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How corporations crush the working class

Rogue Valley

Lead or get out of the way
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4/18/21
The most dramatic change in the system over the last half-century has been the emergence of corporate giants like Amazon and the shrinkage of labor unions. The resulting power imbalance has spawned near-record inequalities of income and wealth, corruption of democracy by big money, and the abandonment of the working class. Fifty years ago, General Motors was the largest employer in America. The typical GM worker earned $35 an hour in today's dollars and had a major say over working conditions. Today's largest employers are Amazon and Walmart, each paying far less per hour and routinely exploiting their workers, who have little recourse. The typical GM worker wasn't "worth" so much more than today's Amazon or Walmart worker and didn't have more valuable insights about working conditions. The difference is those GM workers had a strong union. They were backed by the collective bargaining power of more than a third of the entire American workforce. Today, most workers are on their own. Only 6.4% of America's private-sector workers are unionized, providing little collective pressure on Amazon, Walmart, or other major employers to treat their workers any better. Fifty years ago, the labor movement had enough political clout to ensure labor laws were enforced and that the government pushed giant firms like GM to sustain the middle class.

Today, organized labor's political clout is minuscule by comparison. The biggest political players are giant corporations like Amazon. They've used that political muscle to back "right-to-work" laws, whittle down federal labor protections, and keep the National Labor Relations Board understaffed and overburdened, allowing them to get away with egregious union-busting tactics. They've also impelled government to lower their taxes; extorted states to provide them tax breaks as a condition for locating facilities there; bullied cities where they're headquartered; and wangled trade treaties allowing them to outsource so many jobs that blue-collar workers in America have little choice but to take low-paying, high-stress warehouse and delivery gigs. Oh, and they've neutered antitrust laws, which in an earlier era would have had companies like Amazon in their crosshairs. The power shift can be reversed – but only with stronger labor laws resulting in more unions, tougher trade deals, and a renewed commitment to antitrust. The Biden administration and congressional Democrats appear willing. And across the country, labor activism has surged – from the Amazon union effort, to frontline workers walking out and striking to demand better pay, benefits, and safety protections.


The time to act is now. When the corporate-loving GOP again ascends in Washington, it will be too late then for the American worker.

If we continue along this corporatist path, the work environment will more resemble that of Bangladesh than the United States.
 




The time to act is now. When the corporate-loving GOP again ascends in Washington, it will be too late then for the American worker.

If we continue along this corporatist path, the work environment will more resemble that of Bangladesh than the United States.
I worked for a US Fortune 500 company for about 35 years. Given free reign we'd pay front line people minimum wage. Where we didn't was due to the counter-balance of unions. In those areas we paid front line people double or triple the wages, with benefits. We made money in both the union and non-union environments. As a manager I'd rather the union environment any day - far lower turnover, generally employees more satisfied.
 
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