Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Assets Under ControlAssets Under Control

Editor's Pick

Reforming Labor Union Laws

Chris Edwards

America’s labor markets are generally free. Employers hire workers of their choice, and workers are free to seek employers that offer the best combination of compensation and working conditions. 

However, labor markets suffer from harmful government interventions, including labor union laws. In the early 20th century, the idea that employers had too much bargaining power relative to employees began gaining favor. Congress responded in the 1930s with the Davis–Bacon Act, the Norris–LaGuardia Act, and the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). These laws allowed worker cartels called labor unions, which replaced individual employment agreements with so-called collective bargaining.

In a new Cato study, Charles Baird, an emeritus professor of economics at California State University, argues that the labor laws of the 1930s are deeply flawed. They damage the economy and violate individual rights, particularly the freedom of association.

The NLRA imposed exclusive representation on employees and employers, which means monopoly unionism. Exclusive representation implies that individuals do not own their labor, but rather a majority of their colleagues do. Dissenting workers have union representation forced on them, and they lose their individual voice.

The 1930s labor union laws were premised on the false idea that management and labor are enemies in the workplace, notes Baird. The reality is that individuals and businesses work together to produce products for consumers. Management and labor are complementary, not rivalrous, inputs to value generation in the economy.

The new Cato study is a great introduction to federal labor union laws from a libertarian perspective. Baird concludes that American workers would enjoy more freedom and prosperity if the labor laws of the 1930s were repealed. 

You May Also Like

Editor's Pick

This week, Joe analyzes all 30 Dow Jones Industrial Average stocks in a rapid-fire format, offering key technical takeaways and highlighting potential setups in...

Editor's Pick

David Kemp and Peter Van Doren Environmental regulations are among the most significant components of the federal regulatory state. Between 2006 and 2016, the...

Editor's Pick

Alfredo Carrillo Obregon and Clark Packard Last week, President Trump announced the United States was imposing a 50 percent “national security” tariff on copper...

Editor's Pick

Thomas A. Berry Suing the government is expensive work. That’s why federal law authorizes the “prevailing party” in a civil rights suit against the...

Generated by Feedzy