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From: Sid Shniad
Subject: Unions and Wages
Date: Monday, June 07, 1999 4:50PM

Unions and Wages

Union membership helps to raise workers' pay and to narrow the income gap
that leaves women and minorities at a disadvantage.

Overall, union workers earn 32% more than those not in unions. The median
weekly earnings for all full-time unionized wage workers were $659 in 1998,
compared with $499 for their non-union counterparts. Among just men, the
earnings of unionized workers were 22% greater ($699 as compared to $573).
For white workers, the union pay premium totaled 33% ($683 as compared to
$513).

But the union wage benefit is most pronounced among women and minorities.
In 1998, women in unions earned 39% more ($596 as compared to $430),
African American union members earned 45% more ($578 as compared to $398),
and Hispanic workers earned 54% more ($540 as compared to $350) than their
non-union counterparts.

Sources: The State of Working America 1998-99 and the Bureau of Labor
Statistics.

Copyright � 1999 by The Economic Policy Institute. Preferred Citation:
Economic Policy Institute, "Economic Snapshots, [insert date]." Washington,
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