Medusa

Youth thrust on union potency post ‘Occupy’ period

<p>The millennial led &OpenCurlyQuote;Fight for 15’ movement has gained momentum from where Occupy Wall Street ended&period; It shows a renewed interest in labor unions&period; 25 year-old Alicia White defied the vagaries of economic depravity by attending graduate school and college on a partial scholarship&period; Despite tireless efforts to get a job&comma; she has been face-painting at kid’s birthday parties&period; She thought that she would carve a lucrative career after toiling so hard&period; The end result is that she has ended up precariously with &dollar;50&comma; 000 of debt&period; This is no exception as one in every two college graduates is still unemployed or underemployed&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The middle class section also faces disparities and is bogged down by the country’s futile effort to pith a first-hand upward mobility&period; The inanities of educated workers getting low wages&comma; chinless jobs have propelled a revised labor movement&comma; which is a wide departure from its erstwhile dwindling type&period; You have diverse&comma; young people fighting against what they perceive as faulty labor market&period; The aim is to effectuate a higher&comma; minimum wage&period; It is seen the sole way to showcase income inequality alongside widespread poverty&period; The SEIU designed movement seeks to raise the fiscal parameters from &dollar;7&period;25 an hour to &dollar;15 per hour&period; It tested its novel legislative victory during last fall when SeaTac residents protested with equal grit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>30 year-old Ady Barkan&comma; a Yale Law graduate and attorney staff in the Center for Popular Democracy in NY thinks this time&comma; the enthusiasm has got doubled&period; This indicates that the movement has carried from the point where Wall Street agitation finished&period; He brands this as an identical &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;cultural movement”&period; The wage difference between non-union and unionized jobs is immaterial in the context of the movement&period; According to the Labor Statistics Bureau&comma; the weekly median income of union members was &dollar;943 in 2012 as compared to &dollar;742 for those not involved in it&period; Annette Bernhardt&comma; UC Berkeley&&num;8217&semi;s visiting sociology faculty&comma; opines that the abysmal prospects of young people elucidate the fact that it is impossible to revamp or restructure the economy with low-remuneration jobs&period; Inequality has created an &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;existential crisis for America”&comma; she adds&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Considering demographic factors&comma; the modest millennial has demonstrated a reversal of decade-old interest&period; Unions are aging out of the fiscal mold with their respective members&period; You have automation&comma; outsourcing and a service-centric economy that has effectuated a fall in the share of national income&period; Union membership has hit rock bottom with only 11&period;3&percnt; density&period; Social pundits account this steep decline to the decay of the middle strata&period; Diversity is a conspicuous feature in the new labor movement&comma; which reflects the dominance of Hispanic and black workers&period; The persistence of poor pay is galvanizing people who were not accustomed with a healthy job spectrum&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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