/2008 8:15:51 PM
good to heareach time i look at my state taxes for the year i do one of these praying that some of my dollars are used effectively
9/7/2008 8:17:49 PM
One of the tire factories in my home town voted to go union, then one year later voted the union out...they made lots of promises and didnt do anything. When you vote in a union you have to wait a year to vote them out.
9/7/2008 8:23:10 PM
9/7/2008 10:47:21 PM
I have never understood why employers should have less rights than employees, especially considering most/all employment is done on their property.As far as I'm concerned, as long as any employee can quit a job for any reason they like with little or no notice (assuming no contract otherwise), then any employer should be able to 'quit' an employee by firing them for any reason they like with little or no notice.Freedom of Association, ftw
9/7/2008 10:54:23 PM
^ Employers have inherent power over their employees. They're hardly being oppressed by unions or government restriction.
9/7/2008 11:08:11 PM
I can see why you love CEPR, since they clearly make the same abhorrent arguments you do. Just the most glarring, your link suggests that the EU central bank keeping interest rates too high somehow explains several decades of high unemployment in France, and not the policy and culture structure of France's labor market, although the EU central bank did not exist for a lot of that time and such would contradict several works, including the natural rate of unemployment, which states that no central bank can keep unemployment away from the natural rate in the long term, be it high or low.
9/7/2008 11:15:09 PM
^^union labor is a form of contract.
9/7/2008 11:15:33 PM
It is. And not even the most anti-union state would curtail any union that managed to get its employer to sign such a contract voluntarily. But as we all know, what is at issue are the involuntary unions that are not only imposed involuntarily upon the employer but a fraction of the workforce as well (those that opposed unionization).
9/7/2008 11:24:39 PM
I'll pull this line, since the people in your camp always like to pull it.If you don't want to work in a union shop then don't. go work someplace else.
9/7/2008 11:27:35 PM
^^ You're just angry the data doesn't support your basic models. Unfortunately for you, faults in alternative theories don't make yours correct. As correction, though, the linked doesn't make any claims about decades of high unemployment in France. I'm not sure where you're getting that. Here the important point from the link:
9/7/2008 11:28:12 PM
Exactly my point nutty. If I want to work in a union shop then I can accept lower wages in exhange for my employer signing on. But, if unionization is imposed by the government, then there is no where I can go to find a non-union shop. If you are an auto worker and live in Union states, then non-UAW shops do not exist. But, among right to work states, union work can be found at BMW, non-union can be found at Toyota, etc. And yes, Viper, while it is not mentioned in the article, France's unemployment rate has been significantly higher than its industrialized peers for almost two decades. The US just a few years ago made more cars than ever before in history, it is just that they were now being made in righttowork states, not Michigan. It seems clear to most people that the reason transplants are not openning in Detroit is for policy reasons. Do you disagree?
9/7/2008 11:48:10 PM
9/7/2008 11:50:00 PM
9/8/2008 12:18:36 AM
Not all unions are bad. A lot of the labor protections we have now are thanks to people getting fed up at the turn of the last century and unionizing. Some companies are still scummy and having a union in place can help keep that in check. Unfortunately though you have greedy unions that give a bad name to the decent ones.
9/8/2008 5:20:51 AM
Unions in general have been on the decline for the last several decades, largely because they were so successful in accomplishing much of their initial platform, rapidly increasing wealth, and problems with national union leaders. It is hard to envision rapid unionization in today's global economy, particularly without terrible working conditions (such as we saw in mills in the early 20th century). The main places unions still have power are in well-organized entrenched public unions and declining industries in particular regions of the country. Even in the auto industry, foreign auto makers (whose jobs are growing) are providing generous benefits while Detroit has been contracting. One could argue that this is in part driven by the threat of unionization, but the trends do not support it.
9/8/2008 9:29:18 AM
markgoal, the working conditions you call so terrible at the turn of the century were heaven compared to the working conditions in mills just thirty years earlier, when unions made no headway (back then the pinkertons tended to shoot union leaders). In fact, Unions only really grew after various state governments and then FDR passed laws enabling unions to coerce their members and other workers. As such, in my opinion unions are a political and cultural phenomenon, absolute working conditions are irrelevant. Of course, if it were unions which improved working conditions from the 1930s onward (the only time they started to matter), one wonders why working conditions and pay improved at all from 1600 to 1936 without the help of unions. GoldenViper, the article said that high interest rates explain France's high unemployment rate. France has had a high unemployment rate for decades. Are you suggesting they have a different explanation for the previous decade but decided to keep it secret?
9/8/2008 10:25:15 AM
^ Have you lost it? Please stop making inaccurate claims. The article does not say you anything about your decades of unemployment. Again, look at the data. That counts more than anybody's theories.
9/8/2008 10:32:10 AM
9/8/2008 11:05:37 AM
No, Golden, the article does not. But the history books sure do. As such, chronic long term unemployment disuades an assertion that french unemployment is caused by high interest rates. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/archive/9/9f/20071219000154!Unemployment_France,_UE-15,_G7.pngSearch engines are your friend. I image searched "France unemployment" and this was the first graphic that came up. And this was the third:http://www.economicshelp.org/uploaded_images/uk-france-719448.gif
9/8/2008 12:12:26 PM
^ That's not addressed in the article. The CEPR folks do suggest the interest rate as a possible explanation for Europe's current higher unemployment. How you twist this into talking about France's unemployment rate for decades I don't know.
9/8/2008 12:16:53 PM
9/8/2008 12:24:02 PM
Agreed. Unions once served a purpose, they no longer do. It's also pretty fucking funny when totally unskilled labor tries to unionize. If I can train your replacement in 15 minutes you really don't have much leverage.I can't imagine ever wanting to be in a union. Why would I want my pay tied to things like seniority and what other people are making? I'd much rather have it tied to my performance.
9/8/2008 12:27:31 PM
Yes, the article tries to prove its argument by only discussing the present. But the EU did not come into existance in 2006. As such, it would be a falacy to ignore the prior twenty years in an effort to ignore the fact that EU unemployment has consistently been 50% percent higher than the G7 average while at the same time being less productive. But, again, this is all irrelevant. Maybe the French and their fellow Europeans would be just as unemployed with better policies. Maybe it is a purely cultural phenomenon, I cannot say for certain. My point is that I know of no mechanism for coersive unions to have net benefits for society. Once granted special priviledge over their fellow workers, unions have a strong incentive to cut both employment and productivity in their captive industries. Afterall, tolerated laziness is a form of compensation, and by driving up this and other forms of compensation, unions will weaken their employers and curtail expansion, at the expensive of both customers and non-employees, both groups which dramatically outnumber the union members in question.[edit] I just realized that me and Viper are distracting this thread from its better purpose of allowing those here from industry to spread horror stories of dealing with unions. I appologize. [Edited on September 8, 2008 at 12:35 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/8/2008 12:33:11 PM
9/8/2008 1:39:25 PM
It's amazing how every TWW thread will see the free market advocates win out in the end.You people are just too highly educated. You need to loose some degrees to get in line with the rest of the population.
9/8/2008 6:35:29 PM
more union shenaniganshttp://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/blog/europeinsight/archives/2008/09/boeings_on_stri.html?campaign_id=rss_daily (albeit not in NC...just didn;t want to start new thread
9/9/2008 11:39:40 AM
Interesting article. The devalued dollar would make Boeing's planes very attractive.
9/9/2008 12:41:39 PM
bottom line is that unions served an important purpose before the major national labor laws were enacted....now that we have labor law that all businesses must abide by, unions are for the most part, an unnecessary bloat that negatively impact both workers and companies in the long run.
9/9/2008 1:36:45 PM
^Until you see the difference between union and nonunion wages. I work up north on constuction projects that are 100% union laborers and operating engineers and believe me the difference is significant.[Edited on September 9, 2008 at 8:52 PM. Reason : .]
9/9/2008 8:51:42 PM