The
Yellow Dog Contract: Bring It Back!
by
Walter
Block
by Walter Block
The
Yellow
Dog Contract is an honorable contract. It states that one of the
conditions of employment is that the worker agrees not to join a
union. It is no different, in principle, from the requirement that
if you come visit someone in his house at his invitation, you must
wear a funny hat, or agree not to associate with anyone he specifies,
say, an enemy of his. In each case, that of the firm, and the private
home, the one making this "demand" is exercising his rights
of free association. He is saying, in effect, "if you want
to associate with me, you must do thus and such." You are perfectly
free to refuse to do so, but then, he will not associate with you.
He will not allow you into his home, nor agree to employ you.
But
suppose you need a job? Is it not "unfair" that the employer
will not hire you unless you give up, in advance, your rights to
organize with others for better wages and working conditions? No;
this situation is no more illicit than if you need to go to a party,
and hate to wear a funny hat but the host insists upon it. Or demands,
as the price of entry, that you not consort with his enemies. After
all, it is his house.
We
all assert our rights of free association through implicit "threats"
of this sort. The wife says to the husband, "If you gamble
away our money, I’ll leave you." The husband may say to the
wife, "If you run around with other men, I’ll divorce you."
The customer says to the shop-keeper, "If you give me a bad
product, you’ll never see me in here again." The restaurant
owner says to his diners, "If you can’t behave yourself, I’ll
have to ask you to leave."
Free
association is a crucially important element of liberty. Without
the right to associate with those we (mutually) choose, we are in
effect and to that extent, slaves. The only thing wrong with
slavery was that the slave could not quit. He was forced to "associate"
with the slave master against his will.
But
the principle is the same with the Yellow Dog Contract. When it
is banned, the employer is compelled to associate with a potential
union member. To force him to do so is to coerce an innocent man.
It is to violate his right to freely associate with others on a
voluntary basis.
The
argument for doing so is that without unions, wages would plummet
to whatever low levels the "generosity" of employers would
yield. But nothing could be further from the truth. Wages are, rather,
determined on the basis of (marginal revenue) productivity, which
in turn stems from how hard and smart we work, and with the cooperation
of how much and of what quality capital equipment. Wages were rising
long before the advent of unions in the early part of the 20th
century, in industries (computers, banking, insurance, baby sitting,
lawn mowing) and countries (Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan) without
any such labor organizations. Labor unions reached their apex decades
ago, and now account for single digits in the private sector;
during this sharp decrease in the proportion of workers "protected"
by organized labor, wages catapulted.
No,
labor organizations are instead an economic tape-worm, infesting
firms and eating away their substance. It is no accident that what
is now the "rust belt" in the northeastern quadrant of
the country is the most heavily unionized sector of the nation,
and suffered the greatest degree of plant closings when they were
trying to suck the blood of entrepreneurs. Nor is it any puzzle
that the south, the least unionized part of the country, became
one of the fastest growing areas. Parasitical labor organizations
in the coal-fields were also responsible for the economic devastation
of West Virginia.
Are
unions per se illegitimate? No. If all they do is threaten mass
quits unless their demands are met, they should not be banned by
law. But as a matter of fact, not a one of them limits itself in
this manner. Instead, in addition, they threaten the person and
property not only of the owner, but also of any workers (they call
them "scabs") who attempt to take up the wages and working
conditions spurned by the union. They also favor labor legislation
that compels the owner to deal with the union, when he wishes to
ignore these workers and hire the "scabs" instead.
The
Yellow Dog Contract, in addition to safeguarding employer and employee
rights of free association, also serves as a remedy against union
inflicted economic disarray and violence against innocent people
and their property. Long live the Yellow Dog Contract. Bring it
back. Now.
September
5, 2005
Dr.
Block [send him mail]
is a professor of economics at Loyola University New Orleans. He
is the author of Defending
the Undefendable.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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