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Millwright Ron[_2_] Millwright Ron[_2_] is offline
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Default How unions help all workers

Economic Policy Institute

How unions help all workers


by Lawrence Mishel and Matthew Walters

Unions have a substantial impact on the compensation and work lives of
both unionized and non-unionized workers. This report presents current
data on unions' effect on wages, fringe benefits, total compensation,
pay inequality, and workplace protections.

Some of the conclusions a


• Unions raise wages of unionized workers by roughly 20% and raise
compensation, including both wages and benefits, by about 28%.

• Unions reduce wage inequality because they raise wages more for low-
and middle-wage workers than for higher-wage workers, more for blue-
collar than for white-collar workers, and more for workers who do not
have a college degree.

• Strong unions set a pay standard that nonunion employers follow. For
example, a high school graduate whose workplace is not unionized but
whose industry is 25% unionized is paid 5% more than similar workers
in less unionized industries.

• The impact of unions on total nonunion wages is almost as large as
the impact on total union wages.

• The most sweeping advantage for unionized workers is in fringe
benefits. Unionized workers are more likely than their nonunionized
counterparts to receive paid leave, are approximately 18% to 28% more
likely to have employer-provided health insurance, and are 23% to 54%
more likely to be in employer-provided pension plans.

• Unionized workers receive more generous health benefits than
nonunionized workers. They also pay 18% lower health care deductibles
and a smaller share of the costs for family coverage. In retirement,
unionized workers are 24% more likely to be covered by health
insurance paid for by their employer.

• Unionized workers receive better pension plans. Not only are they
more likely to have a guaranteed benefit in retirement, their
employers contribute 28% more toward pensions.

• Unionized workers receive 26% more vacation time and 14% more total
paid leave (vacations and holidays).

Unions play a pivotal role both in securing legislated labor
protections and rights such as safety and health, overtime, and family/
medical leave and in enforcing those rights on the job. Because
unionized workers are more informed, they are more likely to benefit
from social insurance programs such as unemployment insurance and
workers compensation. Unions are thus an intermediary institution that
provides a necessary complement to legislated benefits and
protections.


The union wage premium

It should come as no surprise that unions raise wages, since this has
always been one of the main goals of unions and a major reason that
workers seek collective bargaining. How much unions raise wages, for
whom, and the consequences of unionization for workers, firms, and the
economy have been studied by economists and other researchers for over
a century (for example, the work of Alfred Marshall). This section
presents evidence from the 1990s that unions raise the wages of
unionized workers by roughly 20% and raise total compensation by about
28%.

The research literature generally finds that unionized workers'
earnings exceed those of comparable nonunion workers by about 15%, a
phenomenon known as the "union wage premium."

Millwright Ron

www.unionmillwright.com