Employment and Jobs

Why this Labor Day Is different

September 1, 2023  • Thomas Kochan

Workers across a wide breadth of sectors are striking for increased wages — but also for dignity, equity, and a say in how new technologies are deployed.

Article / 9.01.2023

 

Historians are likely to label 2023 as the year of labor’s discontent in the United States. They will note that:

– Entertainers and writers were engaged inlong strikesto restructure how they were paid paid in the streaming media environment.

– At United Parcel Service, the Teamsters union used its buildup of a very credible strike threat to achieveone of the largest wage increases in yearsfor full- and part-time workers.

– Strikes erupted across the nation to the point that this season was labeled “Hot Labor Summer.”

– Employer violations of labor law also escalated to the point that the National Labor Relations Board issued a “new frameworkfor organizing to ensure that unions would be established if that was what the majority of workers wanted.

– Union and nonunion workerscontinued to engage in collective actions to gain a stronger voice on issues such as scheduling and time off, dignity and respect, use of AI and other advancing technologies, and social issues.

– Low-wage workers gained significant groundthanks to the combined effects of the Fight for $15 wage campaign, tight labor markets, and state-level increases in minimum wages.

 

Read More


About the Roundtable

The Aspen Business Roundtable on Organized Labor is a private network of CEOs, founders, investors, and other business leaders reinventing corporate America’s relationship with organized labor. Click here to learn more.