Treasury Department releases first-of-its-kind report on benefits of unions to the US economy
By Pete MarcheseThe Treasury Department today is releasing its most comprehensive ever look at the role that labor unions play in the American economy with a new report by the Department’s Office of Economic Policy.
The report represents one of the over 70 actions implemented by the White House Task Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment, chaired by Vice President Harris.
The report finds that unions play an important role in addressing longstanding challenges faced by the middle class – including stagnant wages, high housing costs, and reduced intergenerational mobility. In doing so, unions contribute to a more robust and resilient economy.
President Biden, Vice President Harris, Secretary Yellen and the Administration have consistently championed the rights of workers and the role of strong labor unions in contributing to a thriving middle-class and economy – including through good-paying jobs, safe working conditions, and equitable treatment for workers.
The report’s key findings are:
- Middle-class workers reap
substantial benefits from unionization. Unions raise the
wages of their members by 10 to 15 percent. Unions also improve fringe
benefits and workplace procedures such as retirement plans, workplace
grievance policies, and predictable scheduling. These workplace
improvements contribute substantially to middle-class financial stability
and worker well-being. For example, one study has estimated that the
average worker values their ability to avoid short-notice schedule changes
at up to 20 percent of their wages.
- Unionization also has spillover
effects that extend well beyond union workers. Competition
means workers at nonunionized firms see increased wages too. Heightened
workplace safety norms can pull up whole industries. Union members improve
their communities through heightened civic engagement; they are more
likely to vote, donate to charity, and participate in a neighborhood
project. And, the higher pay and job security of both union and nonunion
middle-class workers can further spill over to their families and
communities through more stable housing, more investment in education, and
other channels.
- Unions help create a fairer economy by benefiting all demographic groups. By encouraging egalitarian wage practices, unions serve to reduce race and gender wage gaps. And modern unions have broad representation across race and gender. In 2021, Black men had a particularly high union representation rate at 13 percent, as compared to the population average of 10 percent. The diverse demographics of modern union membership mean that the benefits of any policy that strengthens today’s unions would be felt across the population.
- Finally, in addition to
supporting the middle class, unions contribute to economic growth and
resilience. They do so in part simply by
reducing overall inequality. Income inequality often feeds back into
inequality of opportunity, which impedes growth if disadvantaged people
cannot access the resources necessary to acquire job skills or start
businesses. And unions can boost businesses’ productivity by
improving working environments and by giving experienced workers more of
an input into decisions that design better and more cost-effective
workplace procedures.
The Biden-Harris Administration recognizes the benefits of unions to the middle class and the broader economy and continues to take steps to strengthen their role. Promisingly, there have been recent signs of a reinvigorated labor movement, as union election petitions in 2022 bounced back from the pandemic to their highest level since 2015, and public opinion of labor unions is at its highest level in over 50 years.
Actions taken and planned by the Biden-Harris Administration to
advance this progress include:
- Prioritizing the passage of the
Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act and the Public Sector Freedom
to Negotiate Act.
- Appointing a General Counsel and
Board Members to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) committed to
protecting the right of workers to organize in the workplace.
- Increasing the funding of the
NLRB to enable them to expand enforcement activities.
- Creating the White House Task
Force on Worker Organizing and Empowerment, which, under the leadership of
Vice President Harris, works with agencies on ways to use their existing
statutory authority to support worker organizing and bargaining.
- Signing Executive Order 14063,
which requires the use of project labor agreements on federal construction
projects of $35 million or more.
- Signing Executive Order 14003 to
promote the rights of federal employees to collectively bargain.
- Launching the Good Jobs
Initiative to ensure the provision of critical information to workers,
employers, and government—including about the union advantage—as they work
to improve job quality and create access to good jobs free from
discrimination and harassment for all working people.
- Promoting “know your rights”
initiatives to provide workers with better information about their
organizing and bargaining rights.
- Announcing a new rule to raise
wage standards of construction workers by updating prevailing wage
regulations issued under the Davis-Bacon and Related Acts,
which require payment of locally prevailing wages and fringe benefits
to more than one million construction workers.
- Requiring employers to pay
prevailing wages and abide by apprenticeship requirements to claim the
full value of many clean energy tax incentives in the Inflation Reduction
Act, as part of the Treasury Department’s implementation of the law.