Abstract
Workers in the United States have lost their voice (or influence) in Washington and the workplace. Industrial unions are ill-suited to the postindustrial economy, and alternative organs of representation and influence (i.e., “alt-labor”) are trapped in a vicious circle of vulnerability and volatility that limits their likely growth. As a result of this, power is increasingly skewed toward employers and their political allies, who add to labor’s difficulties by eliminating and evading remaining labor protections. The federal government could help to restore a balance of power between workers and employers by establishing and enforcing a robust wage floor: (1) a $15 an hour minimum wage, (2) a nationwide hotline for workers who believe that their rights had been violated (“911 for workers”), and (3) a database that would allow regulatory agencies and worker organizations to rationalize and coordinate labor and employment law efforts. Doing so would produce a positive feedback loop so workers regain their voice on the job and in politics.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science
Reference66 articles.
1. Avins Jeremy, Larcom Megan, Weissbourd Jenny. 2018. New forms of worker voice in the 21st century. Harvard Kennedy School-MIT Sloan Working Paper, Cambridge, MA.
2. Employers Gone Rogue: Explaining Industry Variation in Violations of Workplace Laws
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