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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

The Future of Work: Where the Labor Movement Is Heading

Global Labor Strategies. Posted September 1, 2008.


Conventional trade unionism is pretty much over. On Labor Day, it's time to figure out what should come next.
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It has been decades since Labor Day was a celebration of workers and trade unions as its 19th century founders intended it to be. Today, it marks the end of summer. Perhaps the local paper runs an op-ed or an article with a labor theme. Occasionally it prompts a bit of reflection on the decline of trade unionism, and very occasionally on ways to reverse that decline.

The truth is that conventional trade unionism is pretty much dead. It is now time for post-mortems and for questions about what could come next. Is another labor movement possible? Can existing trade unions survive even if they manage to change or will new ones be needed?

Today only 8% of private sector workers in the U.S. belong to a union. Vast sections of the country are essentially union free. No wonder. The organizational structures, laws, and institutional arrangements that shape today's labor movement have their roots in an earlier era stretching back to the 19th century. And while capitalism has undergone revolutionary changes in the past few decades, changes we generally refer to as globalization, the labor movement has remained essentially unchanged and nation based.

Three trends, in particular, stand out:

  1. Modern corporations roam the world looking for low labor costs, lax regulations, and weak labor unions. This pits workers and communities against each other in a classic race to the bottom to attract and retain jobs.
  2. Corporations have abandoned the old vertically and horizontally integrated organizational structures, in which companies sought to keep most aspects of production and distribution in-house, in favor of newer core/ring systems in which they perform only core functions while farming out the rest to complex supply chains of contractors and subsidiaries. Workers making the same product, or providing the same service, may be employed by many different employers, making solidarity and collective action difficult.
  3. Corporations divide the remaining in-house workforce into a core group of workers with standard jobs and at least some expectation of long term employment, and a secondary group of contingent workers: part-timers, temps, contract workers, on-call workers, and day laborers usually with sub-standard wages and benefits and little or no job security.

These trends -- capital mobility, "dis-integrated" corporate structures, and contingent staffing strategies -- all thwart labor's ability to organize and bargain effectively and make it much more difficult for unions to do the kinds of things that would make them attractive to workers and worth fighting for. For instance, on critical issues like protecting jobs, unions have been unable to deliver, and in recent years labor has had extraordinary difficulty even holding on to gains made earlier in the 20th century.

Some argue labor should focus on less mobile service sector jobs; we have written elsewhere why we think this strategy will not reverse labor's decline. Others argue that tweaks in U.S. labor law like the Employee Free Choice Act currently being promoted by unions and the Democrats, which will allow card check recognition, will revive labor's fortunes by reducing anti-union employer pressure on workers attempting to organize. But marginal changes in labor law do not address the central dynamics of capital mobility, new corporate structures, and contingent staffing strategies that characterize contemporary capitalism and undermine organized labor.

Labor's revival in the era of globalization will require a new kind of labor movement, one that not only provides effective representation at the workplace and in the economy but also helps workers represent themselves in relation to the basic questions of society: of how we will address the challenge of global warming; of how we can overcome the polarization of wealth and the persistence of poverty; of how we can build the essential cross border solidarity necessary in the era of globalization.

In fact, the issues on which labor's revival depends are not simply the issues of craft, industry, or employers but are essentially class issues that relate to the role of working people in shaping the direction of the society.

The labor movement is still the bearer of a great heritage available to those who will remake it for the world we live in now. There are people inside and outside the existing labor movement ready to get down to the work of building on that heritage and many unions retain considerable resources that could contribute to building a new labor movement for our times. Like any movement under attack, labor generally resists as disloyal critical thinking that challenges established tenets and practices. But today that won't do. Now more than ever we need a free and open debate about the future of labor, a debate that respects a full range of opinions and perspectives. Launching such a debate would be a good first step in labor's revival.

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The Problem is the Decline of the Nation State ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 1, 2008 1:05 AM   
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Corporations have over taken government around the world. Many corporations are bigger than 80% of the countries out there.

The neoliberalization of the world can only be stopped by the revitalization of the Nation State through the utilization of tariffs,the sovereignty of natural resources and the nationalization of central banks to dump the use of fractional reserve banking .

The Labor Movement has waxed and waned and now is no different. The failure of the DOHA round of WTO talks points to the reversal of fortune for the banks and conglomerates and the rise of nationalism.

All this being said there are immediate problems that will encourage this new nationalism to become violent and belligerent. Those problems are Peak Oil and Environmental Catastrophes. These will cause countries to further fascist governance as economies succumb and people lose jobs and face homelessness and hunger.

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This, too, shall be overcome by events
Posted by: phshafe on Sep 1, 2008 4:51 AM   
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The problem of wholesale exploitation of labor in American industry is important and deserves attention. Yet, our economy was founded on gilded age laissez-faire capitalism which is antithetical to respect for labor, and which will not likely change anytime soon. What will change is that the energy Armageddon that the world faces will choke off what large organizations, that institutionalize labor exploitation, need to survive. Our economy will reorganize at the local level -- which will have its own issues, but will hammer the final nails into the coffin of big business/big labor horseshit that have plagued the honest worker during the industrial age.

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International unions will be a viable force only when income differences between rich and poor
Posted by: andabottleof_rum on Sep 1, 2008 6:16 AM   
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countries have come a long way toward leveling out. This means they won't have much of a chance until first-world workers are making a lot less money, and third-world workers are making a lot more, and we're all more or less second world like Mexico or Eastern Europe. Until then, the first-world workers will not want to bargain collectively with the third-world workers.

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The old 'old left' and the future
Posted by: nemonemini on Sep 1, 2008 7:04 AM   
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The labor movement is the child of the old 'old left' which since the (fortunate) passing of Bolshevism is essentially defunct, both theoretically and in practice. Isolated labor movements are sitting ducks without the larger framework of a true left. The future needs something new in the way of a theory/philosophy of history that can base the idea of the left in something more than the Leninist distortions and revolutionary adventurism. Behind the errors of Marx and his denunciation as a failed prophet lies the reality that he prophesied the exact situation that neo-liberalism has created for us. But his flawed theories have proven the left's own downfall. So, for a first thought, we need to both disown the old left, and yet have no illusions about the acute insights of such as Marx that essentially produced the classic diagnosis of our situation. This diagnosis is still mocking us a century and half later. But the old left is in many way in the way of new thinking.
It popped into my head to start a blog on this issue: 1848+: Out of Revolution, (no content yet, but it's the idea that counts)

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» Repeating Lenin Posted by: pdxjoe
» RE: repeating Lenin ????????? Posted by: nemonemini
» RE: repeating Lenin ????????? Posted by: shinseiji
Too Much of a Good Thing Turns It Bad
Posted by: Last Chance on Sep 1, 2008 7:11 AM   
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Relentless growth of human population provokes the spread of social chaos, collapse of popular organizations, policy madness, spreading violence and global war.

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realistic change
Posted by: carrotwax on Sep 1, 2008 9:06 AM   
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At this point - given the economic situation that's going on globally - the most likely way to have significant change is to go through another great depression. This may happen quite soon.

Historically, after any major crises and destruction of businesses, the rights and benefits of workers have tended to go up.

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When Labor Re-creates Part 2
Posted by: Patrick Murfin on Sep 1, 2008 10:52 AM   
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That is history. But there is no reason to suspect that the general pattern will not repeat itself. I am proudly tied to the labor tradition—I’m an old Wobbly. But I know that the IWW in its glory days was just the organic response of working people to concentrating capital and it’s militarized forces of repression. It was once an entirely fresh idea, born in Chicago in 1905 by practical men and women who had already been baptized by fire in a thousand struggles. It challenged the labor orthodoxy of craft unionism and quickly offended the theoreticians of the left who could not understand it, co-opt it, or lead it.
Something like that is already under way. What results won’t resemble the Great Wheal of Industrial Union organization drawn up by a renegade Catholic Priest, Father Haggerty, all those years ago. The shape of what it will look like is only beginning to emerge. But it will certainly come out of the knowledge that the traditional labor movement as bound itself to near impotency by accepting the restrictions of American labor law in exchange for the scraps of a supposedly “sympathetic” NLRB and the ease of collecting dues by check-off deductions from wages. New organizations may pointedly not call themselves unions or engage in direct bargaining with specific employers for contract defined benefits just so they can be free of the straight jacket the traditional unions have put on themselves. They will take advantage of modern technology and instant communications. Organizations like MoveOn have shown that, with the right spark unimaginable numbers of people can be linked together and organized for common purpose in amazingly short periods of time. And organizations of this type are apt to be loose, flexible, undependent of massive bank accounts that can be seized at any time, and resistant to top-down leadership.
Some traditional unions are seeing this and moving in these directions. Those that do may even survive.
But I place my faith in the future in the hands of the dawning self awareness of the new working class and its creativity. May It ever be so.

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When Labor Re-creates-Part 1
Posted by: Patrick Murfin on Sep 1, 2008 10:53 AM   
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Labor movements are by their nature the organic response of working people to the situations that confront them. Stretching back to Wat Tyler’s rebellion in 13—and undoubtedly even earlier—peasants, wage workers, indentures, even slaves organized themselves and pressed for reform or revolution using the tools they found at hand. Sometimes they had visionary and/or charismatic leadership, but just as often historians are left scratching their heads in a vain search for a “great man” on whom to fix leadership.
Over centuries of time spanning continents and seas, it is the recurring recognition of the inequity of a yawning class divide, the necessity of common organization and action, and the inspiration of those who came before and engaged in their own struggles that weaves a continuum. It is not form of organization. Organization arises from meeting the conditions on the ground. Thus in America the organizations of “mechanics”—master workmen enforcing the rules of craft secretly slipped into the hands of apprentices and journeymen confronting the masters who themselves had morphed from workingmen to employers. Benevolent societies meant for the provision of widows and orphans found themselves to be common ground where workers could meet and take action. Secret societies like the Molly Maguires of the Pennsylvania Coal fields arose where oppression of open action was the strongest. Brotherhoods and fraternal organization like the Knight of Labor morphed into labor unions employing the tactics of strike and boycott over the objections of their own leadership because the members demanded it. So it went. Craft unions, industrial unions, international unions. And the working class also invented other organs—political parties, Internationals, co-operatives, community organizations, amorphous movements, and alliances with other excluded alienated groups in society—to address issues and problems that employment based organization could not.
Each of these organizations might borrow something from those who came before. But there were always those who told the working people that their salvation relied on hewing to the old traditions without waver. And there were theorists and ideologues who thought they had found firm, fixed answers spun out of utopian visions made possible if only workers would hew closely to the one and only path. Both types were bound for astonishment and disillusion when working people disregarded their admonitions and invented their own organs. Neither the sentimentalists for a glorious past or the self-proclaimed “vanguard” were ever much more than hangers on around the real movements of working people.

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Educate, agitate, organise..........
Posted by: Daidactic on Sep 1, 2008 1:58 PM   
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As a Trade Union activist from the UK - Cymru (Wales) to be precise, I think that educate, agitate, organise is the way forward for Trade Unions.
Because capitalism is international so Trade Unions need to organise internationally and now the Comintern is dead in the water it is time to educate workers that it is in their best interest to organise internationally too. This is an aim but a realistic one.
The major problem we all have is the way that the law in the USA and UK makes it difficult for Trade Unionist to organise properly - we are not as far down the road of casual labour as the US but that is what Globalisation requires. What we need is a political voice to strengthen our rights but on both sides of the Atlantic politicians on the left have sold out to big business.
On a more postitive note, my Trade Union branch has increased our membership by almost 50% in the last 5 years because we have engaged with the day-to-day problems that our members have - its not glamorous and it can be hard work but it is the only way to build.
IMHO the main problem that you have in the USA is that people have a very hazy idea, if any, of class, and that is because an ideological view is absent - there is not enough analysis. In real politics once you can see what class struggle is about then you can organise and build.
A Trade Union branch secretary ( 3 hours a week to do the job, LOL!)

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good summary of problem but solution...?
Posted by: edgar1 on Sep 1, 2008 3:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Revival of guilds so the skill card travels with you from job to to job, even if you are part-time? No tax benefits for non-union companies over a certain size? No right to go public unless you have a unionized work force? I know these are poltically difficult proposals and most Americans wouldn't know what I'm talking about. But if you write an article like this, propose something.

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» Thank you, Edgar. Posted by: Sojourner
Liam on the Left
Posted by: Liam on Sep 1, 2008 8:29 PM   
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I worked for both private and public sector unions for 25 years. Something organized labor could do to help themselves but is never discussed, is planning, training and competent management of the locals, councils and even the AFL-CIO!

I never worked for a union that had a plan. The AFL-CIO would develop at times great programs they would dump in a year or two with no follow through. Local Union "leadership" was usually recruited off picket-lines, negotiations committee or the rank and file loud mouth who sees a better job running the union than being a productive member. There is no management training - little support from the International Staff and I never figured out what state labor councils or the AFL-CIO did other than go to politicians wine and cheese parties! This is not a 100% answer to labor's problem but good management of the organization would help a lot. As pointed out in the "Peter Principle": "IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHERE YOU'RE GOING, YOU WILL PROBABLY END UP SOMEWHERE ELSE!" Nothing could describe the state of organized labor in the U.S. better today.

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READ NAOMI KLEIN. YOU WON'T EVEN KNOW WHAT WE FACE UNTIL
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Sep 2, 2008 11:01 PM   
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you do. Yes this is serious. The powers that be really do fear democracy. We are in a fight for our lives and our freedom. Right now we are losing.

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