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Unions are Good for Business, Productivity and the Economy

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rucky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-21-11 11:33 AM
Original message
Unions are Good for Business, Productivity and the Economy
Content + links to sources @ http://www.aflcio.org/joinaunion/why/uniondifference/uniondiff8.cfm

According to Professor Harley Shaiken of the University of California-Berkeley,unions are associated with higher productivity, lower employee turnover, improved workplace communication, and a better-trained workforce.
Prof. Shaiken is not alone. There is a substantial amount of academic literature on the following benefits of unions and unionization to employers and the economy:
Economic Growth
Productivity
Competitiveness
Product or service delivery and quality
Training
Turnover
Solvency of the firm
Workplace health and safety
Economic development
Economic Growth

During the period 1945-1973, when a high percentage of workers had unions, wages kept pace with rising productivity, prosperity was widely shared, and economic growth was strong. Since 1973, union density and collective bargaining have declined, causing real wages to stagnate despite rising productivity. This decline in union density and bargaining contributed to the current financial crisis and severe recession, as unsustainable asset appreciation and easy credit too the place of wage increases most workers were not getting.

Productivity
According to a recent survey of 73 independent studies on unions and productivity: “The available evidence points to a positive and statistically significant association between unions and productivity in the U.S. manufacturing and education sectors, of around 10 and 7 percent, respectively.”
Some scholars have found an even larger positive relationship between unions and productivity. According to Brown and Medoff, “unionized establishments are about 22 percent more productive than those that are not.”
Product/ Service Delivery and Quality
According to Professors Michael Ash and Jean Ann Seago heart attack recovery rates are higher in hospitals where nurses are unionized than in non-union hospitals. According to Professor Paul Clark, nurse unions improve patient care by raising staff-to-patient ratios, limiting excessive overtime, and improving nurse training.
Another study looked at the relationship between unionization and product quality in the auto industry. According to a summary of this study prepared by American Rights at Work:
“The author examines the system of co-management created through the General Motors-United Auto Workers partnership at the Saturn Corporation…The author credits the union with building a dense communications network throughout Saturn's management system. Compared to non-represented advisors, union advisors showed greater levels of lateral communication and coordination, which had a significant positive impact on quality performance.”

Training
Several studies in have found a positive association between unionization and the amount and quality of workforce training. Unionized establishments are more likely to offer formal training. This is especially true for small firms. There are a number of reasons for this: less turnover among union workers, making the employer more likely to offer training; collective bargaining agreements that require employers to provide training; and finally, unions often conduct their own training.
Turnover
Professor Shaiken also finds that unions reduce turnover. He cites Freeman and Medoff’s finding that “about one fifth of the union productivity effect stemmed from lower worker turnover. Unions improve communication channels giving workers the ability to improve their conditions short of ‘exiting.’”

Solvency
Labor’s enemies assert that unions drive employers out of business, but academic research refutes this claim. According to Professors Richard Freeman and Morris Kleiner, unionism has a statistically insignificant effect (meaning no effect) on firm solvency. Freeman and Kleiner conclude “unions do not, on average, drive firms or business lines out of business or produce high displacement rates for unionized workers.”

Workplace Health and Safety
Employers should be concerned about workplace health and safety as a matter of enlightened self-interest. According to an American Rights at Work summary of a study by John E. Baugher and J. Timmons Roberts:

“Only one factor effectively moves workers who are in subordinate positions to actively cope with hazards: membership in an independent labor union. These findings suggest that union growth could indirectly reduce job stress by giving workers the voice to cope effectively with job hazards.”
The benefits of unions in terms of safer workplaces are hardly new. According to one most recent study, unions reduced fatalities in coal mining by an estimated 40 percent between 1897 and 1929.

Economic Development
Unions also play a positive role in economic development. One good example is the Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership, “an association of 125 employers and unions dedicated to family-supporting jobs in a competitive business environment. WRTP members have stabilized manufacturing employment in the Milwaukee metro area, and contributed about 6,000 additional industrial jobs to it over the past five years. Among member firms, productivity is way up--exceeding productivity growth in nonmember firms.”
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SDuderstadt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-21-11 11:36 AM
Response to Original message
1. Excellent! n/t
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texshelters Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-21-11 12:52 PM
Response to Original message
2. The one thing unions lack is that
there workers are more independent and less prone to manipulation and unilateral cuts in wages and benefits. That's why corporate funded governor hate them.

Peace,
Tex Shelters
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upi402 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-21-11 01:01 PM
Response to Original message
3. Labor on demand!
Companies can call the hall and request 10 workers, and usually get all the skilled and well trained labor they need. They don't have to pass on the big jobs, or keep people working when it's not efficient but they want to keep staff for busier times.

Around here, employers are like spoiled teenagers. If they aren't able to get all the workers they want, they retaliate with their governmental power and screw with unemployment insurance, etc.
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rucky Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Feb-21-11 01:05 PM
Response to Reply #3
4. That's how I found a great handyman.
Called the carpenter's local and had one over the next day.
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