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"Union Activist Voter Fraud Investigated: Nothing is going to stop union militants efforts to… http://t.co/G6YSKHtA" — Right2Work

Job Losses Increase Pressure For Reform

On September 1, 2010, By NRTW Committee Staff
(Source: August 2010 NRTWC Newsletter)

Grass-Roots Right to Work Efforts Expanding in Midwestern States

Pro-forced unionism politicians like Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D-Mich., shown here with former Vice President Gore and President Obama) have lost credibility due to the extraordinarily poor economic performance of forced-unionism states. Credit: Radiospike.com

All across America, Right to Work states have long benefited from economic growth far superior to that of states in which millions of employees are forced to join or pay dues or fees to a labor union just to keep their jobs.

But over the past decade, the contrast between Right to Work states and forced-union-dues states has been especially stark in the Midwest.

Four Midwestern forced-unionism states — Michigan, Ohio, Illinois and Indiana — suffered absolute private-sector job declines over the past decade that were worse than those of any of the other 46 states. Midwestern forced-unionism states (the four just mentioned, plus Missouri, Wisconsin and Minnesota) lost a net total of 1.88 million private-sector jobs.

Combined, these seven forced-unionism states had 8.1% fewer private-sector jobs in 2009 than they did back in 1999.

Meanwhile, the five Midwestern Right to Work states (North Dakota, Nebraska, South Dakota, Iowa and Kansas) experienced an overall private-sector job increase of 2.3%.

Moreover, from 1999 to 2009, real personal income in Midwestern Right to Work states grew by 17.3% — an increase two-and-a-half times as a great as the combined real personal income growth in Midwestern forced-unionism states.

State Right to Work laws prohibit the firing of employees simply for exercising their right to refuse to join or bankroll an unwanted union.

At this time, 22 states have Right to Work laws on the books. However, because of intensifying grass-roots efforts in many of the remaining 28 forced-unionism states, the number of Right to Work states could be on the rise over the course of the next few years.

Recession’s End Won’t Suffice to Revive Big Labor-Controlled States (more…)

Tagged with: Cato Journal • Illinois • Indiana • Iowa • Kansas • Lowell Galloway • Mark Mix • Michigan • Minnesota • Missouri • Nebraska • North Dakota • Ohio • Richard Vedder • South Dakota • Wisconsin
Posted in: Economic Development in RTW States, Economic Impact of Unionization, Economics, Exclusive Representation, Forced Dues, Forced-Dues for Politics, Government Grants to Unions, Legislation, Monopoly Bargaining, NRTWC Newsletter, Pension Funds, Political Activity, Public Employees, Right to Work, State Right To Work, State RTW, Union boss power
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Right to Work Laws ‘Have a Positive Impact’

On March 26, 2010, By NRTW Committee Staff

 Eminent Economist Gauges Benefits of Banning Forced Unionism

(Source: March 2010 NRTWC Newsletter)

A new scholarly article by eminent economist Richard Vedder constitutes an important addition to the already formidable array of evidence that state Right to Work laws increase job opportunities and raise employees’ real incomes.

Dr. Vedder, a professor on the faculty of Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, and the author of more than 100 academic papers published in scholarly journals as well as several books, is a specialist in labor, taxation and education issues.

With fellow Ohio University economist Lowell Galloway, Dr. Vedder is the coauthor of the acclaimed book Out of Work, an examination of the ties between unemployment and public policies in 20th Century America.

In 1994, this book was both the recipient of the Sir Anthony Fisher International Memorial Award and a Mencken Award Finalist.

In “Right to Work Laws: Liberty, Prosperity, and Quality of Life,” an article appearing in the Winter 2010 edition of Cato Journal, Dr. Vedder observes that currently 22 states have on the books Right to Work laws banning the termination of employees for refusal to join or pay dues or fees to an unwanted union.

Massive Migration to Right to Work States an ‘Important Untold Story’

An “important untold story,” Dr. Vedder continues, “is the rapid growth of population” living in Right to Work states “relative to states refusing to grant workers the right to reject unionization.”

In 1970, 28.5% of Americans lived in Right to Work states. By 2008, the “proportion” had risen to nearly 40%, or over 121 million people.

And “the most important reason for the increase in the percentage of the U.S. population” living in Right to Work states has been “a huge migration of persons” from forced-unionism states “to those allowing greater personal liberty with respect to employment.”

U.S. Census Bureau estimates indicate that, from April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2008, a net total of roughly 4.7 million Americans, “on average more than one person every single minute,” moved from a forced-unionism state to a Right to Work state.

Dr. Vedder goes on to summarize a multiple regression analysis he did to determine whether some factor other than the lack of Right to Work protections could possibly account for the massive and continuing out-migration from forced-unionism states.

Analysis Reinforces ‘View That People Vote With Their Feet’ For Right to Work

“I tried several different models,” he reports, “incorporating different sets of explanatory variables (tax, climate, occupational composition of the labor force, unemployment, [and] population density . . .).

“Without exception, in all the estimations, a statistically significant positive relationship . . . was observed between the presence” of a Right to Work law “and net migration. . . .

“Consider a state with a population of five million in 2000. Other things equal, the model with the best predictive power that we used suggests that about 150,000 more people would move into the state between 2000 and 2008” because of its Right to Work status.”

Overall, Dr. Vedder’s findings “reinforce the view that people vote with their feet to move to freer labor market environments.”

Elsewhere in the article, Dr. Vedder reports that he also did a regression analysis “to relate the rate of growth in real personal per capita personal income from 1977 to 2007 for the 48 contiguous U.S. states to the existence” of Right to Work laws.

The analysis controlled for each state’s tax burden, the share of its adults with college degrees, land area, and several other variables.

Right to Work Law ‘Would Have Increased Per Capita Income by an Extra $2760’

Here again, Dr. Vedder found “a very strong and highly statistically significant . . . positive relationship between” Right to Work laws and economic growth.”

He elaborates: Suppose two states both “had per capita income of $24,000 in 1977.”

Real per capita income in the state without Right to Work protections “would have risen to $36,000 in 2007, compared to $38,760” in the Right to Work state. Right to Work protections “would have increased per capita income by an extra $2760 — or over $11,000 annually for a family of four.”

While alternative models “might offer somewhat different conclusions, . . . based on existing evidence, a strong case can be made” that Right to Work laws “have a positive impact on U.S. living standards.”

But despite all the evidence of Right to Work laws’ economic benefits, and despite the fact that nearly 80% of Americans who regularly vote support the Right to Work as a matter of principle, passing a state Right to Work law is never easy.

Unions that file federal disclosure forms rake in a total of roughly $20 billion a year in (mostly forced) dues and fees, government grants, rents, interest, and other revenues. And union bosses deploy a huge share of that money on politics and lobbying.

Freedom-Loving Citizens Must Be Mobilized to Pass More Right to Work Laws

As Dr. Vedder notes, most politicians fear the power of the Big Labor lobby, “but . . . probably also suspect that public opinion is generally supportive” of Right to Work laws.

Many politicians evidently calculate that these factors “are roughly offsetting, so the politically optimal thing to do is nothing: don’t rock the boat.”

“Though Richard Vedder is an economist, not a political scientist, his analysis of the way many politicians think is right on target,” commented National Right to Work Committee President Mark Mix.

“That’s why it takes several years of painstaking mobilization by freedom-loving citizens to put sufficient pressure on state legislators and executives to adopt and sign into law a Right to Work measure banning forced union dues.

“But the vital protections such laws furnish for personal freedom and the economic dynamism they make possible are always well worth the effort.

“And the Committee and its 2.5 million members and supporters always stand ready to offer our advice and assistance for citizens in any of the 28 current forced-unionism states who are willing to take on the fight to bring about passage of new Right to Work laws.

“Moreover, the Committee also continues to work for passage of national Right to Work legislation repealing all federal labor-law provisions that authorize forced union dues and fees. Effectively, that would make all 50 states Right to Work states.”

Tagged with: CATO • Lowell Galloway • Ohio University • Richard Vedder
Posted in: Economic Impact of Unionization, Economics, Exclusive Representation, Forced Dues, Forced-Dues for Politics, Government Grants to Unions, Legislation, NRTWC Newsletter, Political Activity
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