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by pdonis
705 days ago
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> Unions are intended to protect workers. But they actually don't. > If their jobs are required to keep the city running, the city (and society at large) should do what's necessary to keep these employees happy. Granting for the sake of argument that this is true, unions do not help to do this. In fact they hinder it. In one strike I personally observed (not of public sector employees but I think the case is fairly typical), the union and the company agreed on a deal on Day 92 of the strike that was identical to the deal the company proposed on Day 2 of the strike and the union indignantly rejected. Who suffered the most from all this? The very workers the union was supposed to be protecting, who got no pay during those 92 days and had trouble paying their bills and could not even seek alternate jobs temporarily because the union prohibited it. And in fact many of those jobs now are automated away, because it was easier for the company to do that than to keep dealing with the union. > This has nothing to do with the "structure of employment" and everything to do with corporate greed. Not necessarily "corporate" greed; in the public transportation case it's a government employing the workers. That said, unions themselves share many of the dysfunctional charateristics of large corporations, and for much the same reasons. |
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Sure sometimes unions get it wrong, but that's not the vast majority of cases, and in fact that union that got it wrong likely got it right more often than not and those employees were better paid, even with the strike, than they would have been otherwise, when you consider a larger time scale.