The latest reports indicate that union membership in the private (and public) sector continues to decline. In 2003, just over 8% of private sector employees belonged to a union; in 2004, the figure was
7.92%. Which states had the highest percentage of unionized workers?
NY, Hawaii, and Michigan.
The states with the lowest percentage:
N. and S. Carolinas, followed by Arkansas and Mississippi.
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on April 20, 2005
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I was curious about any correlation between union membership and unemployment. Of course, just looking at the top 3 and bottom 4 union states is less meaningful than the kind of analysis of all 50 states Michael could do using fancy statistical methods (hint, hint).
I actually found a mixed bag. National average unemployment for Feb. was 5.4%.
Here are the states Michael mentions:
Top Union:
NY . . . . . 5.1%
Hawaii . . . 3.0%
Michigan . . 7.5%
Bottom Union:
NC . . . 5.4%
SC . . . 7.1%
Ark. . . 5.5%
Miss . . 6.8%
Could one conclude that union support is weaker where unemployment is higher and workers are just glad to be working?
Or is Michigan typical of the strong union state suffering high unemploymet because unions drove all the good jobs away — and Hawaii and NY anomalies?