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Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Ed Feulner :: Townhall.com Columnist
Unions: What Works, and What Doesn't
by Ed Feulner
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"We must hang together, gentlemen," Benjamin Franklin warned his fellow colonists during the American Revolution, "else, we shall most assuredly hang separately."

In many ways, the same thing is true in business today. The global competition for customers is fierce. Companies that don’t forge good relationships between employees and management are likely to be run out of business by those that do.

Unfortunately, our labor laws make it tougher than it should be for management and workers to work together.

The National Labor Relations Act was written during the 1930s, and hasn’t truly been updated since just after World War II. Back then, workers and employers tended to treat each other as adversaries. Workers unionized to protect their interests and frequently squared off against business owners.

But the picture is very different today.

Global competition has forced American companies to embrace teamwork. Businesses count on workers to identify problems and suggest solutions, and workers understand it’s in their best interest to help their company succeed.

One way to encourage that give-and-take attitude is through employee involvement programs, where workers and supervisors sit down together to discuss ways to improve business. That’s exactly the sort of organization many employees want, but there’s a problem. Many such groups are illegal.

The law says workers may speak with employers through a labor union, or not at all. Any other form of dialogue between employee representatives and management (outside of collective bargaining) is banned.

That’s a mistake, especially since relatively few workers these days even want to be unionized. A 2006 Zogby poll found that 74 percent of non-unionized workers say they wouldn’t “personally like to be a member of a labor union.” Today only 20 percent say they would like to unionize. That’s down substantially from 1984, when about a third of non-union workers said they wanted to form a union.

The numbers on union membership bear that out. In 1974, a quarter of private-sector workers were in unions. Today, only 7.5 percent are. What workers seem to want is a voice in how their company operates, without the confrontational attitude that so many unions bring to the table. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Edwin Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation, a Townhall.com Gold Partner, and co-author of Getting America Right: The True Conservative Values Our Nation Needs Today .
 
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reply to killer
As if you didn't know, I was merely summarizing, in everyday language, some of the points conservatives have made about unions for a very long time. Sorry if it hurt your feelings. There have been occasional conservatives who have remarked on the socially conservative function served by unions (increasing the stake workers have in the economy, compatibility with other conservative values,etc.) but conservatives who believe in the gospel of the free market have no use for unions.

Unions walk a fine line
Historically, unions worked for the betterment for their worker members. There have been times with they morph into something which ends up to the detriment of their members, case study United States Steel industry. When unions use intimidation to control their members, that's a good indication of crossing the line. The line represents the point when employers (business) begins the studying cutting benefits, layoffs, and relocation to other countries eliminating jobs. Another problem is with the greed of business moving the "line". Double edged sword. I believe moving to other countries represents a gamble I personally wouldn't entertain. Part of the energy problem we have has roots in the US manufacturing exodus. The paychecks don't get federal income tax deducted, contribute to social security, and aren't spent in US stores. They help increase the demand for everything from building materials to oil by increasing the buying power of foreign workers. I am still without answer why some unions back democrats so strongly. Lack of action concerning oil prices are leading to union jobs disappearing. I wish I could figure out the location of the "line" because it would invariably save american jobs, but GREED keeps the "line" almost like the gold at the end of the rainbow. The higher the greed, the more illusive the "line".
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