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  • Labor Union membership in the United States has fallen steadily since the 1960s, to 11

  • percent, its lowest point in 98 years. So, what are labor unions? And are they still

  • useful?

  • Well, American labor unions took off during the Industrial Revolution. The Civil War decimated

  • rural Southern economy, driving many young people to urban industrial jobs. Labor Unions

  • formed to unite workers, so that they had some bargaining power about wages and work

  • conditions. Historically, manual laborers were paid low wages, and then cast aside when

  • they could no longer do the work. However, when union membership exploded in the late 1930s, laborers

  • were able to demand better treatment. Since then, many companies have been forced to strike

  • a delicate balance between their relentless pursuit of profits and appeasing the unions.

  • Today, with so few American workers belonging to a union, many argue that they should be

  • done away with altogether. A 2008 report by the Heritage Foundation think tank argues

  • that unions are obsessed with equal treatment of workers - to a point where individual merit

  • is nullified, and promotions are only based on seniority. The report also points out that

  • many of the repetitive manufacturing jobs of yesteryear are now performed by machines.

  • Modern jobs aren’t as suitable for unions.

  • On the other hand, the Economic Policy Institute reports in 2012, that the decline of union

  • membership is allowing employers to undercut low- and middle-wage workers. Their increasingly

  • limited access to good jobs and economic security contributes to the growing gap between the

  • rich and poor in America.

  • So how much power do existing labor unions have? Well, corporations have all but eliminated

  • private sector unions (6.6% rate). However, public sector jobs still have a 35% membership

  • on average - especially workers in education, training and library services. A 2013 Bureau

  • of Labor Statistics report identifies a pay-gap of nearly 4 dollars per hour between union

  • and nonunion workers - which is over 7,000 dollars more per year. Unions also have more

  • access to employer healthcare and insurance benefits.

  • For the workplaces that do have unions, members continue to benefit from higher wages and

  • job security than their nonunion counterparts - so they are still very useful in America.

  • However, Labor Unionsconstant decline in popularity calls into question the future

  • of organized labor. The debate on the ultimate merits and necessity of American labor unions

  • rages on.

  • Learn more about American economy by checking out this video here!

  • This graph shows that the number of jobs added year over year.

  • The deep in jobs added from 2008 to 2010 represents the busting of housing bubble,

  • the subprime mortgage disaster, and the great recession.

  • And click to subscribe to TestTube Daily!

Labor Union membership in the United States has fallen steadily since the 1960s, to 11

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