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Submitted by Joe638NYC on Sat, 04/12/2008 - 6:41pm.
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Caught a glimpse of this at the Field Staff Association (FSA), A Union of Professional Advocates website, from (4/25/07):
According to Professor Harley Shaiken of the University of California-Berkeley,[1]
unions are associated with higher productivity, lower employee
turnover, improved workplace communication, and a better-trained
workforce.
Prof. Shaiken is not alone. There is a substantial
amount of academic literature on the following benefits of unions and
unionization to employers and the economy:
Productivity
Competitiveness
Product or service delivery and quality
Training
Turnover
Solvency of the firm
Workplace health and safety
Economic development
Productivity
According
to a recent survey of 73 independent studies on unions and
productivity: “The available evidence points to a positive and
statistically significant association between unions and productivity
in the U.S. manufacturing and education sectors, of around 10 and 7
percent, respectively.”[2]
Some
scholars have found an even larger positive relationship between unions
and productivity. According to Brown and Medoff, “unionized
establishments are about 22 percent more productive than those that are
not.”[3]
Product/ Service Delivery and Quality
According
to Professors Michael Ash and Jean Ann Seago,[4] heart attack recovery
rates are higher in hospitals where nurses are unionized than in
non-union hospitals.
Another study looked at the relationship between unionization and product quality in the auto industry.[5] According to a summary of this study prepared by American Rights at Work:
“The
author examines the system of co-management created through the General
Motors-United Auto Workers partnership at the Saturn
Corporation…The author credits the union with building a dense
communications network throughout Saturn's management system. Compared
to non-represented advisors, union advisors showed greater levels of
lateral communication and coordination, which had a significant
positive impact on quality performance.”
Training
Several
studies in have found a positive association between unionization and
the amount and quality of workforce training. Unionized establishments
are more likely to offer formal training.[6]
This is especially true for small firms. There are a number of reasons
for this: less turnover among union workers, making the employer more
likely to offer training; collective bargaining agreements that require
employers to provide training; and finally, unions often conduct their
own training.
Turnover
Professor
Shaiken also finds that unions reduce turnover. He cites Freeman and
Medoff’s finding that “about one fifth of the union
productivity effect stemmed from lower worker turnover. Unions improve
communication channels giving workers the ability to improve their
conditions short of ‘exiting.’”[7]
Solvency
Labor’s
enemies assert that unions drive employers out of business, but
academic research refutes this claim. According to Professors Richard
Freeman and Morris Kleiner, unionism has a statistically insignificant
effect (meaning no effect) on firm solvency.[8]
Freeman and Kleiner conclude “unions do not, on average, drive
firms or business lines out of business or produce high displacement
rates for unionized workers.”
Workplace Health and Safety
Employers
should be concerned about workplace health and safety as a matter of
enlightened self-interest. According to an American Rights at Work
summary of a study by John E. Baugher and J. Timmons Roberts:
“Only
one factor effectively moves workers who are in subordinate positions
to actively cope with hazards: membership in an independent labor
union. These findings suggest that union growth could indirectly reduce
job stress by giving workers the voice to cope effectively with job
hazards.”[9]
Economic Development
Unions
also play a positive role in economic development. One good example is
the Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership, “an association of
125 employers and unions dedicated to family-supporting jobs in a
competitive business environment. WRTP members have stabilized
manufacturing employment in the Milwaukee metro area, and contributed
about 6,000 additional industrial jobs to it over the past five years.
Among member firms, productivity is way up--exceeding productivity
growth in nonmember firms.”[10]
[1] Harley Shaiken, The High Road to a Competitive Economy: A Labor Law Strategy, Center for American Progress, June 25, 2004, pp. 7-8.
[2]
Christos Doucouliagos and Patrice Laroche, “The Impact of U.S.
Unions on Producivity: A Bootstrap Meta-analysis,” Proceedings of
the Industrial Relations Research Association, 2004. See also, by the
same authors, “What Do Unions Do to Productivity: A
Meta-analysis,” Industrial Relations, Volume 42 Issue 4 October
2003:
[3] Charles Brown and James L. Medoff, “Trade Unions in the Production Process.” Journal of Political
Economy, vol. 86, no. 3 (June 1978): 355–378.
[4]
Michael Ash and Jean Ann Seago, “The effect of registered nurses'
unions on heart-attack mortality,” Industrial and Labor Relations
Review, Vol. 57, No. 3 (Apr. 2004), pp. 422-442.
[5] Saul A.
Rubinstein, “The Impact of Co-Management on Quality Performance:
The Case of the Saturn Corporation.” Industrial and Labor
Relations Review, Vol. 53, No. 197 (January 2000).
[6] Harley J.
Frazis, Diane E. Herz and Michael W. Horrigan, “Employer-Provided
Training: Results from a New Survey.” Monthly Labor Review (May
1995): 3–17.
[7] Harley Shaiken, cited earlier, quoting Richard Freeman and James Medoff, What Do Unions Do? New York, Basic Books, 1984.
[8]
Richard B. Freeman and Morris M. Kleiner, “Do Unions Make
Enterprises Insolvent?” Industrial and Labor Relations Review,
vol. 52, no. 4 (July 1999): 510–527.
[9] John E. Baugher and J. Timmons Roberts, “Workplace Hazards, Unions and Coping Styles.” Labor
Studies Journal, Vol. 29, No. 2 (Summer 2004).
[10]
Annette Bernhardt, Laura Dresser, and Joel Rogers, “Taking the
High Road in Milwaukee: The Wisconsin Regional Training
Partnership.” Working USA, Vol. 5, Issue 3 (January 31, 2002).
The
Field Staff Association (FSA) is a Union of Professional Advocates in
the titles of Labor Relations Specialists, Organizers, Contract
Administration Specialist, Field Mobilization Specialist and
Occupational Safety and Health Specialists.
http://www.fsa-staff-union.com
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