WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's union membership held steady
at 11.3 percent last year, but losses among state and government workers
suggest an ominous trend for the future of organized labor.
In a turnabout, there are now slightly more union members
working for private firms than in government, the Bureau of Labor Statistics
reported Friday. That reverses a five-year trend.
Although the rate of membership among all workers didn't
budge, the overall number of union members grew slightly, rising about 162,000
to nearly 14.5 million.
Unions added about 282,000 new members in the private sector
as the economy improved. But that was partly offset by the loss of 118,000
members in the public sector, as state and local governments and public school
districts continued to face financial pressure from shrinking budgets.
For decades, the growth of union workers in government has
helped compensate for steep losses in manufacturing, construction and other
private industries where unions once thrived. The public sector union
membership rate of 35 percent remains more than five times higher than that of
private sector workers, at 6.7 percent.
But budget pressures have meant layoffs and hiring freezes
for many state and local governments. Public unions have also been on the
defensive in Wisconsin, Michigan and other states where Republican governors
have pushed measures to limit union bargaining rights.
Public sector unions saw their biggest membership losses
last year among workers in social assistance programs, administrative and
support services, public school teachers and state university employees,
according to BLS data.
In Wisconsin, union membership in the public sector fell
from 53.4 percent in 2011 to just 37.6 percent in 2013.
"This suggests that the erosion of public sector union
coverage reflects the new anti-collective bargaining policies implemented in
several states," said Lawrence Mishel, president of the liberal-leaning
Economic Policy Institute.
The overall rate of union membership has been steadily
declining for decades. The share of workers belonging to unions peaked in the
1950s at about 30 percent, and dropped to about 20 percent by 1983.
The modest increase in union ranks last year follows a steep
decline in 2012 that saw the union membership rate sink to its lowest level
since the 1930s. The increased unionization among private firms took place
largely in construction, health care and the auto industry, as the economy
rebounded to create about 2.2 million new jobs.
"It could be that we've hit bottom and things are going
to turn around," said John Schmitt, a senior economist with the Center for
Economic and Policy Research in Washington. "The other possibility is that
it's just a blip and we'll get back to a slow steady decline in private sector
unionization."
Among full-time wage and salary workers, union members in
2013 earned a median salary of $950 a week, compared to $750 for nonunion
workers.
New York continued to have the highest union membership rate
at 24.4 percent, while North Carolina had the lowest rate at 3 percent.
Source: Philly.com
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