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> If anything, they are a hindrance to it.

Yes, by doing things like get us the 8 hour working day (parts of what is not the AFL-CIO were the largest driver for that, taking decades, and having members die in the process, and leaving us with May 1st as the international day for labour demonstrations as another direct result).

Productivity is not a measure of the success of a society.



To clarify. I never said they never contributed to productivity. At one time they did, but these days they have largely succumbed to the shirky principle:

“Institutions will try to preserve the problem to which they are the solution.” — Clay Shirky

The same can be said of the organizations that have typically opposed the unions too. The world has too many zombie organizations that have outlived their usefulness and are now a drag. The effort being spent on unions would be better off spent on increasing support for a guaranteed minimum wage. We've now got universal healthcare (or at least some flavor of it), but there are a lot more ways we can improve equality of opportunity and fairness and I don't see how the modern unions contribute in any way to the bigger picture (like the 8 hour workday)

Productivity is what allows more and more of us to pursue activities that make us happy for more hours of the day.

http://kk.org/thetechnium/2010/04/the-shirky-prin/


by doing things like get us the 8 hour working day

How do you figure? To me it seems that most of the union jobs were simply automated away, moved to third world countries, or heavily supplemented with illegal immigrant labour. None of those arrangements maintain an 8 hour working day limit.

The remaining positions are generally high-skill or based on independent contractors. No wonder they command higher wages and have better working conditions.

Unions rode the tide of technology and globalization but didn't actually cause it.



From your link,

Although there were initial successes in achieving an eight-hour day in New Zealand and by the Australian labour movement for skilled workers in the 1840s and 1850s, most employed people had to wait to the early and mid twentieth century for the condition to be widely achieved through the industrialized world through legislative action. [And many other countries followed the same trajectory.]

How come? I'll take a guess: because it was only made possible in practice in the 20th century by a sufficient increase in productivity, mainly through automation but also economies of scale. And as the process continued, those jobs went away completely.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_hoc_ergo_propter_hoc




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