Monday, April 27, 2015

US union membership sinking, except for managers: study

US union membership sinking, except for managers: study

[WASHINGTON] Labour union membership has sunk across the United States over the past 15 years for most jobs except legal workers, mathematicians, and, ironically, management, according to a study published Monday.
The Pew Research Centre's new survey said that the number of union members in jobs classified as "management occupations" rose from 438,000 to 562,000 in the 2000-2014 period.
Over the same period, the number of union members in manufacturing jobs fell by nearly half to 1.1 million.
In another once relatively strongly unionised sector - installation, maintenance and repair occupations - the number of union members fell from 933,000 to 655,000, according to the study.
Overall union membership sank to 14.6 million people last year, or just 11 per cent of the workforce, marking a steady slide since the peak of the labor movement in the 1950s, when nearly 35 per cent were in labour unions.
Pew said the gain in management occupations involved not high-level executives but people deemed management because they had authority over others, including school administrators, construction foremen, food-service managers and other supervisory personnel.
And the rate of union membership in the category remains extremely low at 4.5 per cent.
The losses in union jobs over the past three decades have all been in the private sector, while public sector unions remain strongest.
Many economists blame the growth in income disparity across the country to the weakening of unions. In the past three years unions have fueled a growing movement to force higher wages for low-paid workers in retail and fast-food service jobs.
Despite a decline in pro-union sentiment, the Pew study said more Americans still support the right to unionise.
Forty-eight per cent have a favorable view toward unions, compared with 39 per cent unfavourable. Just five years ago, more people had negative views of unions.
There was relatively stronger support for the right to unionise: 62 per cent of people back fast-food workers in their right to set up and join unions, and 82 per cent back the same rights for manufacturing and factory workers.
But only 45 per cent of those surveyed say the fall in union membership has been bad, while 43 per cent say it has been mostly good for the country.
AFP

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