Labor Relations
Union Bargaining Power during a Recession
The PBS News Hour reported that the "great recession" that hit the U.S. And much of the world beginning in 2008 there were companies that cut salaries in order to stay solvent during those financial hard times. "The current recession has severely undercut the bargaining power of labor unions," the PBS program explained (Solman, 2010). As an example of what businesses have done to stay afloat during the recession, the Mott's juice and apple sauce factory in New York State simply cut wages in a union shop so the 300 workers went out on strike.
No problem, said Mott's (owned by Dr. Pepper / Snapple), we'll just hire non-unionized workers ("scabs"), and they did, cutting back their costs to one-half of what they were paying union workers. Because so many people have been put out of work during the recession, there are plenty of potential employees to work for less than the union workers were making, Solman explains.
The unfairness for many union workers that either have been laid off or have gone on strike -- and for the millions of Americans who were looking for work during the recession -- is that "at the top of the corporate ladder,...
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