British prime minister Harold Macmillan (1957ø63) was once asked
by a reporter what major problems he faced. He replied, "Events, dear boy,
events." In their paper, Barry Hirsch and Jeffrey Hirsch say they are choosing
to look forward rather than backward in considering the Wagner Act at age
seventy. They then propose forward-looking changes in federal law such as
modifying the Wagner Act to allow employee voice systems other than unions.
I choose in my comments to look backward in order to look forward. Paula Voos
similarly proposes a legal change to give managers and professionals more
collective (bargaining) rights. Freeman wants Congress to give more authority
to the states to regulate such matters. The difficulty with the Hirsch,
Hirsch, Voos, and Freeman approaches is that they all ignore the role of great
events in opening up the labor policy regime.
The Wagner Act was a product of the Great Depression. It is inevitable
that seven decades after its passage the Act's provisions seem dated and are
debated as to their present-day relevance. As I see it, the key presumption
in the Wagner Act was not top-down management, as Hirsch and Hirsch suggest.
Rather, the presumption was that, given a free choice, most workers would
want to join a union. If workers could join unions, Senator Wagner thought,
they would collectively determine terms and conditions with employers. Government
regulation would be limited to setting minimum standards for those somehow
left outside the union sector. So the new law aimed at providing a peaceful
election mechanism for unions to represent workers.
In fact, the explicit presumption concerning firm authority
structures came in the later Taft-Hartley Act (1947), with its definition
of supervisors and separation of professionals from other workers, as Voos
notes. And, by the way, most firms are still hierarchical, even if today's
more educated workers have more day-to-day discretion. Frederick Taylor would
not be shocked by much of contemporary management practice, once he learned
to see past the latest buzzwords and fads. If you do not think so, see any
Dilbert comic strip.
Why would Senator Wagner and other lawmakers have assumed that most workers
would want to be represented by unions? Workers, disillusioned by what they
could expect from management, and society in general, were at the time flocking
into unions. And there were often violent disputes as unions sought recognition
and employers resisted. Moreover, the political scene had taken a definite
turn to the left with the New Deal. In essence, the Depression had killed
two prior national assumptions; the public was disillusioned, not just workers.
First, before the Depression, it was assumed that the economy—which
had been prosperous in the late 1920s—would continue to deliver the macro
goods thanks to some combination of scientific management and new technology
(mass production, Model Ts, radio, talkies, etc.). Second, it was assumed
that welfare capitalism would deliver the micro goods, with benevolent employers
providing pensions, job security, and even employee voice mechanisms. While
it is easy to find fault with both assumptions, even viewed from the
cyclical peak of 1929, these were the animating beliefs and hopes of the period.
The first assumption was destroyed by the Depression itself. Popular
culture of that era took up the theme of World War I veterans who fought for
their country and were then betrayed by the economic collapse and the political
response. Songs such as "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?"1 and "Remember
My Forgotten Man"2 picked up
the theme of the betrayal of the veterans, as did films such as Heroes
for Sale, Gabriel Over the White House, and Gold Diggers of 1933. The
Veterans' "Bonus March" on Washington in 1932—which ended in the military
attacking World War I vets under presidential orders—symbolized the
economic, social, and political world turned upside down. How could President
Hoover order an attack on former U.S. soldiers who had saved democracy and
brought permanent peace to the world? The veterans were betrayed by their
country.
The second assumption was destroyed by the collapse—for the most
part—of welfare capitalism. Most firms, and most workers, were not in
the nexus of welfare capitalism even at the 1929 peak. But high-profile
firms, once seen as model employers, ended up cutting wages and their
nascent benefits under severe economic pressure. And, of course, job
security was not on offer in the 1930s. Workers were betrayed by their employers.
What seems to be the main lesson from history with regard to labor
policy over the past seven decades is that true turning points come from crisis
and disillusionment often external to the employment setting. The fact that
unions—particularly in the CIO—were linked to radicalism and communism meant
that in the Cold Warøera policy would shift against the union-friendly Wagner
Act. Taft-Hartley and Landrum-Griffin were more products of the Cold
War than they were of policy wonks tinkering with the rough edges of the Wagner
Act. The Civil Rights movement turned the solid Democratic south into solid
Republican states. Stagflation, race riots, busing, and student rebellions
of the late 1960s and 1970s created "Reagan Democrats" and further shifted
the country to the right. While major amendments to the Wagner/Taft-Hartley/Landrum-Griffin
Acts did not occur, certainly the tenor of policy toward unions changed at
the NLRB and elsewhere.
Given this history of events and shocks often external to labor
relations, it is hard for me to see that there will be a major change in federal
labor policy— including Freeman's abandoning of federal preemption—until
the next external crisis and disillusionment occurs. Fiddling with the "company
union" provisions of the Wagner Act to promote what used to be termed "quality
circles," or even some kind of quasiøvoice mechanisms, would inevitably open
the door to a wholesale review of the entire Act, which no one is pushing
for at present. Moreover, employers who want to institute quality circles
or voice committees are de facto largely free to do so. The Wagner Act is
basically a "don't ask, don't tell" policy. If no one complains, nothing happens.
Unless a union is running a serious organizing campaign, no one is likely
to complain. Employers were upset by the Electromation decision in
the mid-1990s, which dismantled one company's employer-initiated consultation
arrangements.3 But who even remembers that case today? And, yes,
there is some vague desire for voice by employees in surveys—but not
enough for a single politician to want to run for Congress on the issue.
So from where will the next big shift in federal labor policy emerge?
Maybe it will come from a decision of Chinese and other Asian central banks
not to hold vast dollar reserves. (The old Ricardian version of comparative
advantage was that every country did what it did best. Today's version seems
to be that the Chinese are good at producing and lending and America is good
at borrowing and spending.) Some observers see scenarios in which such a decision
could trigger a worldwide financial crisis. Maybe the impetus for a
new labor policy will come from another terrorist attack on the U.S. mainland.
Or maybe—my favorite candidate—as baby boomers face retirement and the nation's
bills for income support and health care come due, there will be political
turmoil (Mitchell 2000). Whatever the triggering mechanism may turn out to
be, I doubt it will consist of policy wonks, or academics weighing alternative
systems of employee voice, or self-regulation of safety standards, or redefinition
of supervisors, or dropping federal preemption.
What about action at the state
level, as Freeman suggests, but without federal changes? California is about
as labor-friendly nowadays as a state is likely to be. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger
learned in November 2005 that taking on unions over such issues as "paycheck
protection" was a losing proposition (no pun intended). All of his proposed
initiatives—including paycheck protection—were defeated in the special election
he called. Los Angeles is where the Justice for Janitors campaign achieved
real traction. Still, in the private sector, the 2004 union representation
rate in California was 10.2 percent (and roughly trendless since the late
1990s) versus 8.6 percent (and declining) for the United States as a whole.
The public sector, where state law dominates, showed a more dramatic difference:
57.5 percent versus 40.7 percent. I would take that outcome and difference
as about as much as can be expected from state policy. If all states were
like California, but federal law remained unchanged, the overall U.S. union
representation rate in 2004 would have been about 18 percent—where it was
in 1990— instead of the actual 14 percent. The private sector rollback would
be only to 1999. For a major shift beyond that, you will have to await "events."