Thursday, June 25, 2009

Why Unions Are Bad For Companies, Employees and Customers


If you have ever read my blog you know that I am no fan of unions. They may have had their place in the past but not in today's world. I have mentioned in my blogs on EFCA (Employee Free Choice Act) that unions cost a company. Not just in direct costs, but in indirect costs as well. Slowed work process, lessened productivity, poorer employee relations, and more have been cited as the costs associated with unionism. A study by the Heritage Foundation puts a bit more concreteness to this argument. What Unions Do: How Labor Unions Affect Jobs and the Economy can be read by clicking the title.

This study finds:



  • "Unions function as labor cartels. A labor cartel restricts the number of workers in a company or industry to drive up the remaining workers' wages..... Companies pass on those higher wages to consumers through higher prices, and often they also earn lower profits. Economic research finds that unions benefit their members but hurt consumers generally, and especially workers who are denied job opportunities.

  • The average union member earns more than the average non-union worker. However, that does not mean that expanding union membership will raise wages: Few workers who join a union today get a pay raise. ....The economy has become more competitive over the past generation. Companies have less power to pass price increases on to consumers without going out of business. Consequently, unions do not negotiate higher wages for many newly organized workers. These days, unions win higher wages for employees only at companies with competitive advantages that allow them to pay higher wages, such as successful research and development (R&D) projects or capital investments.

  • Unions effectively tax these investments by negotiating higher wages for their members, thus lowering profits. Unionized companies respond to this union tax by reducing investment. Less investment makes unionized companies less competitive.

  • Economists consistently find that unions decrease the number of jobs available in the economy. The vast majority of manufacturing jobs lost over the past three decades have been among union members--non-union manufacturing employment has risen. Research also shows that widespread unionization delays recovery from economic downturns.

  • Some unions win higher wages for their members, though many do not. But with these higher wages, unions bring less investment, fewer jobs, higher prices, and smaller 401(k) plans for everyone else.

  • Economic theory consequently suggests that unions raise the wages of their members at the cost of lower profits and fewer jobs, that lower profits cause businesses to invest less, and that unions have a smaller effect in competitive markets (where a union cannot obtain a monopoly).

  • .....union contracts compress wages: They suppress the wages of more productive workers and raise the wages of the less competent. Unions redistribute wealth between workers. Everyone gets the same seniority-based raise regardless of how much or little he contributes, and this reduces wage inequality in unionized companies... But this increased equality comes at a cost to employers. Often, the best workers will not work under union contracts that put a cap on their wages, so union firms have difficulty attracting and retaining top employees.

  • Studies typically find that unionized companies earn profits between 10 percent and 15 percent lower than those of comparable non-union firms."

Much more can be read in this study. If you truly want to know the costs, ALL THE COSTS, that are associated with unions read the article. It talks about how unions have cost GM and the US.


Probably the item I find the most disagreeable is this following statement on individualism. It is why I have never belonged to a union, it goes against how I was raised.

"Final union contracts typically give workers group identities instead of treating them as individuals. Unions do not have the resources to monitor each worker's performance and tailor the contract accordingly. Even if they could, they would not want to do so. Unions want employees to view the union--not their individual achievements--as the source of their economic gains. As a result, union contracts typically base pay and promotions on seniority or detailed union job classifications. Unions rarely allow employers to base pay on individual performance or promote workers on the basis of individual ability."


Just does not suit me.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

There was a time the working population was oppressed and needed someone or something to champion their cause. Today it is about greed and frivious complaints. The structure of the hierarchy makes Madoff look like Santa Claus.

Anonymous said...

Join a Union first and then talk crap on them. Most construction is done by mexican's that do not even belong here. I have worked non-union in my trade, and have been treated horrible , no raises, no vacation, no family leave. Since I've joined a union. I have been trained in my field of work. I have been given pay raises every year. I have a great relationship with my employer , and so do many others , I might add. Go ahead and continue to continue your political nonsense. You are not based on fact your based on your own opinion. Sounds like you have never been in a union. Book smarts equal nothing without being involved with what your talking about. Join a union and then talk smack. You never even been on a job site and that's fact. Sure, union's have things done thing's that are hurtful to member's. But, how many non -union companies do worse than the unions. Let me put it this way. We are in a state financial chaos. I work for a company with over 500 hundred employee's and 5 different labor union's. We are having our best year. We are making him million's of dollars! Do yourself a favor and just put down your pen.....

Anonymous said...

Its all about labor. If Our country doesn't have a decent labor force then we are going to fail as a country. Unions allow people to move into the middle class. Without unions, the people who do the work in our country would be paid the lowest wages a company can legally pay, do to the bottom line. No company will pay somebody 20$ an hour when they can get another more willing person to do it for less. The union allows our labor force to become home owners and be part of the economic process. If corporations aren't checked we would have super rich and super poor just like Mexico. For example; If you lay off an auto worker who is making 50,000 a year and replace him with two part time employees then you have three people who no longer can buy your vehicle.

Anonymous said...

You can go screw your self with your anti union retoric. Believe it or not it is true that the business enviroment has changed, but not in the good way. The labor force is more competitive with less jobs and less willing companies to hire at a liveable wage. But on the contrary the mantality of business people (administration and management) has remaind the same, to make the company more money and screw the worker. a perfect example is the working poor in China and the growing millionare and billionare population over there. It just goes to show how selfish CEO's are when in 2009 you can have scandles like bernie madoff (intentionally not capitalized) screwing investors for there own personall greed. By the way don't forget about small companies like Enron, Arthur Anderson, Tyco, Worldcom, and Halliburton. Now I know there are more that should be and could be listed. But don't forget one big fact administration does not make a company money it is the workers who sweat on the line, while they hang out in the A/C in there offices. One last thing if all you know how to do is save you'll eventually go bankrupt with out earning more.