It’s clear which half of the country is prospering more. As an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal this month pointed out:
According to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, from 2003-13 states with such laws increased their employment rolls by 9.5%—nearly three percentage points more than the national average and more than double the growth in non-right-to-work states.Unions point to the fact that the correlation isn’t universal, and there are economic losers under Right to Work — often highly-paid workers in uncompetitive industries. But the benefits of Right to Work for a state as a whole are clear, and the next goal of the National Right to Work Committee is to expand it to Eastern states such as West Virginia and New Hampshire. As In These Times gloomily noted: “It may be just the beginning of attacks on worker rights in many states this year, including roughly a dozen potential right-to-work initiatives.”
These weren’t average jobs, either. They were good-paying positions with increasing wages. Personal incomes in those states grew 12% more than in states without right-to-work protections during that same 10-year period, according to a 2014 study by the American Legislative Exchange Council.
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