Young climate strikers could achieve even more by joining a union
Union membership in recent decades
has been in stark decline. The picture has been particularly bleak over the
past 20 years when it comes to young people.
But there are reasons for optimism:
the same statistics also show a recent uptick in membership among young
workers. In 2017-18, for 16- to 24-year-olds as a whole, the membership rate
went up from 7.8% to 8.4%. Within this, for the 16-19 age bracket it went up
from 2% to 3.2%.
Some people see the overall drop in
membership as part of unions’ inevitable retreat into insignificance –
casualties of a new, individualistic generation in a modern, flexible labour
market that has no need for such outdated institutions.
But, as we have seen from the recent
school strikes over the climate, young people are far from individualistic –
they are prepared to take organised, collective action in the face of a crisis.
If the 10,000 school strikers joined a union, then the number of members among
16- to 19-
Fatalistic accounts of apathetic
young workers ignore the structural changes in the world of work. Around a
quarter of 16- to 24-year-olds are in low-paid, casual and insecure forms of
employment – more than any other age group. Increasing levels of work casualisation
present practical problems for unions in accessing and recruiting workers,
issues that are amplified by hostile policymaking that has added to the
barriers in taking industrial action.
Unions are well aware that they need
to evolve their tactics and are beginning to make headway: the GMB union has
gained recognition with online retailer Net-a-Porter and delivery firm Hermes,
and the Independent Workers Union of Great Britain continues to recruit in the
gig economy and among outsourced workers. Last year saw major action by
McStrike campaigners as well as the largest equal-pay strike in UK history,
involving 8,000 low-paid female workers in Glasgow.
The atmosphere in the US provides
more reason for optimism. Despite an even more hostile policy environment than
in the UK and overall declining union numbers, youth membership is increasing.
In 2017, of the 858,000 net new jobs for US workers under 35, almost one in
four was unionised. Some have attributed this growth to the increased precarity
faced by young workers; other explanations focus on the rise in popularity of a
new socialist agenda.
Similar ingredients exist here, and
aspects of the ONS data suggest they could be beginning to influence membership
numbers. And though younger workers have always been less likely to be in a
union, their participation now is vital: climate breakdown and automation will
drive seismic shifts in the world of work in the coming decades.
Unions are also trying to reflect
the values of the younger generations by taking action on issues outside of the
traditional workplace. The University and College Union became the first trade
union to pledge support for the school students’ upcoming general strike on the
climate, with others likely to follow. Calls for a cross-union campaign for a
four-day week are also ramping up. In the US, initiatives such as Bargaining
for the Common Good have explicitly brought together workplace demands with
wider demands on issues of racism, debt and corporate power. A UK version could
involve forging links with the renters’ unions that have emerged over the past
year, recognising the significant wins this burgeoning movement has had
already.
Trade unions remain the largest type
of membership organisation in the UK. Enabling a younger, more transient
workforce to find a collective voice and take on major problems such as the
climate crisis and gender inequality with workplace action is no small task.
But the opportunity to do so, it seems, could be here.