Employment & Immigration

Union membership dropped to record low in 2022

The decline comes despite the highest union approval rate in decades and a pro-union administration.

Employees of HarperCollins Publisher participate in strike.

Union membership hit an all-time low in 2022 despite a surge in organizing efforts that emerged during the pandemic.

The percentage of U.S. workers who belong to a union dropped from 10.3 percent to 10.1 percent, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Thursday, as the job market added non-unionized workers at a faster rate than unionized workers. That’s the lowest the figure has been since the agency first started tracking comparable data nearly four decades ago.

The decline comes despite the highest union approval rate in decades and a pro-union administration — and backs up earlier findings that while many workers view organized labor favorably, that doesn’t always mean they want to join its ranks. Gallup reported earlier this year that while 71 percent of Americans view unions favorably, 58 percent of non-unionized workers say they are “not interested at all” in joining a union.

Workers launched a series of high-profile unionization drives in 2022, including at nationwide chains Amazon and Starbucks. The federal agency that oversees union elections, the National Labor Relations Board, reported a 53 percent uptick in petitions filed during the fiscal year.

“More than 270,000 American workers joined unions in 2022 and Americans initiated a record number of union elections over the course of the year,” White House Director of Labor Engagement Erika Dinkel-Smith said. “President Biden has taken historic steps to help Americans exercise their right to organize and he will continue working to eliminate barriers to workers’ ability to exercise their rights in the workplace.”

Union officials pointed to union-busting efforts — not worker disinterest — as the reason for the drop. The House passed a Democratic bill last session, the Protecting the Right to Organize Act, that would have reformed labor law to make it easier for workers to join unions, but the legislation stalled in the Senate.

“In 2022, we saw working people rising up despite often illegal opposition from companies that would rather pay union-busting firms millions than give workers a seat at the table,” AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler said. “The wave of organizing will continue to gather steam in 2023 and beyond despite broken labor laws that rig the system against workers.”

Union opponents, on the other hand, touted the numbers as proof that organized labor’s ranks are thinning.

“The BLS numbers are another reminder that headlines from cheerleading reporters and influence in the halls of power in DC are no substitute for actual support among hardworking rank-and-file American workers,” National Right to Work Foundation Vice President Patrick Semmens said.

“Union officials artificially increase their influence in ways that no other private organization can, but they do so while trampling the rights of the very workers they claim to speak for by forcing workers under ‘representation’ they oppose and seeking to force workers to pay up or be fired. For a worker considering unionization, that’s not a winning message,” Semmens said.

On average, unionized workers bank higher wages than their non-unionized counterparts. Nonunion workers’ median weekly earnings were 85 percent of union workers’ in 2022, according to BLS — though the agency noted that this statistic does not control for other factors that could explain the gap.

Some trends remained unchanged: The union membership rate of public-sector workers was still more than five times the rate of private-sector workers, at 33.1 percent and 6 percent, respectively. The membership rate of men (10.5 percent) also continued to be higher than that of women (9.6 percent). And Black workers remained more likely to be union members than White, Asian, or Hispanic workers.

BLS’s report also broke down union membership rate by occupation. The highest union membership rates were among workers in protective service occupations (34.6 percent), such as firefighters, as well as education, training and library jobs (33.7 percent). Those employed in the industries of insurance; finance; professional and technical services; and food services and drinking places had union membership rates closer to 1 percent.

As for states, Hawaii and New York had the highest union membership rates at 21.9 percent and 20.7 percent, respectively. South Carolina and North Carolina had the lowest at 1.7 percent and 2.8 percent, respectively.

Both of the latter are so-called right-to-work states, where laws allow workers to opt out of union membership even if their larger workplace is represented by a union. BLS reported Thursday that about 1.7 million workers are covered by union contracts despite not paying dues.