So I was talking to an old timer the other day. He used to work at a glass-blower factory.
He said that when he got up to management, what he saw was that management and the labor union rep would take a look at the worker complaints and then decide which ones the union would win and which ones the company would win.
In other words, at that company, union conflict became some sort of mirage that management and the union foisted on the workers. It seems to me that unions often are justified in their creation stories, but then they justify their existence as long as they can even when the crisis has passed.
Theoretically, unions shouldn't be necessary, no? For instance, in the retail space, one business model could be the Costco model of high pay for workers, vs the Walmart model of low pay for workers, and then see which company succeeds. There shouldn't be a need to unionize either store and have workers fight against management.
He said that when he got up to management, what he saw was that management and the labor union rep would take a look at the worker complaints and then decide which ones the union would win and which ones the company would win.
In other words, at that company, union conflict became some sort of mirage that management and the union foisted on the workers. It seems to me that unions often are justified in their creation stories, but then they justify their existence as long as they can even when the crisis has passed.
Theoretically, unions shouldn't be necessary, no? For instance, in the retail space, one business model could be the Costco model of high pay for workers, vs the Walmart model of low pay for workers, and then see which company succeeds. There shouldn't be a need to unionize either store and have workers fight against management.