Only 11.1% of American workers were members of labor unions in 2014, reflecting the continued demise of collective bargaining in the U.S.
Labor union membership has fallen steadily since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began collecting data in 1983, when 20.1% of U.S. workers were in union. Last year’s rate was the lowest on record, falling 0.2 percentage points from 2013.
The historical decline has been largely been driven by the death of unionized workplaces in the private sector. More than a third of public-sector workers were unionized in 2014, with a membership rate of 35.7%, while only 6.6% of private-sector workers are in unions — down from 9.0% in 2000.
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Overall, 14.6 million Americans were union members in 2014, and their earnings were significantly higher than those who were not in unions: Non-unionized workers had median weekly earnings of $763, which was only 79% of unionized workers’ pay, who earned $970. (The figures don’t control for occupation and other factors.)









