America’s Stone Age Ports: How Unions Block Progress

America’s Stone Age Ports: How Unions Block Progress

Some union lead­ers are self-destruc­tive idiots.

America’s ports have fall­en behind. Not a sin­gle one ranks in the top 50 world­wide.

A big rea­son is that dock unions stop inno­va­tion.

This fall, the Inter­na­tion­al Longshoremen’s Asso­ci­a­tion shut down East and Gulf coast ports, strik­ing for a raise and a ban on automa­tion. They got the raise.

Now union pres­i­dent Harold Daggett says long­shore­men will strike again in Jan­u­ary if they don’t get that ban on automa­tion.

His state­ment in my new video makes it clear that he knows how bad­ly his strike would dam­age oth­er Amer­i­cans.

“Guys who sell cars can’t sell cars, because the cars ain’t com­ing in off the ships. They get laid off,” says Daggett. “Con­struc­tion work­ers get laid off because mate­ri­als aren’t com­ing in. The steel’s not com­ing in. The lumber’s not com­ing in. They lose their job.”

Obvi­ous­ly, labor lead­ers aren’t nec­es­sar­i­ly “pro work­er,” says Mer­ca­tus Cen­ter econ­o­mist Liya Pala­gashvili.

“They’re say­ing, ‘We don’t care if these oth­er jobs are destroyed as long as we get what we want.’”

Daggett is unusu­al­ly clue­less. He doesn’t under­stand that a ban on automa­tion will also hurt his mem­bers.

As Pala­gashvili puts it, “They’ll save some jobs today, but they’ll destroy a lot more jobs in the future.”

That’s because today’s ship­pers have options. Daggett’s union only con­trols East and Gulf coast ports. Ship­pers can deliv­er their prod­ucts to ports that accept automa­tion.

“We’re going to see less activ­i­ty in ‘Stone Age’ ports,” says Pala­gashvili.

“Stone Age?”

“They want to ban auto­mat­ed open­ing and clos­ing of port doors,” she points out, requir­ing work­ers to pull heavy doors them­selves.

Weird­ly, the union boss makes his demands while also point­ing out that dock­work­er jobs are dan­ger­ous.

“Very dan­ger­ous … We’ve had 17 peo­ple killed in the last three years!”

That’s ter­ri­ble, but it’s an argu­ment for automa­tion! Using machines instead of vul­ner­a­ble humans pro­tects human work­ers. Daggett’s argu­ing against him­self!

I see why he wouldn’t agree to an inter­view.

“It’s back­wards,” notes Pala­gashvili. “(If) you care about the safe­ty of these work­ers, you should enhance their jobs and make them safer and bet­ter. And the only way you can do that is with tech­no­log­i­cal advance­ments in automa­tion.”

Oth­er coun­tries have used auto­mat­ed cranes for years. They’re 80% faster than the human-oper­at­ed cranes in many Amer­i­can ports.

“The best ports,” says Pala­gashvili, “are Asian and Mid­dle East­ern ports. They allow for inno­va­tion and tech­no­log­i­cal advance­ments. If you look at Chi­nese ports, they’re actu­al­ly sit­ting behind a com­put­er and direct­ing port activ­i­ty through the screen. That’s a bet­ter job.”

“I bet there are few­er of them,” I push back.

“Some port jobs will def­i­nite­ly be lost,” she says, “but that’s not a bad thing. Look at it his­tor­i­cal­ly; we had hun­dreds of thou­sands of black­smiths and can­dle­mak­ers and watch­mak­ers.”

Obvi­ous­ly, those and oth­er jobs were destroyed by new tech­nol­o­gy. But unem­ploy­ment didn’t surge. New jobs emerged — jobs peo­ple at the time didn’t imag­ine: pro­gram­mers, mechan­ics, elec­tri­cians, med­ical tech­ni­cians …

That’s capitalism’s “cre­ative destruc­tion.” It con­stant­ly cre­ates new jobs. That makes most every­one rich­er.

The media rarely cov­er that, because it’s a slow, non-excit­ing, good news sto­ry, and the new jobs appear in many dif­fer­ent places. By con­trast, when a fac­to­ry clos­es, the union assem­bles the media, and we report the trag­ic sto­ry about work­ers los­ing their jobs.

“That reporter doesn’t fol­low up with the work­er two years lat­er,” says Pala­gashvili, “but research does, and research shows that that work­er gets a new job.”

“On aver­age, (a) bet­ter job,” I note.

“Bet­ter jobs,” agrees Pala­gashvili, “and high­er wages.”

High­er wages because inno­va­tion allows work­ers to accom­plish more.

“Bull­doz­ers and crane trucks made con­struc­tion indus­try work­ers bet­ter off,” says Pala­gashvili, “and the real wages of those con­struc­tion work­ers increase.”

Daggett and his union just don’t get it.

They fight to keep Amer­i­can ports dan­ger­ous and inef­fi­cient.

That will hurt their own work­ers and, even­tu­al­ly, them­selves.