
Unions | |
Productivity Problems Of Unionized Firms |
Companies and industries in which unions have significant power have been steadily declining, and union power has been declining along with them. Less than 10 percent of the private work force is unionized now -- compared to about 27 percent in the early 1950s.
Since unionized workers earn about 15 percent more on average than nonunionized workers, these higher wage costs put unionized businesses at a competitive disadvantage -- which, according to studies, they are generally unable to overcome.
A forthcoming analysis by Kevin Hassett, of the American Enterprise Institute, and Federal Reserve economist Bruce C. Fallick identifies several strategies unionized businesses could pursue to overcome the disadvantage of higher wage costs. But it concludes that the strategies are not really effective.
Proof that unionized businesses usually reject the automation strategy is provided by the fact that firms generally invest about 30 percent less in new machines when their workers are unionized.
Studies show that American workers in recent years have become increasingly less convinced that unions are worthwhile.
Source: Kevin Hassett (American Enterprise Institute), "Why Big Labor Keeps Getting Smaller," Wall Street Journal, August 3, 1998.
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