Everyone seems to be missing an important point of unions, which is to increase the standard of the work environment. If you have never worked in manufacturing you will not understand, but I spent three summers working in steel mills, and even today the conditions are not very good. There is constantly steel dust floating around in the air, sulfuric acid fumes, and excessive heat. If conditions are like that now, with unions, I cannot imagine what things must have been like earlier in the century.
It may be easy to simply view laborers as commodities (in fact, pg compares them to servers), but it's important to remember these are human beings with lives to live. Before the era of unions, these people were treated as tools, and unions forced companies to recognize that they need to actually give their workers livable working conditions.
So I would like to submit that one reason for the decline of unions today is that government regulates companies much more tightly. Organizations like OSHA and the Workers' Compensation Fund ensure that workers have reasonable demands placed upon them, and if they get hurt, they will still have enough money to live on.
No web consultant ever had to worry about getting electrocuted by the machine he or she uses, or about passing out from excessive heat and falling into dangerous machinery. To compare the union movement of the early 1900s to the boon of web developers in the 90s is absurd, in my opinion. The people who were part of the union movement were heroic, in a way, by forcing faceless companies to recognize the health and humanity of their workers.
First, I think Henry Ford deserves a lot of credit for recognizing that manufacturing workers are people, not servers. He was the one who discovered the benefits of the 40-hour work week. I'm not sure how Unions factor into that, but treating workers like people does make economic sense (even if many managers even today still do not recognize this).
In any case, in addition to working for better conditions, Unions grew to combat corruption. Blacklisting, for example: One manufacturer fires an employee for trying to organize workers and puts him on a blacklist, preventing him from being hired by anyone else. This is a fear tactic that has a large destructive power in an economy where collective bargaining is not protected.
Recently, I heard from an acquaintance. He is a manager at a corporation that was putting on presentations about preventing Union organization. During the presentation, they shared a list of reasons employees form unions, and salary was _dead last_. I don't remember all the reasons, but mostly the issues were related to blatant Management disregard for(or mistreatment of) employees.
1) Isn't it more efficient to mandate minimum safety standards through the government/OSHA than through unions?
2) When you took the job, did you know about the conditions there? If so, why did you take it? I can't speak for you, but I want to guess the money made up for the suckiness, right? So, it seems like if people know what the conditions are in a job before they sign up, isn't it up to the individual to decide whether the money is enough to get them to put up with the sucky conditions?
1) Isn't it more efficient to mandate minimum safety standards through the government/OSHA than through unions?
That's an interesting question. My initial inclination, however, is to answer "no". The conditions and safety issues associated with different jobs vary so greatly that it would be quite difficult for any general organization to encompass and mandate all relevant standards. Unions can be much more specific, even taking care of issues like, "Workers working in location X should receive extra pay because it is 15 degrees warmer than the rest of the plant." (That's a bad example, but I hope you get what I mean.)
2) When you took the job, did you know about the conditions there? If so, why did you take it? I can't speak for you, but I want to guess the money made up for the suckiness, right? So, it seems like if people know what the conditions are in a job before they sign up, isn't it up to the individual to decide whether the money is enough to get them to put up with the sucky conditions?
The 3 summers were actually 3 different jobs. The first one I took, I didn't know much about the conditions. My uncle got me the job (he's a boss there), and the experience turned out to be a very eye-opening one. This was actually the one with the worst conditions: the company I worked for that summer was hired to do the things that their client companies' (unionized) workers wouldn't want to do. This meant that we were in places with high carbon monoxide, extreme heat, excessive dirt (I crawled around in grease on several occasions), and so on. This company was not unionized, and its workers received abysmal pay... anywhere from $9.50-13.50 per hour, with only a couple guys getting more than $11. On one occasion, I worked 11 straight 13-hour shifts, and the full-time guys were frequently expected to work a month or so at a time (8+ hrs/day) without a day off.
The reason the company could go on like this is because work in my area is at a premium. I live in the steel manufacturing area of northeastern Ohio, and since the early 90s, plants have been slowly laying off workers and closing down. There are so many people without jobs that places like the one I worked for can pay ridiculously low amounts for very dangerous work, and they are bound to get someone to take the job. I guess if you've always lived in a place with plenty of jobs, this situation is hard to envision, but sometimes when you have a family to support, you'll take whatever work you can get.
The following 2 summers, I managed to get a job in one of the steel mills, instead of the company I had worked for before. For me, the situation improved dramatically, largely because it was a union job. The pay was better and the demands were much more reasonable. There were still some jobs, however, that if someone asked you to do them, your first reaction would surely be, "Are you serious?" One of the summer workers' duties was basically to work these jobs that the more tenured workers would never do on a regular basis. At least for us, we could look at the end of the summer as the light at the end of the tunnel. For the guys who worked there full-time, many had 30+ more years to go. So I didn't complain too much regardless of what job I was given.
In all cases, I worked the jobs because they were the best money I could get close to home. This does not mean that the money even comes close to making up for the actual value of the worker or the peril of the job (although in the case of the union job, the situation was markedly improved). This is where unions become very important: to ensure that even in a poor job market, workers get their due compensation for the work that they perform.
It seemed as though pg was talking about the unions of the 1950's. Those unions weren't heroic. The heroism was in the union movement of the late 1800s/early 1900s. Companies/capitalists of that gilded age were often enough a law unto themselves, and workers organizing to have their legal rights respected were in very real danger.
It's a good thing that union organizers are in no real danger anymore, and companies allow a fair negotiation process between workers and the corporate offices who determines their pay.
Sure, in a field where there is a high demand for workers, unions are unnecessary, because any deficiencies in pay will be punished. In manufacturing and retail, however, where the demand is not as high, there has to be someone out there establishing a minimum standard for their employees to receive in compensation for their work. Since minimum wage in the U.S. is not enough to live on, the only other groups with the possibility to enforce such standards are unions.
I think that the recent trend (as in the last couple decades) of discounting the importance of unions is in large part due to comparing dissimilar organizations. Manufacturing and retail is a completely different beast from the service industry, and to lump them all into one "unions fight for overcompensation" group is shameful.
Unions are labor cartels. Sellers of labor ban together to set price floors. The force of special legal privilege alone has prevented unions from being consigned to the scrap heap of history's unsuccessful cartels. This privilege prevents the alternate sellers of goods that normally break up cartel ("scabs") from entering the market.
Well at least unions have become cartels. I don't see a problem with voluntary bodies representing workers, advocating for them as a body and so forth. In fact I think remove special protections for unions would make them more accountable to their members, making them better at doing what they are suppose to do; look after their members.
Certainly, PG's point here is very true with respect to the legacy airline carriers: Most of the union contracts were negotiated during airline regulation. Regulated prices guaranteed that the airlines could pass any increases in labor costs on to the customers and still turn a profit - thus, they had no incentive to negotiate with them. Then deregulation and suddenly those contracts don't make much sense anymore.
However, it's very shortsighted to solely blame the unions. A contract is a contract, and if an employer made a bad one, they are still bound to uphold it.
While Startup News sounds like it should be all about startups, I've come to think that it should just be submissions that would be of interest or value to this community. We've come to understand each others' likes pretty well, so as long as something isn't blatantly off topic, it should have a chance here.
a) Look around some more. An article about CSS hacks might not be a "startup article", but it may definitely be of interest to startup founders. This is decidedly different from an article about, say, Spider-man 3's box office success.
- Who here is creating or has created a web page for their startup? Did it use some CSS?
- Who here has dealt with unions for their startup?
PG's article is not even practical in its treatment of unions, something that is a highly political topic. I guess politics is where I would really start to draw a line... some economics is ok, but PG isn't an economist, and this article, right or wrong, has little relevance for most of us here.
I'm not judging the article itself, but I hope in the future that that sort of discussion can be left to reddit. I sympathise with the point that "it's a tight community", but these things usually start to head downhill. I like to talk politics and economics myself, and would certainly enjoy doing so more here than on reddit, but if we all started posting articles about those sorts of things, I could see it becoming a bit too prevalent...
Sorry... didn't notice the lack of a yc news link on the article. But to be fair, this article is closer to dealing with startups (labor relations, corporate structure) than a lot of things I've seen grace the front page.
I've got another explanation, one that's perhaps simpler and grounded in more orthodox economics:
The great union boom of the postwar era came about because labor was relatively the scarcest factor of production. Millions of people had been killed by WW2; billions more were locked up behind the iron curtain or stuck in third-world post-colonial nations, and hence unable to contribute to the global economy. Meanwhile, the U.S. had a huge capital stock leftover from WW2, and plenty of new innovations to develop. High supply of capital + high demand for products + low supply of labor = rising wages.
The nifty thing about this model is that it can explain virtually all economic history from the past millenia. For example:
Around A.D. 1000, the population of Europe began rising, marking a slow trend out of the Dark Ages. As labor became more abundant, land became scarcer (capital was not much of a factor in those days). This led to the glory days of feudalism: serfs would be bound to the feudal estate, since land was dear and labor cheap.
This continued until 1347, when Black Death hit. Within a few years, 1/3 of Europe's population was wiped out, leading to large-scale chaos in the social order. When people recovered, wages started rising. Feudalism collapsed, as there were not enough workers left to work the field, and surviving laborers began demanding more rights. The new entrepeneurial spirit led to innovations, particularly the development of modern finance, Medici-style banking. As capital became progressively more important and labor more abundant, returns to capital increased (the speculative booms in the late 1600s) and wages dropped.
Colonialism also opened up large new land areas during this time period, dropping the returns to land and increasing the returns to labor and capital. This sounded the final death knell of feudalism: you really don't hear about many knights in shining armor after the 1600s.
As labor expanded across the new continents, it eventually reached a point of diminishing returns. It's no coincidence that the industrial revolution kicked into high gear just as the Americas and European-habitable parts of Africa and Australia became fully settled. With no more land for the taking, people had to turn to machinery to increase their returns. And once the machinery had been invented, wages dropped as labor became less necessary.
This reached a head during the Great Depression, when capital outpaced what labor could buy. The immediate cause of the Great Depression was a major contraction in the money supply. This, in turn, was caused by the bursting of a major credit bubble that had inflated throughout the 1920. Credit is a way for rich people to give poor people money, so that poor people can continue to buy the products that rich people make. Unfortunately, creditors generally expect to be paid back, so it sucks when people find out that's impossible.
The Depression led to the political unrest that eventually led to World War 2. WW2 had four major effects: it killed a lot of people, it made the U.S. build up a huge industrial base for war production, it destroyed the capital stocks of most European countries, and it led to the Cold War and rise of communism. The net effect is detailed above: labor became scarce, capital became abundant, and that lead to a large increase in wages and general prosperity.
That changed in the 1980s. People generally attribute the change to Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, but it's worth asking how they came to power. In the 1980s, the peak of the baby boom generation was just entering the workforce. The increased labor supply drove wages down ("jobless recovery", anyone?) and returns to capital up.
The pendulum should've started swinging the other way around 1990, when the relatively small Gen-X started entering the workforce and the 1920s-born Silent Generation started retiring. And that's what happened among skilled professionals: wages for the top 20% of the population have increased significantly lately.
But the end of the Cold War put a kink in a more broad-based prosperity. When Communism collapsed, lots and lots of additional workers entered the global labor pool. And with Y2K and outsourcing and the Internet, we found out how to put them to use. So the global supply of labor has been increasing and increasing fast, which keeps real wages down and returns to capital up. Hence the booming stock market of the last 10 years, amidst fears that Main Street USA is missing out on the party.
In the last 3-4 years or so, a new wrinkle has been added. The new Asian workers are voracious savers, which means that the supply of financial capital has been high along with the supply of labor. That's why real interest rates are fairly low, and stocks are trading at valuations higher than their historical norms.
It also means the relatively scarce factor of production is innovation: the ability to take available capital and make something people want. That's why the returns to entrepreneurship have been so high for these past couple years, and why so many people have been starting startups. We're attempting to fill a supply/demand imbalance and turn all that free money floating around into useful products for people. When YouTube gets bought for $1.6B despite having little revenues and no profits, it's not because Google is stupid. It's because Google stock has been bid up to stratospheric heights by large influxes of money, and so the rational thing to do is trade it away to make life a bit better for its customers.
So PG's wrong when he says unions are a historical anomaly. (Well, the particular organization of a "union" is a historical anomaly, but the general phenomenom of labor making greater demands in times of scarcity is not.) Labor will have its day again, when a war or famine or plague kills off large numbers of people. Similarly, the startup ecosystem isn't a brave new world that'll last forever: rather, it's a reaction to the particular economic conditions that exist on earth at this time. As long as capital and labor both remain abundant, though, startups will continue to be a profitable career path.
Sure, labor prices always vary with supply and demand. I'm not contradicting that, or merely restating it. What I'm saying is that the hot companies of the early 20th century happened to be a type that needed lots of people. Those before and after didn't, earlier ones because they just weren't as big, and later ones because they tended to hire programmers by the tens, not factory workers by the hundreds.
So labor unions were a historical anomaly, because they happened at a time when, uniquely in history, single organizations needed to hire large numbers of people and didn't need to be too careful about how much they paid them.
I would advocate removing all legal advantages unions have to level the market. If they want to exist, let it be a fair voluntary agreement between employees and management without the legal jeopardy that still exists for management during labor disputes.
This agreement could never be fair. Management has hordes of resources at its disposal that can be used to fight workers against improving their conditions. Workers cannot afford the type of representation a company has. Moreover, in an economy with a poor job market, you are bound to find someone to work a given job no matter how bad it is. This does not mean that the given wage is fair, you are simply taking advantage of a deficiency in the system.
You are also neglecting the fact that many of these manufacturing jobs pay a wage that is typically barely enough to support a family. What's to stop management from suddenly cutting workers' pay? Even in the presence of unions, many workers are forced to "grin and bear it" when certain changes are enacted, because they cannot afford to stop working there (their family would go without). In a market with no union protections, management would be free to jerk workers around at will... when the market goes a little sour, they could just lower pay, some workers would quit, others would stay and pick up the extra available hours so that they could still get by, and the company would do fine. When the market improves, management could advertise positions and temporarily raise pays in order to get more people working there. This may seem fair from a supply-demand economics perspective, but when you're talking about the lives of the workers who are not far from poverty, a slight change in pay leads to a dramatically different quality of life. Unions help to deaden this "yo-yo effect" and make the condition of the worker a little more livable and realistic.
I think that's a bad idea. I'm sure there are laws that need reconsideration, there always are. But fundamentally, collective bargaining is an important right because individual workers are worth so little all by themselves. In order for the dynamic you mention in your post to work employees have to be able to organize. They cannot do this if all the legal aspects (aka threats of force) favor the employers. Employers will use Divide and Conquer to win every time.
I guess I don't quite see your point. What stops employees from organizing themselves (say using the web etc), electing someone to represent the group, and negotiating with the company. Lets say the group demands more pay, and the company says no. The employees go on strike, and the company is able to hire all new people. This means that the pay demand was beyond market levels and not an appropriate request. The flip side is the company is unable to find replacements, which would mean that the staff is underpaid, so they grant the raise. Going on strike at a company is an extremely damaging method of contract negotiation putting into jeopardy both the company and the jobs they provide. It is very risky and should only be done as a last resort. Either way, why would you need laws for this (other than current contract law, etc.)
Can you give an example of where the free market and current laws prevent voluntary group negotiation?
"What stops employees from organizing themselves?"
The companies themselves are one thing. I mentioned the practice called blacklisting above. If employees attempt to organize, the company fires the leaders and prevent them from being employed anywhere else in the industry. This, so far as I know, is currently very illegal because of the laws protecting Unions.
Once the workers are disorganized, they're at a big disadvantage. If we assume that individuals are unable to organize because employers use unethical tactics to keep them that way, knowledge and input on company policies becomes much harder to fight for.
Suppose top executives want to "cash out," and pursue a deal that is bad for the long term health and stability of the company but good for short term revenues and stock price. Normal workers are generally too busy with their jobs and families to spend time investigating that sort of thing. By the time the peons find out that a deal has been made, it's way too late to do anything. One of the things Unions theoretically do is ensure the workers have a voice. A Union leader would be involved somehow in the writing of the contract, and when they started talking about sending valuable training personel to a direct competitor he'd be able to fight it with the leverage of the entire Union.
But I am not a lawyer and not an expert on Union law, so I cannot give a complete example.
We're no longer in the old days - organizing is very easy today with all the technological tools available. Doing it in a way that prevents management from knowing who is leading the push is also quite doable. In fact, a group of employees could negotiate in unison by every one of them sending emails to management with the same content at the same time - making it impossible to single out anyone for firing. So again, I don't see your point.
The issue about executives destroying a company is an issue for the board of directors, who fire and hire the executives. If the board agrees to sell their company and the shareholders agree, etc, that is their prerogative as they own the company, not management or the employees. Unions are powerless in this context, which is a good thing.
But I guess the reality is that unions in the US are shrinking fast as they are becoming increasingly irrelevant.
You may be right, but either way anti-union sentiment isn't particularly useful. It's not a good idea to recklessly jettison union protections without understanding what they're really doing in the first place.
You say organizing is easy with the internet, but sites like overhear.us only just launched, and we really have no data about how effective they will be. Secret organization is not effective either, because in order to actually negotiate anything serious they would have to come out, at which point they'd be vulnerable.
And my example is about arriving at the best possible economic solution for everyone, not simply assuming that the way company ownership works is perfect and therefore any consequences of that are Good Things. My example is about making sure the workers can excercise their economic power. I am most definitely not saying that a Union should be able to prevent a Board from selling the company, nor even entering into a bad deal. I'm saying that a company should not be allowed to use threats of force to influence the labor market (eg keep it disorganized by blacklisting leaders).
The simplest answer is that many people believe the "free market wage" is not always the apropriate wage.
Anyhow your defining the free market wage, as the wage the get paid if the have no legal help in there negotations. And then your defining the appropriate wage as the free market wage.
So you are basically stating that by definition the appropriate wage for people to be paid is the wage they could negotiate if they have no laws to help them negotitate.
Basically your conclusion is the axiom you start with.
As PG said in "How to Create Wealth" the contributions of individual workers can not be measured individually. They have to be measured as a whole. That's why the negotiations often need to be done at the organizational level, rather than on an individual basis.
The problem there, of course, is that it becomes harder to hire and fire, thus it becomes harder to maximize the skill of your workforce. Which is why employers really need to think about the consequences of being evil.
The free market wage is the amount that an employer is voluntarily willing to pay, and an employee is voluntarily willing to be paid. To say that this is "inappropriate" is to argue for the introduction of force into one or the other side of this equation which would definitely be inappropriate.
manufacturing laborers unionized because they were in great demand? so shouldn't the tech bubble workers have unionized as well since they, too, were in such great demand? union qua union, ithink, serves a purpose -- ie ensure the well being of its members. and it was unions that provided workers with leverage to negotiate higher salaries and more benefits - not because they wer in such great demand. if workers already had leverage because they were scarce, i don't see why this would lead them to forming unions. and contrary to what PG implies, i think there were some extraordinary, heroic union organizers.
I don't quite buy the analogy. Manufacturing was a profitable business (particularly the auto industry) during the union heyday. The same can hardly be said for most startups investing in infrastructure during the dot com bubble.
I don't understand how that damages the analogy. The point of the essay is that an environment where you have to grow fast or die makes it better to overspend on some things than to waste time trying to bring the price down. If that's valid logic for an unprofitable company, it seems it should make even more sense for a profitable one.
Ventures have changed. During the Industrial Revolution, startups were started within a company -- Andrew Carnegie was a bond broker and speculator who got into a (very risky) sideline in steel; Du Pont was a gunpowder company before they started messing around with chemistry[1].
The auto business was enormously profitable for GM and Ford, but there were thousands of equally promising auto startups at the same time. Most of them built prototypes bespoke for rich people; none of them are still around.
[1] And cars. They used to own about a fourth of GM, until they were forced to divest.
Actually there were a huge number of car companies, nearly all of which died. It was very much like happened with Internet startups. In fact during the Bubble Rupert Murdoch used the history of the car business as an example to explain why he wasn't in a rush to invest in Internet companies.
I think it is better to think of labor unions themselves as startups that eventually consolidated. They gained control of a resource that was in demand by a growing industry, manufacturing. They grew by competition and consolidation (as did their most successful customers) They supplied that resource at a price negotiated with their customers. Manufacturing prospered, and so did it's suppliers, including the labor unions.
The labor unions failed to adapt to a changing market (as did many of their customers), which is why they are on hard times.
That they failed to adapt says little or nothing about the considerable, commitment and sacrifice it took to found them. I agree though, that the presence or absence of those attributes in modern day union organization and membership isn't the whole story about why they are throughly failing today.
"I think it is better to think of labor unions themselves as startups that eventually consolidated."
They don't make something people want. They take something people want and jack up the price to make them pay more for it. They're as much of a startup as OPEC -- the only difference is that they're cartelizing labor instead of oil.
What an arrogant, ignorant jackass. PG doesn't know what the hell he is talking about. He sounds stupid explaining unions the way he did. I guess that's what happens when you surround yourself with sycophants and yes men.
"A union brings democratic practices to the work environment."
Do workplaces need democratic practices? I've never worked for a company that threatened my life, liberty, or pursuit of happiness -- mostly, they tend to secure the blessings of (financial) liberty to myself and my posterity by paying me an amount that I find satisfactory. If they didn't, I could always cry oppression, but it would be more mature for me to just find a better job. And if I had a higher estimation of my worth as an employee than any employer, I might consider my own estimate incorrect.
It's a fallacy to apply your political principles to anything outside of politics. If you want to work for a business that runs itself like a country, work for GM (and pray for your pension).
The democracy in the workplace is you are free to leave and join another company at any time. This is a good thing. Any attempt to make it harder for employers to employ people always pushes back by raising unemployment. (See the minimum wage)
Democracy is probably useful for any institution with absolute power -- if there's a group that has the right to imprison or kill me, I'd rather they derive that right from the will of the people. But if all an institution can do is give me money in exchange for work, or give me stuff I want in exchange for money, democracy is an imposition that makes them less free. If a transaction can only happen with the consent of person A and person B, why on earth would you want Mob C to interpolate itself between them? The only positive results from that would flow to members of C or to parties that have coopted it.
Why would it not be democratic enough that you can quit your job if you are unhappy with the work conditions?
Of course there may be the concern that you would have no opportunity to find another job. However, then I don't understand why it is deemed fair for society to dump the social responsibility on the enterprises. Is it the companies fault that you cannot find another job, or is it maybe your "fault" that you lack the qualifications?
Ultimately society pays anyway: if the company has to overpay the inefficient workers, it's products will get more expensive, rest of society pays. I think it would be cleaner to just have society pay directly, which might enable economic pressure against the inefficiency, too (if society pays, the problem is open and can be tackled). Worst case is the whole company goes out of business because it cannot compete anymore.
A safe work environment should be guaranteed by legislation. Beyond that, if you don't like your job, you should find a new one. Democratic practices are completely unrelated to a work environment. No one is ruling over you. You're free to go.
Granted, switching jobs isn't a simple thing to do, mainly because our labor market is so inefficient. There are other things attached to having a job, like healthcare, that complicate things. If only we separated healthcare from employment somehow...
Out of curiosity, what gains did you get from forming a union?
"A safe work environment should be guaranteed by legislation."
You're confusing actions and goals. If we pass legislation banning unsafe environments, all we're saying is "Dangerous work should only be done by criminals." If you think coal mines and slaughterhouses are bad now, just imagine how much worse they'd be if they were run by the mob.[1]
[1] We've passed laws that say "Nobody should smoke pot," but the effect of those laws is, essentially, "People should only buy their pot from someone who has little to lose from committing additional crimes, such as someone already involved in illicit traffic and already able to extralegally enforce illegal agreements.
I didn't say that dangerous work should be banned. When a job has risks, the necessary precautions should be taken to minimize that risk. That's what a union would be asking for in negotiations, right? They shouldn't have to.
At what point is a union or a legislature necessary, here? If I want to do something dangerous to myself, should I leave it up to Washington's Finest to assess the risks for me? Why on earth would I do that? They have every incentive to be cautious (they'll get blamed if they okay risks and I still get hurt) and no reason not to be (if my work is approved and I'm unhurt, I get the benefits; if it isn't approved, we'll never know if they were wrong).
Regulators have less information than entrepreneurs. Regulators have a bias towards caution; entrepreneurs would suffer for it. So you're advocating a system in which uninformed people with a vested interest in my failure are responsible for choosing whether or not I have a chance to succeed. I'm afraid you need more of a defense for that than a smug smattering of "should"s.
Without regulation, the cost of someone dying on the job is the same as someone quitting: you just have to train a new person to do the job. That's not the type of society I'd like to live in. Regulation isn't perfect, but it's far better than no regulation.
You keep on talking about regulators making a certain line of work illegal, but that's not what I'm suggesting. All work should be made as safe as possible.
Yes it does. The compensation to the worker for the risk may cost more than reducing the risk. Therefore the risk will be minimized if possible to save cash.
That argument would make sense, if you were refering to say someone like evil-knivel, who may be compensated heavily for making extremely dangerous stunts.
But in reality I imagine your talking about coal miners, who are not in the coal mining for the thrill of the mine, or the thrill of fame and money. But are in it to make ends meat.
That argument would make sense, if you were refering to say someone like evil-knivel, who may be compensated heavily for making extremely dangerous stunts.
But in reality I imagine your talking about coal miners, who are not in the coal mining for the thrill of the mine, or the thrill of fame and money. But are in it to make ends meat.
And why on earth would you want to restrict the economic freedom of someone desperate enough to do that kind of work? If the money isn't worth the risk, they know it better than you do -- and if you disagree with them, it's probably because you're applying your assumptions to their situation, not that you know more about mining safety than they do.
I love the intellectual lengths people will goto to justify their own greed.
This is a classic argument you are making. It makes me richer to exploit workers. But if i don't exploit my workers than I will be denying my workers their economic right to be exploited.
So you see I am only exploiting my workers to help my workers, because my workers want to have the freedom to be exploited, really they want to be exploited, it makes them feel more free.
How is employing people exploiting them? (In the bad sense of the word "exploit") The employees freely agreed to come and work for you in exchange for a certain amount of money, and they are free to leave at any time.
If they were worth any more money than they were getting paid then they would change to a higher paying job.
Well this goes into the whole philosophical question of the word "freedom" and "free will"...
It all depends what you mean by the word "freely". But unless you are actually rich, you don't really have the freedom to not get a job. So I would not describe this as purely a contractual agreement entered into by parties freely.
But you could say also that the employer needs a worker, and also isn't really freely entering into the contract. Utter nonsense! Both parties freely enter into the agreement. You might not have the freedom not to have a job, but you do have the freedom to choose which job to take. That freedom means that nobody can pay you less then you are worth, else you'll leave. Therefore nobody employer can exploit you. (That is pay you less then you're worth.)
Since you define what someone is worth as what they are getting paid..you essentially stating a tautology.
However, I would also note that since what people get paid depends on the existance of Unions, and is also effected by the law and certain legal regulations. Then the value someone is worth changes depending on what the laws currently are.
So in any case I am in favor of trying to increase the worth of people.
(Not that this is really relevant, but most people who lead companies actually do not need their workers, they often can afford for the company to fail, and still live a comfortable life...)
"Since you define what someone is worth as what they are getting paid..you essentially stating a tautology."
I'm defining what someone's labour is worth as what employers are willing to pay them. (That may differ from what they are getting paid right now, but they can always change jobs.)
It might help for you to understand that "worth" is defined as what people will pay for something. It's subjective. There's no absolute value that someone should be paid in exchange for labour. It depends on what employers think they are worth,
"However, I would also note that since what people get paid depends on the existance of Unions"
False. Most people aren't in Unions, and the average wage has risen faster than the wage demands from unions. People get paid based on their worth to employers. (Productivity etc)
"So in any case I am in favor of trying to increase the worth of people."
The only way to increase the worth of people is to make them more productive. (Skills, investing in machinery etc.) If you force employers to pay them more you will just cause anyone not worth that amount to become unemployed.
"Not that this is really relevant, but most people who lead companies actually do not need their workers"
So why do these money grabbing capitalists employ them then? Wouldn't they make even more money by getting rid of them?
And you still haven't shown me how employing someone exploits them.
"Democratic practices are completely unrelated to a work environment."
Maybe to YOUR work environment, but not all.
What gains did we get? Well, for one, a voice so that we could communicate with management in an orgainzed way, just as management generally do with the labourforce. Before, each person who had a problem was isolated and dealing with it alone.
Then add in the free legal representation, negotiation advice, free training etc etc
"Then add in the free legal representation, negotiation advice, free training etc etc"
Wow. Free? Really? Where do you think the money comes from? The union has operative expenses that it pays for with the dues you pay. You PAY for those things and the overhead it takes to support them. Your employer probably pays a bit for them too, and as a result probably increases prices or decreases employee benefits to compensate.
Try owning and running a business sometime and tell me how much you think it would benefit you (and your business) to be "democratized".
In a democracy, people run things. In a corporation, the owners run things. I'm not saying that they should run things without thinking about what their employees want, I'm just saying that by definition, a corporation isn't a democracy.
What kind of issues were there that the union dealt with?
Why do we need a "Theory" to justify being against Unions? If we want to be selfish and keep all the money for the people at top of society. Let us just be honest about it, and say we are selfish and will use the power we have to satisfy our own greed.
The whole point of capitalism is that people are basically going to be greedy no matter what, but if you tell them, "Well, be as greedy as you like, but to get money you have to convince other people to give it to you, and the best way to do that is usually to make something they like," then things work out ok. Of course, we still need regulation to ensure that the best way to make money really is to make something people like, but outside of that there's no reason to blame geed per se. Greed is the engine that drives the machine!
It may be easy to simply view laborers as commodities (in fact, pg compares them to servers), but it's important to remember these are human beings with lives to live. Before the era of unions, these people were treated as tools, and unions forced companies to recognize that they need to actually give their workers livable working conditions.
So I would like to submit that one reason for the decline of unions today is that government regulates companies much more tightly. Organizations like OSHA and the Workers' Compensation Fund ensure that workers have reasonable demands placed upon them, and if they get hurt, they will still have enough money to live on.
No web consultant ever had to worry about getting electrocuted by the machine he or she uses, or about passing out from excessive heat and falling into dangerous machinery. To compare the union movement of the early 1900s to the boon of web developers in the 90s is absurd, in my opinion. The people who were part of the union movement were heroic, in a way, by forcing faceless companies to recognize the health and humanity of their workers.