On today’s episode of Labor 131 presented by the National Labor Office, Joel Suarez, Assistant Professor at Harvard University, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to discuss the complex factors behind labor's decline in the 1970s, the impact of economic policies and the failed Operation Dixie campaign.
Suarez highlighted how unions shifted focus from broad social unionism to workplace-specific concerns in the 1940s and 1950s. He said this change decreased organizing efforts, while leadership complacency weakened labor's position. By the early 1970s, Suarez noted that labor leaders stopped worrying about membership size, which he said signaled a critical failure in union leadership.
The economic policies of the 1970s, particularly the Volcker Shock, dealt a severe blow to labor. Suarez explained how Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker's drastic interest rate hikes to combat inflation increased unemployment and weakened union power. He said this action was taken after other economic factors, such as oil shocks and food crises, had already put pressure on the economy and further eroded the strength of the union workforce.
Finally, Suarez discussed the impact of Operation Dixie, the Congress of Industrial Organization’s attempt to organize Southern workers in the 1940s. Suarez called it a crucial missed opportunity in the labor movement. He detailed how inadequate resources, poor strategy and racial biases doomed the campaign. The failure to organize the South inevitably led to the migration of manufacturing jobs to So-Called “Right-To-Work” states, further eroding union strength.
Listen to the full episode of Labor 131 with Joel Suarez on America's Work Force to hear more insights on labor history and its impact on today's workforce.