Posted on 01/16/2012 11:37:44 AM PST by MichCapCon
Indiana policymakers are poised to pass a right-to-work law, which would make it the first state in the so-called manufacturing belt to pass such legislation. While the manufacturing belt isnt what it used to be, Indiana has the greatest concentration of manufacturing jobs in the country and likely has the most to gain from enacting a right-to-work measure.
A right-to-work law means employees cannot be coerced to join or financially support a union as a condition of employment. This makes unions more accountable since they have to prove to their members that they are worth the cost. At the same time, right-to-work protections are attractive to employers because they can be more confident that a union actually reflects the interests of the men and women it represents. Most employers can accept tough negotiations with employees; over the long run they benefit from having a workforce that is content with its wages and working conditions. A union that is unaccountable and free to pursue its own interests is less valuable to workers and can do far more damage to employers. And the numbers show this accountability improves jobs in right-to-work states.
The old manufacturing belt, stretching from New York to Wisconsin, still maintains some states with a large percentage of manufacturing jobs, but others have dropped. Pennsylvania and New York aren't even in the top 10. Michigans concentration is down to 6th, falling behind Ohio, Arkansas and Iowa in the past decade. Illinois remains near the middle, at 20th.
While Indiana leads the country in manufacturing job concentration, five of the top 10 manufacturing states have right-to-work laws.
Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and Wyoming all provide employees with right-to-work protections.
Manufacturing Jobs as a Percent of Total Jobs
Percent
Rank Indiana 13.1% Wisconsin 13.0% Iowa 10.6% Arkansas 10.6% Ohio 10.0% Michigan 9.9% Alabama 9.8% Mississippi 9.4% Kentucky 9.3% Kansas 9.2%
” Indiana has the greatest concentration of manufacturing jobs in the country”
Wow, I live in Indiana and don’t see too many factories around. RCA closed years ago, GE is scaled way back, GM Truck & Bus, and I could go on and on. So if we have the greatest concentration then what does that say about the country?
I hope this attracts more companies to Indiana. If this passes, way to go Mitch!
You might be surprised. Honda, Lilly, Rolls Royce, Pepsi, Alcoa, Caterpillar, Cummins, Finish Line, Escalade, Hillinbrand, Steel Dynamics, etc. There are some HUGE names with big operations in Indiana.
Lafeyette, IN, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Evansville, Terre Haute, Kokomo, Michigan City, Columbus, etc.... If you think about it for just a few minutes, you too would find yourself thinking, aahhhh yes. These are all faily significant manufacturing areas.
lots of RV and boat plants up north here
Also... Roche Diagnostics, Nucor Steel, US Steel, Standard Oil (now BP), AM General, Chrysler Transmissions, Suburu-Isuzu (Toyota Camry), Navistar, Coachmen RV, ConAgra Foods, Hoosier Racing Tires, McCormick Spices, Bayer, Allison Transmission, Praxair, National Starch, Nestle, Boehringer Ingelheim all have manufacturing operations in Indiana.
Of course - I can also list manufacturers who have pulled out in part because of the antagonistic labor culture (especially in the norther part of the state).
"TMMI produces the Sequoia full-size sport utility vehicle, the Sienna minivan, and the Highlander mid-size sport utility vehicle."
Employment: Nearly 4,000
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