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new data about Canada's labor unions

pitzerwm

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U.S. manufacturing is an important source of payroll gains as average hours worked and earnings per hour both increased. U.S. manufacturing has become increasingly competitive in the past five years as the U.S. dollar has fallen and productivity surged. Many American companies are stepping up production in the U.S. relative to other countries. Canada must be wary of these developments. With weak productivity growth in Canada and strength in the loonie, we risk losing key manufacturing jobs to the U.S.

Two global companies, Caterpillar Inc and Rio Tinto PLC, are taking on Canadian unions that are already facing efforts by private and public sector employers to cut labour costs. Recent labour disputes at Caterpillar Inc-owned train locomotive company, Electro-Motive Diesel Inc in London, Ontario, show that the world’s largest maker of construction and mining equipment is prepared to take on the unions despite its big recovery in earnings over the past two years. According to media reports, CAW union officials said Caterpillar's latest proposal would halve wages and reduce benefits.

The company, however, says that wages and benefits at the Canadian plant are twice those of workers represented by the UAW at the Electro-Motive plant in LaGrange, Illinois. Canada’s competitive challenge could bolster U.S. manufacturing employment. Caterpillar is holding the U.S. up as a surprising example of cheaper and pliable labour.

Meanwhile, Rio Tinto Alcan, an aluminum-production unit of Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto, locked out about 800 union workers at a Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec smelter. Truck maker Navistar International Corp. last August announced plans to close its Chatham, Ontario plant after failing to reach a collective-bargaining agreement with the CAW. At Air Canada, the pilots union last May rejected a proposed low-cost airline unit and pension changes. The union and airline have held further talks, assisted by a federally appointed conciliator amid threats of a strike by mid-February. The Canadian government prevented the airline's flight attendants from striking in October by seeking intervention by the Canadian Industrial Relations Board. The federal government also intervened in June to end a lockout at Canada Post, forcing postal workers to accept wages below what Canada Post had last offered.

Bottom Line: While a rebounding U.S. economy is good news for Canadian exporters, Canadian labour and domestic suppliers of goods and services must rise to the challenge of the newly crowned “low-cost producer” south of the border.
 

bigleo48

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Bill,

You should post the link to this in order for everyone to discover where this is coming from. However, I do know that this is coming from Sherry Cooper (she's American BTW) and a chief economist for one of our major banks. For a number of years now I see her crap posted and she has been wrong for so long on just about everything, I don't know how she's managed to keep her job. Her regular face lifts must be cramping her brain.

Almost all her examples lack the depth to understand the problem. For example Rio Tinto in Alma Quebec. Rio is there because of their own Hydro Electric generating system from the rivers and water falls that merge at that location. As you may know, it takes a lot of power to make aluminium. Rio may want to move, but they can't take the hydro generating with them. Were talking enough power generated there to power NY city and more.
 

pitzerwm

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Thanks Big, we always need the other side of the story. There are more opinions than facts.
 

Mikelcharles1

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Ask and you usually will get. Another reminder that if after you log in, you click on "New Post" you will only see the new ones since you were last logged in.
 
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