If companies can go overseas and they can more the money they do, they are even give tax breaks to do so. They did that at my company with some of their accounts, and WE ARE NOT UNION, AND NO ONE THAT DOES MY WORK THAT I KNOW OF IS UNION. It is so easy to blame unions for these issues. Do you know I read an article about the Auto Workers and it was the healthcare, the big wig Insurance companies that was causing a problem and how hard it was to insure the workers. Why don't we address that. It isn't about me being owed anything, its about fair treatment and fair wages, not greed, not jealousy, etc. You want to work for 12-14 dollars an hour then? You can't live on that. We all see what has happened with the large corporations and it isn't the unions, its what happens when they are given too much power, no transparencies, etc, what do you think they would do their workers? It's plain old greed at the top.
I refer you back to my post. I said that manufacturing (and service) companies have competing motivations. These motivations are, once again, for those in the back of the room:
1. A company's stockholders demand increased earnings/revenues/profits in order to receive dividends and a capital appreciation in the stock share price.
2. A company's customers demand goods and services to be provided at the lowest price possible at any customer's particular quality point. (I.e., if Company A sells a widget for $10 and Company B sells a widget of identical quality for $8, most will purchase the $8 widget).
If a company's costs go up over time, the only way they can continue to offer a product or service at the SAME PRICE and to continue INCREASING PROFIT is to either (a) cut costs, or (b) sell more widgets at that price point to make up for the shortfall due to rising costs. As I said, companies try to do both.
Please note that I said in my earlier post that I believe unions are partially responsible for their own demise and for the destruction of the middle class. I did
not say that they were the only cause.
Now, to your point. I read your response to my post and the only relevant point that I could find in there is that you say your company is nonunion and it outsources to other countries, therefore my argument is wrong. In fact, the opposite is true. You proved my point with your comment. A smart corporation, organized or not, is going to try to cut costs to continue offering a similar service at a competitive price and with increasing profits. Outsourcing to other countries is one of the methods of doing that. It's not specific to union manufacturing. Your company is outsourcing to other countries because
you and your fellow employees are too expensive for the company to provide its goods/services at a competitive cost and still maximize profit.
I didn't understand the rest of your post. I don't see what it has to do with what I was saying. It seems to me that you are refusing to acknowledge the facts. Instead, you talk about fair wages and fair benefits and all of that without thinking about the side effect. What is the side effect of good wages and good benefits and all the other things that come with unionized employment?
Higher costs. Everything becomes more expensive. The companies that provide good wages and good benefits will be undercut continually by the companies that don't. The companies that don't provide good wages and benefits will grow, and the union shop company will go out of business.
Again, for the millionth time, companies have to make profits in order to grow, to be sustainable, and to provide returns to their investors and a good share price on the Street. As long as that motivation exists, companies will undercut one another in price in order to grab market share and to make profits. They'll cut costs in order to maximize profits. There are ways to avoid that, but they're all illegal (e.g., price fixing and collusion).
There is far more to this issue than good wages and good benefits for a line worker in Michigan or a secretary in Kansas. It isn't specific to unions; it reaches every employee, organized or not. It goes far deeper than that into our society and our economic model. It's not as easy as saying "everyone deserves good wages and good benefits." Sure, that sounds nice, but it completely ignores the reality of our national and global economy.
Rant over.