psychicscubadiver said:
The article provides no proof of that statement beyond "Even when not part of a union, workers see their wages benefit from high union density on the state level. The average median weekly wages are $1,121.70 a week in the 10 states with the strongest union density versus $942.70 a week for those in the 10 lowest union density states in 2020." Which means nothing without greater context. Does that statistic include only non-union workers? Does it adjust for cost of living across different cities and states? What the GDPs of these unnamed states? |
In Brazil even if you are not part of an union you were obligated to forfeit 1 day of your year wage as tax for unions. We had like 17k unions. Basically every year all statutory raises are negotiated through union (employee and employer unions) without you having any choice, usually they ask 3 times the inflation, employer offer half the inflation, it tanks for 3-6 months (sometimes years) until they agree on inflation until a cap (about 6 brazilian minimum wages or a little more than 1k USD/month) and after the cap it is a flat amount.
In 10 years on my company union raises for me basically mean I earn less now than I did when I joined.

duduspace11 "Well, since we are estimating costs, Pokemon Red/Blue did cost Nintendo about $50m to make back in 1996"
http://gamrconnect.vgchartz.com/post.php?id=8808363
Mr Puggsly: "Hehe, I said good profit. You said big profit. Frankly, not losing money is what I meant by good. Don't get hung up on semantics"
http://gamrconnect.vgchartz.com/post.php?id=9008994
Azzanation: "PS5 wouldn't sold out at launch without scalpers."







