Would a union argue this if it meant more workers working - solidarity re
sharing the work and more union dues? In the 40s, the Ford agreement
included everyone dropping to a 36 hour week and  if there was a production
cutback so as to limit layoffs (and not just having layoffs by seniority -
solidarity was both a living idea and vital re building in the early days of
the union). This implied a significant 'cut in pay'

-----Original Message-----
From: PEN-L list [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of tom walker
Sent: June 20, 2005 10:42 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [PEN-L] "No cut in pay"

Marvin Gandall wrote:

> Tom
> manufactures his case by using the
> weekly rate.

I wish that was true. Then I could just as easily unmanufacture it. When
unions say no cut in pay, they mean no cut in weekly (or annual) pay not no
cut in hourly wage. I'm not making it up. Honest. But see the
following:

> 1) No union would fight for a 20% reduction in hours and a 20% pay
> increase if it would result in a net LOSS in their members'
> weekly take home pay -

That's exactly what they (&I) mean by no cut in pay -- "a LOSS in their
weekly take home pay."  Although technically it's not a "loss" because
they're earning a higher wage and working fewer hours. So what's this about
the case I'm manufacturing?

> Maybe Tom, who has
> researched this area
> extensively, can some provide examples of unions which have
> triumphantly done so, but I doubt he has found many.

Well, yes, for example the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union
negotiated several contracts which involved shorter hours without a fully
compensating increase in hourly wages. I've got the CEP pamphlets and will
post particulars when I get the chance. The thing is workers were often
apprehensive before hand that the drop in income would effect them more than
it does. But in reality they pay less taxes, their expenses go down and they
find they really appreciate the extra time off.

> 2) By the same token, no company would reward their workers with an
> 20% pay hike and a 20% decrease in their work time - and then declare
> victory to their shareholders and the Chamber of Commerce. Tom might
> find some evidence of company boards telling angry investors that this
> did not really represent a "shorter work week at no loss in pay", but
> I doubt he would find many.

I have to remind you, Marvin, that I said my example was not an _economic_
one. That is what I meant. Look, the precise percentages are just for the
sake of easy illustration.  A real world example wouldn't need to be so
strikingly unlikely.

> The shorter work week is not as complicated an issue as Tom makes out.

Hold on a minute. It wouldn't be complicated if people didn't imagine
problems and solutions and fallacis that don't exist but they do and that's
what makes it complicated. And yes companies are more receptive to short
time working during a slump and it's in the context of a cutback. Unions
SHOULD be fighting for shorter work time during the good times but they
don't. The issue usually comes up for unions when layoffs are imminent or
unemployment is rising.

> If Tom is wondering why most unions don't embrace reduced hours at
> reduced pay, as he has advocated, the explanation lies here.

That's why the issue is complicated, not why it's simple. ;-) Unions,
employers and governments all have
*positions* on shorter working time that are in some respect irrational and
based on myths and miscalculations. It isn't showing greater sympathy to the
interests of the workers to buy the union version of the myth.

Look, not even the unions buy their own myth on shorter work time.

The Sandwichman

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