注册并分享邀请链接,可获得视频播放与邀请奖励。

Chris Freiman
@cafreiman
Professor, John Chambers College of Business and Economics at WVU | Libertarianism, neoliberalism, effective altruism
加入 July 2021
288 正在关注    35K 粉丝
I’m skeptical that people wouldn’t have a say in their work without unions. From *Libertarianism: The Basics*:
Since the libs are already mad at me, I’ll poke the bear and say the anti-public-sector-union takes amount to effectively wishing for an end to the American labor movement—that’s just the reality when private sector unionization is ~6%. I’m sure I’ll get some “yes” chad face replies and quotes, but be careful what you wish for; liberal democracy under capitalism but without unions has often been pretty politically unstable! People want a democratic say in their economic life; unions offer this. Without unions, allegiance to liberal democracy itself declines, because people feel (reasonably) without resource to have a say in where they spend a third of their lives—at work. If you’re frustrated with the policy demands of some public sector unions, find compromises. Offer them something else in exchange! Do a little horse trading. Better yet, reform and expand American labor law through things like sectoral bargaining so unions aren’t so often in zero-sum situations where they feel obligated to cling to existing jobs for existing members, because they don’t have a strong path to organizing new workplaces and finding good new union jobs for workers that would be displaced by, say, automating trains.
显示更多
0
4
109
5
转发到社区