this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2023
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Work Reform
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A place to discuss positive changes that can make work more equitable, and to vent about current practices. We are NOT against work; we just want the fruits of our labor to be recognized better.
Our Philosophies:
- All workers must be paid a living wage for their labor.
- Income inequality is the main cause of lower living standards.
- Workers must join together and fight back for what is rightfully theirs.
- We must not be divided and conquered. Workers gain the most when they focus on unifying issues.
Our Goals
- Higher wages for underpaid workers.
- Better worker representation, including but not limited to unions.
- Better and fewer working hours.
- Stimulating a massive wave of worker organizing in the United States and beyond.
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This is the problem with nafta. NAFTA created an environment that is hard for unions to operate in. The big 3 can send it all to Mexico and just ship the final product back.
Or Canada. Either is cheaper labor wise.
It’s why nafta needs to be renegotiated.
Unionize Mexico
Nafta has restrictions around worker pay. Overall though it might be bad for auto workers in the US but much more beneficial to the average American.
NAFTA is horrible for the average American. It destroys unions and wages. It allows a massive export of our jobs to other countries.
You have a cite around workers pay? That wasn’t in the original plan.
Eta: found an article from 2017
https://www.npr.org/2018/10/17/657806248/will-nafta-2-0-really-boost-mexican-wages
Is protectionism really the solution?
Yes. Everyone else does it. Otherwise union labor will not be as competitive in America.
I’d rather have some guardrails to keep the labor here.
In this case, yes. NAFTA screws the average American and boosts the stock market which pur government is beholden to. The net effect around the globe is more exploitation for all.
Yeah, I'm already paying more for American made products, in search of better oversight and safety. If it offered workers better pay, that would be a huge win for "voting with my wallet".
Canada really isn't that much cheaper than the US to manufacture and they are also unionized. You just get the currency advantage (1USD = ~$0.72 CAD). Stellantis already moved Ram production to Mexico. The bigger issue is relative competition with Asian imports and Tesla who have no union factories because they produce mostly in the south.
Either way, it would make little sense to move F150 and Silverado to Mexico. Hard to claim you drive American industry but produce in Mexico. I think the frustration is that multiple reasonable offers have been made and the UAW has yet to move from their original position. Which is ironic given they accused Stellantis and GM with bargaining in bad faith.
Current advantages but wages are typically lower. I know in my career field they’re about 40-50% lower. You also get the savings of not paying healthcare cost. (Most people don’t understand that employers are self insured. That means medical payments come out of expenses).
Tesla mostly produces in Nevada and California. Texas is starting to pick up but it isn’t as union as Nevada or California.
When my wife at the time bought her Nissan, it was more American built than any product in the same price range. It was non/-union labor but mainly built here.
Gm has moved a lot of production to Mexico. People forget all the supply chain which has moved as well. Ac Delco moved almost everything to Mexico.
I don’t know what is reasonable as I’m not an auto worker. I don’t buy most American car brands because they’re garbage. My two cars currently are an Audi and a Tesla. I know the Tesla was not union but Im not sure about the Audi.
It's important to note that Mexico and Canada have unions.
Musk and his team has been very successful at surpressing unionization. They quickly gets rid of those that try.
The Japanese and Korean makers try to keep people placated so that they don't think about unionization. Or in Hyundai's case, using child labor and getting caught. In the South, some people are too ignorant to understand what the benefits of unions are which is one reason why it's a popular destination for manufacturing jobs.
Volkswagen Auto Group has two separate unions, a minority UAW and a competing American Council of Employees specifically at the Chattanooga plant. The others are probably not unionized YET.
Unionization gets more popular as more conpanies try to extract more productivity without proper compensation.
Yeah Ford's multi-million dollar "all in on America" football ad campaign will look pretty fucking ironic if they move all of their production elsewhere.
(Not that I believe it anyway)