An individual autoworker negotiating a wage with Ford Motor Company has no bargaining leverage — Ford employs tens of thousands of workers and can easily replace any one of them. Organized as the United Auto Workers, those workers can credibly threaten a strike that halts production across multiple plants, imposing enormous costs on the employer. The collective threat is what creates bargaining leverage — converting atomized wage-taking into coordinated wage-setting. That shift in market power is the economic function of a labor union.
In plain terms
A labor union is a collective organization of workers that negotiates with employers over wages, benefits, hours, and working conditions through a process known as collective bargaining. In the absence of a union, individual workers face the employer in a one-on-one negotiation where the employer typically has far more bargaining power — especially in labor markets with monopsony features. The union aggregates workers' collective bargaining power to match the employer's.
In the United States, unions are governed by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), which guarantees workers the right to organize, bargain collectively, and strike. The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) enforces these rights, supervises union elections, and adjudicates unfair labor practice complaints.
Why it works this way
Union power rests on the credible threat of collective action — a strike that withdraws all unionized labor simultaneously. This makes the employer's cost of refusing reasonable wage demands much higher than the cost of accepting them. In well-organized markets, this leverage shifts rents from employers toward workers.
The union wage premium — the difference in wages between unionized and otherwise identical non-union workers — is estimated at 10–20 percent in research that controls for worker skills and firm characteristics, per BLS data and academic meta-analyses. Unions also compress wage inequality within firms, reducing the gap between the highest and lowest paid workers.
The BLS Union Membership data documents the long-run decline of private-sector unionization: from approximately 35 percent in the 1950s to under 7 percent today, concentrated in manufacturing, transportation, and utilities. Public-sector unionization (federal, state, and local government employees) remains approximately 33 percent.
A real example
The 2023 United Auto Workers strike against Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis resulted in wage increases of approximately 25 percent over four years — significantly above what any individual worker could have negotiated. The strike's effectiveness demonstrated the enduring leverage of collective action in capital-intensive industries where production shutdowns impose large fixed-cost losses on employers.
Why it matters
Union decline is central to the debate over rising wage inequality. Research by the Economic Policy Institute attributes a significant portion of the increase in the wage gap between high- and middle-income workers since the 1980s to declining union density — as unions compressed wages within firms, their decline widened the internal distribution. The policy debate over union law reform (card-check organizing, restrictions on permanent striker replacement) turns directly on this question of whether union power is efficient countervailing force or efficiency-distorting labor market regulation.





