The 45,000 CWA and IBEW members are hopeful that Monday night's return
to work at Verizon after a two- week strike will bringmeaningful collective
bargaining and a good result for all concerned. For us, the strike was
about real collective bargaining rights as much as about preserving
the standard of living for our families.
The unity of our members and the widespread public support for workers
really speak to the general state of working families in the US. This
includes stagnating real wages in recent years, the collapse of employer
based health care, declining retirement security and the export of good
jobs to low wage contractors and offshore. The root cause of much of
this decline is the collapse of bargaining rights in the US in both
the public and private sectors.
For our members and their union, as well as Verizon management, at
least on the surface, there is no larger story. The strike was about
this contract and the state of bargaining at this company. Verizon has
begun a management transition, and we are hopeful that for lots of reasons
this is an opportunity for change. But the unity of our members and
the popular support of their cause, to a large extent, reflects how
normal cuts have become and how unusual resistance on this scale is
in the United States of the 21st century.
For working women and men, and retirees in the US, there is little
structural economic support. We can pretend otherwise, but look at nearly
every other industrial democracy, where high level and cost effective
health care is the norm, retirement security means much higher income
replacement, public policy supports retaining jobs in key industries
and most important, there is widespread public and politicalsupport
for collective bargaining.
We are in an economic free fall. Pretending that we are consumers and
not working Americans first will not fix it. Tax cuts will not fix it.
Attacks on working Americans and their rights like those led by Republicans
in the House of Representatives and extremist governors at every opportunity
will make the landing even harder.
We need to restore workers' rights in a meaningful way so that we all
can negotiate and engage our employers in a meaningful way. Human resource
leaders at major US based employers should be ashamed of looking to
cut costs at every turn, then collaborating with multi-billion dollar
political machines to fight every political attempt to restore balance
through publicpolicy. For example, nearly without exception, US management
opposed federal legislation mandating that all employers pay for quality
care. Even those employers like Verizon that provide decent health care
end up subsidizing employers that are health care deadbeats by ensuring
spouses who work for those companies.
Collective bargaining can make a difference. Look back to 1938, when
the United States still was gripped by the last of the recessions that
made up the Great Depression. Well known economist John Maynard Keynes
wrote to President Franklin D Roosevelt, stating that the jobs program
and financial regulation were important, but "I regard the expansion
of collective bargaining as essential."
Keynes was not particularly a union supporter but he understood, as
did economists for decades to come, that collective bargaining is a
critical engine to fire up the demand curve and enable workers to improve
their conditions in discussion with management, thus improving the economy.
We will never have an economic recovery in this country if instead very
profitable employers automatically cut wages, cut benefits and ship
more good jobs overseas because their colleagues at other firms are
all doing it. That remains a race to the bottom.
We can't have a recovery based on a "dollar store" economy.
Unless workers can truly use bargaining rights to better their conditions,
that's exactly where we're headed. The strike at Verizon demonstrates
the severity of the problem, but it will take a majority based political
movement to fix it.
Larry Cohen is president of the Communications Workers of America, which
represents 700,000 working men and women in communications, media, airlines,
manufacturing, health care and public service.
Source:
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/labor/178171-verizon-strike-has-bigger-lessons-for-us-economy
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