Got a recession? Get a union. So concludes a report by a surprising source: the World Bank, the global financial authority whose lending policies have historically tended to place it at odds with organized labor. The report, "Unions and Collective Bargaining: Economic Effects in a Global Environment," analyzed more than 1,000 studies on unions and pay settlements. It found that high unionization rates can lead to lower unemployment and inflation rates, higher productivity and faster adjustment to economic shocks. "This report reinforces everything we in the labor movement have been saying for years," said IBEW International President Edwin D. Hill. "I’m glad to see the World Bank is catching on to ideas that have for so long been fundamental to our way of life." Union members in rich and poor countries earn significantly more money than workers who do not belong to a union. In the United States, the study said wages are 15 percent higher and in other industrialized countries they are up to 10 percent higher. The AFL-CIO has put the union advantage at an average of 25 percent higher in the United States and 30 percent for women and minorities. "A well-functioning labor market is essential for solid economic performance as well as future economic growth and for the well-being of workers and their families," said a summary of the report on the World Bank web site at www.worldbank.org.
The report said union members receive more training, work fewer hours and have longer job tenure on average than non-union workers. Countries with a history of wage bargaining have "less persistent unemployment and fewer and shorter strikes," the study said. The World Bank plays a major role in shaping the global economy by setting, implementing and enforcing rules governing international trade, often benefiting multinational corporations at the expense of sustainable development, workers and the environment. It has been criticized by the international labor community for promoting policies that roll back workers’ rights, reduce real wages, privatize and deregulate public services and mire poor countries in debt. |
IBEWCURRENTS April 2003 IBEW Journal
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