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Union wage premium
The union wage premium refers to the degree to which wages for union members exceed those for otherwise similar non-unionized workers. Union wage premiums are one of the most researched and analyzed issues in labor economics. The modern scholarly consensus is that unions tend to be associated with higher wages, greater levels of benefits like health care and paid time off, and improved workplace protections.
Dynamics
One of the characteristics of a union is to try to bargain and negotiate wages and hours. Unions also try to reduce or eliminate pay discrimination and low wages. The wage gap of non-union workers and unionized workers since the 1970s has varied between 21% and 32% in Canada.{{cite journal |access-date=3 September 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050426101312/http://www.statcan.ca/english/studies/75-001/archive/e-pdf/e-0242.pdf |archive-date=April 26, 2005
This union premium wage gap can be interpreted as the adaptations to globalization, technological, and demographic changes.
Others attribute changes in this premium to changes in business cycles (for example should the unemployment rate go up, it would raise the premium or if the inflation rate were to increase then it should lower the premium). Deregulation also affects premiums by adding competitors that will probably lower the unions bargaining power but it could be argued that it also affects the wages of non-union workers as well. As well cause them to compete with local and foreign wages to keep workers in the jobs and not move to a better paying job. Similarly, import penetration would cause the union to insulate the wages for a period of time.
References
References
- {{usurped
- [https://www.epi.org/publication/briefingpapers_bp143/ How unions help all workers]
- (1988). "Labor Market Segmentation and the Union Wage Premium". [[Review of Economics and Statistics]].
- Orazem, Peter F.. "Economics 322: Collective Bargaining". Iowa State University.
- (2004). "The Union Wage Premium in the US and the UK". CEP Discussion Papers.
- Union wage premiums also usually raise the wages of low-skilled workers more than those of high-skilled workers. Thus these low skilled workers usually have less education, lower wages, and in lower paid jobs. This mainly is the result of unions historically representing the working and lower classes. Most economist and labor studies on union wage premiums estimate a difference of about 15%.[https://archive.today/20120912005532/http://www.metapress.com/content/dna507agtn2rk5ne/?p=91f5cec641834157bcc7e35b90473ede&pi=2 MetaPress – Journal Article]
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