『The 1981 Air Traffic Control Strike That Broken a Union and Reshaped Labor』のカバーアート

The 1981 Air Traffic Control Strike That Broken a Union and Reshaped Labor

The 1981 Air Traffic Control Strike That Broken a Union and Reshaped Labor

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In August 1981, 13,000 air traffic controllers walked off the job, and President Reagan fired them all within 48 hours. This episode of The Economic History Podcast with Fexingo examines the PATCO strike not just as a labor showdown, but as a pivotal moment in the economics of bargaining power, wage setting, and the decline of organized labor in the United States. Lucas and Luna walk through the strike's immediate trigger — a rejected contract offer — and its lasting effects: how it changed the balance of power between employers and unions, contributed to a decade of wage stagnation, and became a template for corporate resistance to collective bargaining. They also connect it to the broader macroeconomic environment of the early 1980s: high inflation, a hawkish Federal Reserve under Paul Volcker, and a newly deregulatory political mood. Why did a single strike matter so much? And what does it tell us about labor markets today? #PATCO #AirTrafficControllerStrike #RonaldReagan #UnionDecline #LaborEconomics #WageStagnation #1980sEconomy #EconomicHistory #LaborUnions #Strike #CollectiveBargaining #Volcker #Deregulation #PublicSectorUnions #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast #Economics #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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