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Contesting the Great Compression: The National Labor Relations Board and Skilled Workers' Struggle to Control Wage Differentials, 1935–1955
by
Etheridge, Bryant
in
American history
/ Artisans
/ Bargaining
/ Collective bargaining
/ Compression
/ Conservatism
/ Contract negotiations
/ Egalitarianism
/ Employment policies
/ Income distribution
/ Labor relations
/ Labor unions
/ Local elections
/ Permission
/ Segregation
/ Severance pay
/ Skilled workers
/ Strikes
/ Union membership
/ Wage & price controls
/ Wage differential
/ Wage structure
/ Wages & salaries
/ Wagner Act 1935-US
2020
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Contesting the Great Compression: The National Labor Relations Board and Skilled Workers' Struggle to Control Wage Differentials, 1935–1955
by
Etheridge, Bryant
in
American history
/ Artisans
/ Bargaining
/ Collective bargaining
/ Compression
/ Conservatism
/ Contract negotiations
/ Egalitarianism
/ Employment policies
/ Income distribution
/ Labor relations
/ Labor unions
/ Local elections
/ Permission
/ Segregation
/ Severance pay
/ Skilled workers
/ Strikes
/ Union membership
/ Wage & price controls
/ Wage differential
/ Wage structure
/ Wages & salaries
/ Wagner Act 1935-US
2020
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Contesting the Great Compression: The National Labor Relations Board and Skilled Workers' Struggle to Control Wage Differentials, 1935–1955
by
Etheridge, Bryant
in
American history
/ Artisans
/ Bargaining
/ Collective bargaining
/ Compression
/ Conservatism
/ Contract negotiations
/ Egalitarianism
/ Employment policies
/ Income distribution
/ Labor relations
/ Labor unions
/ Local elections
/ Permission
/ Segregation
/ Severance pay
/ Skilled workers
/ Strikes
/ Union membership
/ Wage & price controls
/ Wage differential
/ Wage structure
/ Wages & salaries
/ Wagner Act 1935-US
2020
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Contesting the Great Compression: The National Labor Relations Board and Skilled Workers' Struggle to Control Wage Differentials, 1935–1955
Journal Article
Contesting the Great Compression: The National Labor Relations Board and Skilled Workers' Struggle to Control Wage Differentials, 1935–1955
2020
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Overview
This article argues that federal labor policy was a factor in causing the Great Compression, the dramatic compression of skill-based wage differentials that occurred in the 1940s, and in bringing it to an end. By giving the National Labor Relations Board the power to determine the appropriate collective-bargaining unit, New Dealers gave industrial unions the means with which to build a more egalitarian wage structure. Unskilled and semiskilled workers seized the opportunity and voted themselves big pay raises. Skilled craftsmen responded by petitioning the NLRB for permission to form their own craft bargaining units, a process known as “craft severance.” As conservatives gained influence in Washington in the 1940s, the board adopted a bargaining-unit policy more favorable to craft unions. By the early 1950s, skilled craftsmen had regained control of their wage demands and thereby helped bring the Great Compression to a halt.
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