March 10, 2022
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Collusion and Lack of Competition Designed to Favor Employers

                   

The popular media likes to hammer on tight labor markets and the sudden increase in worker power, citing rising wages and historic numbers of people quitting their jobs in 2021, but the Office of the Treasury paints a different picture according to a recent study commissioned by the Biden administration. The new report highlights high levels of employer collusion to suppress wages and ensure workers have little incentive to change jobs, contra the narrative of the “Great Resignation.”

The report describes the myriad ways in which employers collaborate to prevent workers from seeking better opportunities elsewhere. These tactics lead to missing out on 15-25% of possible wages a worker might otherwise hope to command, according to estimates in the report.

Many of the favored methods used by employers are tried and true ways to devalue workers, and often ones that have gotten whole industries in hot water before, such as when the Justice department found six massive tech firms stoking anti-competitive behavior in a bid to keep workers. Collusion and unfair practices are not restricted to the rarefied world of Silicon Valley tech workers, however, with outsourcing and subcontracting, as well as mergers and acquisitions, remaining a key way for employers to pay low wage workers even less and keep them from finding other employment in the same field.

These practices have broad ramifications beyond beyond just restricting workers’ abilities to choose where they want to work. They incentivize employers to offer fewer benefits, provide less job security and pay little attention to improving working conditions, and, thanks to a multi-decade effort by free-market ideologues and employers which has left private-sector union membership at historic lows, leave workers few options other than to grin and bear it, while the Justice Department tries to play catchup and expand its antitrust division to focus on job market enforcement.

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The Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup: A nurse fights for safer workplaces

September 8, 2020
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There was some decent news this week in the employment outlook, depending on how you look at it. The positive is that roughly 1.37 million jobs were added this week and the unemployment rate dropped to 8.4 percent. The negative is that nearly 20 million Americans remain unemployed and of those 1.37 million jobs added over 230,000 hires are census workers, who will be out of a job shortly.

Too Early Retirement

September 1, 2020
Gender Discrimination
Race Discrimination
For some, early retirement is a chance to do something else, to spend more time with family, or pursue a passion put off by work. But for others, early retirement, also known by the euphemistic “involuntary separation,” has been an unwelcome occurrence and reminder of people’s status within the workforce, and this trend has been increasing in recent times.

The Weekly Roundup: Employment Numbers Remain High as Job Losses Persist

August 28, 2020
Race Discrimination
The jobs report, released early Thursday morning, indicates job losses persist, with first-time unemployment claims above 1 million for the second straight week and continuing claims still north of 14 million. This comes as Congress remains on summer recess, having failed to shore up an extension of the enhanced stimulus that was propping up the economy. With the unemployment numbers still shaky, this week we’re taking a closer look at just who is being affected.

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