Posted on 04/13/2015 3:00:07 PM PDT by Kaslin
Unions are in trouble. Membership is declining, public pension plans are dangerously underfunded, and young workers are not interested in diverting a portion of their paychecks to dues that offer them few benefits in return. Half the states have passed right to work legislation that says that workers cannot be forced to join a union as a condition of employment. In the face of these challenges, the union membership rate has fallen to a 100-year low.
Membership rates continue to fall as traditionally unionized industries such as steel and textiles move offshore and younger workers choose the non-union sector. Only 4 percent of employed 16 to 24 year-olds are union members, and the membership rate for workers 25 to 34 years old is less than 10 percent. Union shops tend to value tenure over skill, and merit bonuses are nowhere to be found. Young workers are the first to be fired, even if they are more competent than experienced employees. Workers aged 45 to 64 have the highest union participation rate at 14 percent.
Given the costs of joining a union, it is unsurprising that unionization rates increase with age and few young people clamor to sign up. Younger workers already ask what that FICA tax is doing in their paycheck, and union dues add another 2 percent to 4 percent tax. United Food and Commercial Workers dues range from $19 to $60 a month, according to the unions website. Initiation fees can add another $50 to $100, the price of a years worth of Netflix.
Reasonable people would expect union bosses to reevaluate unpopular policies in an attempt to attract and retain new members. Reasonable people would be mistaken. Rather than competing in the labor market, union bosses favor influencing government policy by doubling down on political donations.
Unions are required to file annual financial and membership data with the Department of Labor, and recently-released LM-2 forms show that unions continue to struggle to gain new members.
United Food & Commercial Workers International Union membership has fallen 4 percent from its peak in 2009, to 1.3 million. Over this same time, employment has risen by 7 percent. Service Employees International Union membership has fallen 2 percent from its peak in 2011, to 1.9 million. AFL-CIO membership has fallen 7 percent from its peak in 2005 to 12.7 million, although membership has risen over the past few years.
In 1983, the first year in which comparable union membership data are available, 20 percent of employees were unionized. By 1990, 16 percent of employees were unionized. The unionized share currently stands at 11 percent. This prolonged decline has been driven by a sharp drop in private sector unionization rates. Today, only 7 percent of private sector workers are union members, compared with 36 percent of public sector workers.
With union pension plans in such poor shape, young people see little value in having part of their paychecks go towards propping up what is essentially a Ponzi scheme. In 2014, the Department of Labor found that seven UFCW pension plans had reached critical statusmeaning they are less than 65 percent funded. Some of these plans have been in critical status for seven years. Without a heavy influx of new members, these plans will be completely insolvent long before millennials retire. SEIU, AFL-CIO, and the Teamsters Union all also have plans that are in critical status.
One action that unions are not taking to get their finances in order is cutting pay to union bosses. At least ten UFCW bosses earn over $250,000 annually, and AFL-CIO Executive Vice President Arlene Holt-Bakers brings home $370,000. These extravagant salaries (along with the generous political contributions) are funded by entry-level workers dues.
When unions cannot attract new members based on the benefits they offer to workers, union bosses shift their attention to the political sphere. Even though union membership has been falling over the last half century, political contributions by unions have been moving in the opposite direction. Perhaps if dues went to benefit current workers, instead of politicians, wealthy retirees, and union bosses, unionization rates would not be falling so quickly.
In both the 2012 and 2014 election cycles, unions spent over $550 million on federal, state, and local candidates, according to the nonpartisan National Institute on Money in State Politics. Nearly all of this went to Democrats. Back in 1990, when union membership was 16 percent of employees, political spending by unions stood at an inflation-adjusted $9 million.
Unions use some of these contributions for their strong opposition to Right to Work legislation. RTW restores workers rights to choose not to join a union as a condition of employment. This is a losing battle as 25 states now have RTW laws. To avoid losing business, other states will become RTW. Wisconsin was the most recent to join the ranks, following its neighbors Indiana and Michigan, and some counties in Kentucky have declared that they are RTW.
Many states are working to pass RTW because giving employees the freedom to not join a union attracts business and leads to higher economic growth. According to research by Ohio University professor Richard Vedder, from 1977 to 2012, RTW states saw an extra 11.5 percentage points in economic growth compared to non-RTW states. These results control for population growth and industry concentration.
Among continental U.S. states, non-RTW Connecticut saw the largest annual per-capita income loss at $3,752. But Connecticut is not alone20 other states saw annual per-capita income losses that exceeded $3,000. Controlling for other factors, Heritage Foundation senior policy analyst James Sherk finds that workers in RTW states are also 1.3 percentage points less likely to be unemployed than workers in non-RTW states.
If unions are to stay relevant in the 21st century economy, they need to adapt. Overtly focusing on buying legislatures is no way to do so. Millennials rightly see no little value in the current offerings of union membership, but they are the very people needed to fix troubled union finances. It is time union bosses started focusing on young workers needs instead of their own.
To put it more briefly, lots of young people want a Communist state, but they want someone else to pay for it.
Dues haven’t gone up all that much. My USWA dues were $28 a month when I went salary in 1980.
I do believe that at times, workers need representation at the table with other business stakeholders, but unions have acted pretty stupidly for at least half a century and I agree with millennials, where is the value.
When the union took over GM, with the help of Obama, all the new hires got 15 bucks an hour and no benefits. Real nice, eh?
Don't be a dummy.
Don't work for a jerk.
Millennials want to be free spirits who do things at their own time. I suspect that joining a union means you’re tied down, even if it’s a cush job.
if the unions didn’t take member’s money and shovel it to the democrats and every left wing cause....if they used that money on behalf of their membership, they wouldn’t be in this mess
I would like to see public employee unions done away with, as the people that have to pay for their demands are taxpayers.
Millennials don’t like transients bumming up their trendy hangouts either.
Union membership takes a cut out of your paycheck for the dues as part of your membership. I can already see plenty of millenials not liking it one bit.
I know why the UCFW membership has fallen...I used work at Ames, Bradlee’s and Calder and I had to join the union to work there... all 3 are out of business. Ames at one time was behind Kmart, Target and WalMart in terms of stores.
We need a national right to work law and a total ban on union political contributions.
if the unions didnt take members money and shovel it to the democrats and every left wing cause....if they used that money on behalf of their membership, they wouldnt be in this mess
yes they would.... Unions are the HIVE.. in the collective..
the political BORG... fire ants.. and termites..
Because unions are for government jobs.
#1) Even in the “Hipster” crowd, entrepreneurship is fashionable, that means that the Millennial generation is very individualistic, and unions obviously are based on socialistic collectivist principles.
#2) Unions TAKE, but don’t really give much benefit, especially in the 21st century economy.
#3) The industries (or at least companies) that are hampered by unions are dying and so are the jobs-sometimes replaced by new technologies that are more efficient, they jobs that remain largely pay A LOT less than the same jobs in their parents and grandparent’s days..
#4) Unions have been discredited, and associated more with political Democrats than with better pay, working conditions which was their supposed “mission”. Unions aren’t god, and Millennials see and know this..
#5) Right to work and other efforts have successfully freed many from having to join.
I used to have a favorable view of unions in some of the construction craft trades, mostly because of the apprenticeship programs. I would expect a journeyman electrician from IBEW to have at least a basic knowledge of his trade. That went away completely when Richard Trumka, an avowed communist, became head of AFL-CIO. Unions are no longer about representing the rank and file. It is about brutal political power. When the union shut down Hostess, much gloating was there about sticking it to “The Man”, that will show him! What about the jobs that went away (shut up and do as the Party Boss tells you). Unions now just view the rank and file as tools, cannon fodder, while the Fat Cats running the unions (yes, I will refer to them as part of the nomenklatura) sponge off the people they claim to represent.
I am a dummy who worked at a job covered by a union ..retired at 50 years old ....and I am sure enough dumb...barely graduated from HS.....and I worked real hard at what I did...and I doubt you would even consider
a job in that field....I often wonder how much you would be making without a union....ooo I forgot your the smart one
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