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The average full-time worker in a


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2012 Dec 9, 11:53am   12,789 views  38 comments

by kentm   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.nationalmemo.com/5-ways-right-to-work-for-less-laws-crush-the-middle-class/2/

The average full-time worker in a “Right To Work” state makes about $1,500 less annually than a similar worker in a non-RTW state. That’s not just union workers. That’s every worker earning less as a result of union busting. (nationalmemo.com)

Here's an article on right to work. One of the kids on the site was extolling the virtues the other day...

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1   Peter P   2012 Dec 9, 11:58am  

So consumers will have to pay less for stuff because of lower labor costs.

It is a two way street.

2   Bellingham Bill   2012 Dec 9, 12:01pm  

Peter P says

So consumers will have to pay less for stuff because of lower labor costs.

Only in Conservative Storyland.

Here in the real world:

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CP

3   Peter P   2012 Dec 9, 12:13pm  

It is strange.

To many people, inflation is bad, except for home prices and labor costs.

What gives?

4   Bellingham Bill   2012 Dec 9, 12:36pm  

Wages that circulate among goods & service providers is how healthy economies work.

Incomes being siphoned OUT of the paycheck economy by non-laborers -- real estate rents, health care rents, resource rents, our $500B+/yr trade deficit, and corporate stockholders and bondholders -- kill velocity within the paycheck economy and eventually cause everything to collapse.

"Labor costs" is how everyone actually makes a living, LOL.

Not that wages need to be high per se, but everything needs to be in balance, money that leaves the paycheck economy has to be put back or the paycheck earners will run out of money.

Our system is far, far out of balance now, with the 1% and 5% claiming an ever-increasing share of income, which is, in the end, has to come entirely from the product of laborers -- every dime's worth of wealth in this country has to be created by labor. But laborers are seeing less and less of the value of their output.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=dEY

Get it now?

Just because wages "inflate" doesn't mean that consumer prices have to go up, either.

We could liquidate the rentiers, instead.

5   Tenpoundbass   2012 Dec 9, 11:37pm  

Right to work states also don't have state income taxes.
Who needs Unions to demand higher wages and a higher quality of life?
That was supposed to be Mitt Romney's job.

6   david1   2012 Dec 10, 12:22am  

CaptainShuddup says

Right to work states also don't have state income taxes.

This is patently false. There are 23 right-to-work states and 9 income tax free states. (7 totally free, 2 tax only interest and dividend income)

Not all 9 income tax free states are right-to-work, either, Washington, Alaska, and New Hampshire are income tax free but are not right-to-work.

How can anyone look at a graph of corporate profits after tax and union membership (HINT: Real Corporate Profits are soaring while Union membership is falling) and not see the problem.

7   FortWayne   2012 Dec 10, 12:33am  

You can't compare it like that. NY and CA are Non RTW states, but geographical position makes salaries higher in those states.

Now I know this is pointless to discuss since liberals will cling on to anything, true or false, and trumped it as truth, while never looking at all the reasons for wages/salaries etc...

8   marcus   2012 Dec 10, 4:11pm  

FortWayne says

Now I know this is pointless to discuss since liberals will cling on to anything

ACtually this is one of the first sensible arguments I've ever heard from you FW. You're correct, unions aren't the only reason pay is higher in major coastal cities. But it's true to a smaller degree in medium size Midwestern cities RTW states versus not.

Nuance man. Unions aren't all good or all bad. But for a black and white thinker such as yourself, complexity and nuance is too much to handle. You need simple answers.

UNION BAD (frankenstein voice) !

One of the reasons houses are cheaper in the south east is that there's less unions in construction. Is that automatically another reason to be anti-union ?

It's so incredibly stupid. How far does the pendulum have to swing toward economic inequality before you get it? Do we have to become basically a third world fascist police state before you finally wake up.

(not that you would wake up. you would be listening to FOx or another propaganda mill tell you what they want you to think the reasons are for your plight. And you would be one of the first to raise your arm with a big Zeig Heil. It's not your fault. It's called an authoritian personality.)

The least you could do is have an open mind and think a little before you just latch on to the first authority that floats your boat.

So sad.

9   kentm   2012 Dec 10, 6:15pm  

FortWayne says

Now I know this is pointless to discuss since liberals will cling on to anything, true or false

It's gems like this that keep me coming back here.

10   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Dec 10, 10:21pm  

Peter P says

So consumers will have to pay less for stuff because of lower labor costs.

And consumers will be able to buy less stuff because their primary source of income pays less.

Shit's really cheap in Sierra Leone and Laos though.

11   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 12:50am  

thunderlips11 says

And consumers will be able to buy less stuff because their primary source of income pays less.

Shit's really cheap in Sierra Leone and Laos though.

It is a feedback loop. But Market will provide the balance.

12   justme   2012 Dec 11, 1:04am  

Peter P says

It is a feedback loop. But Market will provide the balance.

Yeah, and the balance will be at at an equilibrium point that is bad for EVERYONE.

13   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2012 Dec 11, 1:19am  

marcus says

It's so incredibly stupid. How far does the pendulum have to swing toward economic inequality before you get it? Do we have to become basically a third world fascist police state before you finally wake up.

Says the guy who supports government redistributing income.

Irony much?

14   zzyzzx   2012 Dec 11, 1:26am  

kentm says

The average full-time worker in a “Right To Work” state makes about $1,500 less annually than a similar worker in a non-RTW state.

I'm also guessing that on average, unemployment is lower in a RTW state. Just saying.

15   Mick Russom   2012 Dec 11, 1:55am  

Peter P says

So consumers will have to pay less for stuff because of lower labor costs.

It is a two way street.

No it isnt. All costs are passed along to the consumer. Any savings are generally kept. Not much of the microeconomic stuff applies anyways because all the major throughput of goods are pan-national and oligarchical.

16   Mick Russom   2012 Dec 11, 1:57am  

How about this: higher costs of living (mainly high rent/ expensive houses) means less disposable income in a consumer economy.

We are in a slow motion national suicide by stagflation. Costs go up, salaries stay the same or go down, and the housing freaks keep pressing for higher prices.

17   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 1:58am  

zzyzzx says

kentm says

The average full-time worker in a “Right To Work” state makes about $1,500 less annually than a similar worker in a non-RTW state.

I'm also guessing that on average, unemployment is lower in a RTW state. Just saying.

You are probly right. RTW is like minimum wage. It increases the average and decreases the size. Both are bad.

18   FortWayne   2012 Dec 11, 2:39am  

Peter P says

You are probly right. RTW is like minimum wage. It increases the average and decreases the size. Both are bad.

But it doesn't work that way. I should be free to not be represented by a union. Yet the union in the Non-RTW states will force me into the union. And if a man does not want to be racketed into the union, he should not have to.

19   FortWayne   2012 Dec 11, 2:43am  

Mick Russom says

Peter P says

So consumers will have to pay less for stuff because of lower labor costs.

It is a two way street.

No it isnt. All costs are passed along to the consumer. Any savings are generally kept. Not much of the microeconomic stuff applies anyways because all the major throughput of goods are pan-national and oligarchical.

Generally savings are reinvested in order to grow a business, because if you are not growing your competition is. You can't invest or hire more people if you don't have the money to do it.

I'm not advocating minimum wage for everyone, but what we have now is unions killing this country. A firefighter making 90,000k a year... might be all right. But the same firefighter retiring at 65 with 195,000 annual pension is a cost society cannot bear at current market conditions.

At the end unions are only about unions and union greed, they don't care if we struggle or die in poverty, as long as they get what they want. They pass tremendous costs onto rest of us that we cannot sustain and end up losing services that are needed by our citizens.

20   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Dec 11, 2:44am  

Problem is, everyone benefits from a union. High wages paid to union members drive up the average wages, so even people in non-union jobs benefit.

I remember back in college, my Econ Prof tried this bullshit:

"Wages rise faster for non-union members."

That's true, but it's better to make $18/hr today with 2% raises going forward, than to make $9/hr today and get 5% pay increases for several years until it reaches equilibrium with the unionize workers years down the line. You lost money in the gap period, and the time value of money and all that.

21   FortWayne   2012 Dec 11, 2:48am  

thunderlips11 says

Problem is, everyone benefits from a union. High wages paid to union members drive up the average wages, so even people in non-union jobs benefit.

No, the only beneficiaries here are those well connected in the union. A non union member forced to pay union dues is economically burdened. A society that can no longer afford proper services because of exorbitant union pay is economically burdened.

And with the union structure of seniority and collective decisions, motivation to try hard and be the best is filtered out by creating apathy. And apathy is the most common trait among union workers.

22   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 2:52am  

Unions sre rent seekers.

23   dublin hillz   2012 Dec 11, 3:47am  

FortWayne says

thunderlips11 says



Problem is, everyone benefits from a union. High wages paid to union members drive up the average wages, so even people in non-union jobs benefit.


No, the only beneficiaries here are those well connected in the union. A non union member forced to pay union dues is economically burdened. A society that can no longer afford proper services because of exorbitant union pay is economically burdened.


And with the union structure of seniority and collective decisions, motivation to try hard and be the best is filtered out by creating apathy. And apathy is the most common trait among union workers.

Even if this were true, it sill beats ass kissing and office politics that you are likely to encounter in a non union shop.

24   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Dec 11, 4:13am  

Peter P says

Unions sre rent seekers.

No, because they produce things for their wages.

25   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 4:26am  

Workers produce things. Unions is just a collective controlled by a few.

26   MisdemeanorRebel   2012 Dec 11, 4:30am  

Peter P says

Workers produce things. Unions is just a collective controlled by a few.

Union Members aren't workers? Pilots in a union don't fly planes? Longshoremen don't actually unload ships?

PS Corporations are also collectives controlled by a few.

27   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 4:37am  

Then why can't corporations legally collude against consumers?

28   EBGuy   2012 Dec 11, 4:49am  

A firefighter making 90,000k a year... might be all right. But the same firefighter retiring at 65 with 195,000 annual pension is a cost society cannot bear at current market conditions.
FW, that is not a can do attitude. In my municipality we fill pools with mud, take the library budget out of the general fund and instead create a parcel tax to fund the libraries. What's not sustainable with a strategy like that?
From Forbes: Then ask yourself: What is the net present value of an $80,000 annual pension payout with additional full health benefits? ...Based on this small but unfortunately realistic 4% return, an $80,000 annual pension payout implies a rather large pot of money behind it–$2 million, to be precise.

29   Bellingham Bill   2012 Dec 11, 4:58am  

Peter P says

Then why can't corporations legally collude against consumers?

Because democracy, that's why

30   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 5:06am  

Bellingham Bill says

Peter P says

Then why can't corporations legally collude against consumers?

Because democracy, that's why

What J. S. Mill had said about tyranny.

31   Peter P   2012 Dec 11, 6:58am  

Well, to me personhood begins at birth or incorporation.

I support women's right to choose.

32   anonymous   2012 Dec 11, 6:59am  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Shostakovich says

Our only hope is for unions to be reclassified as terrorists like they are in China and for all Americans to work for half the Chinese wage and offer billionaires blow-jobs for the chance to work for a dollar a week. This is the way of the Free market and if you can't see that, maybe you're a Freedom-hating terrorist, too.

What the hell do you mean, maybe?

33   marcus   2012 Dec 11, 11:26am  

I know you'll never know how little you know or how wrong headed your view is.

FortWayne says

I should be free to not be represented by a union.

In my union you don't have to be a member, but you do have to accept the benefits that they get you.

FortWayne says

At the end unions are only about unions and union greed

This is only about 95% off the mark.

I guess what bothers me is that you truly don't understand what the union is or what it does. You insist on framing it in such a laughable way. How can a human be so gullible.

Yes, unions negotiate on behalf of workers. It's called collective bargaining, and yes their sole function is to try to negotiate the best deal possible for the workers.

Now you could argue that they back politicians and possibly indirectly benefit themselves much like a corporation or industry can lobby government.

If that happens and government workers were to get too good a deal, say for example the fireman with the huge pension that's too high, then why not put pressure on pension reform or adjusting in a fair way things in the other direction ?

Instead you want do away with unions all together, and you see them as evil.

Unions exist for a reason, and in most cases, the collective bargaining they have done have not gotten them a deal that's too good. In some cases pretty good though.

You get what you pay for. My optional ~$50/month I pay goes toward representing the collective best interests of teachers in my district. Yes, that's all they want. IT is what's best for the kids too. Smaller classes and good pay for teachers keeps good people coming in to the profession, and it raises the quality of instruction.

I believe that you have no idea what you are arguing for(unless your real name is Koch - in which case you know).

34   marcus   2012 Dec 11, 11:41am  

EBGuy says

Then ask yourself: What is the net present value of an $80,000 annual pension payout with additional full health benefits? ...Based on this small but unfortunately realistic 4% return, an $80,000 annual pension payout implies a rather large pot of money behind it–$2 million, to be precise.

I don't know about fireman, there's a risk premium with them and with police, but teachers have money taken out of their monthly pay for 40 year if they're going to get that kind of pension. At the rates that pension funds have gotten in the last few decades, if the the govt added a little each year (a few thousand more) to what the teachers payed in for that 40 years, it would be worth $2 million.

35   yup1   2012 Dec 11, 12:09pm  

FortWayne says

should be free to not be represented by a union. Yet the union in the Non-RTW states will force me into the union.

So the union members can't vote to have a closed shop so your leach ass scum sucking non dues paying members can get all the benefits with no costs. How very democratic of you!

36   marcus   2012 Dec 11, 1:16pm  

FortWayne says

No, the only beneficiaries here are those well connected in the union. A non union member forced to pay union dues is economically burdened. A society that can no longer afford proper services because of exorbitant union pay is economically burdened.

And with the union structure of seniority and collective decisions, motivation to try hard and be the best is filtered out by creating apathy. And apathy is the most common trait among union workers.

Nonsense and bullshit.

Can you find apathetic incompetent union members ? Sure. But you can find incredibly driven hard woking union members too, who push for success for themselves and their team's. And there are constant reforms pushing for greater accountability, and efficiency, and success.

The very fact that there are idiots that spout the kind of nonsense we hear from you, and the big billionaire money behind eliminating unions,
makes clear the fact that we damn well better be successful if we want to continue existing.

37   Philistine   2012 Dec 11, 5:11pm  

FortWayne says

Generally savings are reinvested in order to grow a business

Not really. My company puts savings into the pocket of the CEO.

38   zzyzzx   2012 Dec 11, 11:07pm  

FortWayne says

But it doesn't work that way. I should be free to not be represented by a union. Yet the union in the Non-RTW states will force me into the union. And if a man does not want to be racketed into the union, he should not have to.

Yeah, liberals claim to be pro-choice, when the only issue they are really ever pro-choice on is abortion.

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