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Learn about organized labor, collective bargaining, and the roles and responsibilities of businesses in our economy. Explore the impact of unions, mediation, arbitration, strikes, and lockouts. Discover how businesses interact with consumers, employees, owners, and the community.
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Organized Labor • The civilian labor force includes men and women 16 and up who are either working or actively looking for a job
Organized Labor • Labor unions are groups of workers who band together to obtain higher pay and better working conditions (14 percent of American workers)
Organized Labor • Workers who perform the same skills join together in a craft or trade union; industrial unions bring together different types of workers in the same industry
Organized Labor • Before they were declared illegal in 1947 (by the Taft-Hartley Act), closed shops were one kind of union arrangement; a worker had to first join a union to be hired by a company A business that only hires union members
Organized Labor • 22 states have passed right-to-work laws which prevent mandatory union membership required by the union shop
Organized Labor • A union cannot be brought into a workplace unless a majority votes in favor of it; the National Labor Relations Board makes sure these elections are fair
Negotiations • Unions carry out collective bargaining, officials from the union and company meet to discuss workers new contract, wages, and benefits • Mediation occurs when a third party tries to help the union and company reach a compromise (ADD: Non Legally Binding Agreement)
Negotiations • Arbitration occurs when a third party listens to each side and decides how to settle the disagreement (ADD: Legally Binding Agreement)
Negotiations • Workers can call a strike, in which all workers in the union refuse to go to work in the hopes the company will accept the union’s contract terms • Strikers usually carry signs in front of their workplace; picketing is meant to discourage workers from working and building support for the strike
Negotiations • Unions can also encourage members and the public to boycott or refuse to buy, the business’s products
Negotiations • Management can use a lockout against strikers; the company prevents workers from entering buildings until they accept their contract terms
Negotiations • An injunction is a legal order of a court preventing some activity; it can be used by companies to prevent strikes or unions to prevent lockouts
Negotiations • In extreme circumstances the government may resort to seizure, a temporary takeover of operations to allow the government to negotiate with the union
Roles of Businesses • Businesses can act as consumers they buy goods and services from other businesses • Businesses are also employers, they provide jobs to millions of workers
Roles of Businesses • Businesses are also producers, large and small businesses produce items to meet people’s basic needs and things that make life more enjoyable
Responsibilities • 1. Responsibilities to Consumers: selling products that are safe, products and services should work as promised; businesses should also be truthful in their advertising and should treat all customers fairly
Responsibilities • 2. Responsibilities to Owners: to protect stockholders corporations are required to release important financial information, this is called transparency; this allows investors to decide if they want to invest in the company
Responsibilities • 3. Responsibilities to Employees: to give workers a safe workplace and treat all workers fairly and without discrimination, treating employees differently on the basis of race, religion, color, gender, age, or disability
Responsibilities • 4. Responsibilities to the Community: more businesses are emphasizing their social responsibility, the obligation to pursue goals that benefit society as well as themselves; gifts to charities are one example of how businesses meet this social responsibility