Current:Home > NewsHere's one potential winner from the UAW strike: Non-union auto workers in the South -Elevate Capital Network
Here's one potential winner from the UAW strike: Non-union auto workers in the South
View
Date:2025-04-11 17:00:24
When German automaker Mercedes revealed plans to open a new assembly plant in the U.S. in 1993, 19 states started courting the luxury car maker.
Alabama was considered the dark horse. Its proposed site near Tuscaloosa had no major airport, the state had an unskilled workforce and high poverty.
But none of that scared away Mercedes when it chose Alabama that September. The unskilled workforce was low-cost and, crucially, not unionized. The southern states' union opposition and willingness to offer huge financial incentives has led to a foreign car making boom in the region.
Yet autoworkers in the South are watching the current UAW strikes closely. They're left out of the negotiations and any benefits that could come out of them.
But if the United Auto Workers union secures a big bump in pay for their members, the region's foreign auto makers would also likely provide their own raises to stay competitive. It would make the UAW much more attractive in the South, which makes the companies nervous.
"Workers feel that they're going to get the same thing that the UAW is going to get," Morris Mock, a technician at a Nissan plant near Jackson, Mississippi, said.
Southern draw: No unions and big $$ in incentives
Alabama didn't just win Mercedes over because it wasn't favorable to unions. The state also provided incentives of roughly $400 million. Other states in the South have dangled far greater baubles to lure foreign automakers since then. Last year, Georgia and local governments promised Hyundai $1.8 billion in tax breaks, new roads and other benefits in exchange for a new electric vehicle plant in the state.
The incentive war and the lack of unions have made the South the destination of choice for foreign automakers. BMW led the way when it announced a South Carolina plant in 1992. Honda and Hyundai followed Mercedes to Alabama. Nissan went just north of Jackson, Mississippi. Volkswagen chose Tennessee.
Auto workforce has ballooned to tens of thousands
The Biden Administration has also gotten in on the incentives game, this time to encourage foreign automakers to make more of their EVs in America. That could lead to new plants heading to Southern states, like the one in Georgia.
"If it's got to be in the United States it's going to be in the South," said A.J. Jacobs, a sociologist who wrote the book "The New Domestic Automakers in the United States and Canada" about the rise of foreign automaker plants in North America.
Jacobs said many of the deals states offered to these plants can pay for themselves over the course of decades when considering the tax revenue and jobs they generate. Alabama went from just a few hundred autoworkers in the early 1990's to about 47,000 today.
But Jacobs warns that these incentives aren't always worth it, especially now that they've shot well past the half billion mark. Just as important as the amount is which company a state is recruiting.
"If you told me that you gave away $500 million in incentives to get a Toyota factory, I'd say go for it," Jacobs said. "There's not too many companies in the world I would say that about. Because once Toyota builds a factory there it's staying. They're not going anywhere."
The South keeps UAW's negotiations in check
While Southern workers could see their wages rise with a UAW win, the North-South tug of war over wages goes both ways. The smaller paycheck in the South makes it harder for the UAW to negotiate for more money as the northern plants try to stay competitive with foreign automakers.
UAW workers are also striking for better pay and benefits at a Mercedes supplier in Alabama – one of the few unionized car part manufacturers in the region. The strike is unrelated to the national strike against the Big Three.
But paycheck size is not the only issue southern workers are paying attention to with the strike. There's also the global transition to electric vehicles.
The overhaul of old plants and construction of new ones to build EVs will create new jobs. But it will also cause the loss of other jobs. Car companies don't need workers trained to build engines for an EV that won't have one, said Mock.
It's still uncertain to Mock if the EV shift will be a net positive for southern workers. It will depend on what comes of the UAW contract, which could lead to similar changes at the foreign automakers' plants. Job security and retraining workers to fit the EV future is a big part of the UAW's fight for its members – and indirectly for southern auto workers too.
"This is one of the most important times in America," Mock said. "The most important times in the labor movement."
veryGood! (6142)
Related
- Family of explorer who died in the Titan sub implosion seeks $50M-plus in wrongful death lawsuit
- The differences between the Trump and Biden documents cases
- Oklahoma judge caught sending texts during a murder trial resigns
- High profile women stand out on the 2024 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame shortlist
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Tennessee sheriff increases reward to $100,000 as manhunt for suspect in deputy's fatal shooting widens
- Who is Harrison Butker? Everything to know about Chiefs kicker before Super Bowl 58
- DNC accuses RFK Jr. campaign and super PAC of colluding on ballot access effort
- Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
- Breaking down everything we know about Taylor Swift's album 'Tortured Poets Department'
Ranking
- Organizers cancel Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna over fears of an attack
- Southwest winter storm moves into New Mexico; up to foot of snow possible in northeast mountains
- ATV breaks through ice and plunges into lake, killing 88-year-old fisherman in Maine
- Who is 'The Golden Bachelorette'? Here are top candidates for ABC's newest dating show
- Jury finds man guilty of sending 17-year-old son to rob and kill rapper PnB Rock
- 2 dead after plane crashes onto highway near Naples, Florida, and bursts into flames
- Usher's Super Bowl Halftime show was chaotic but cemented his R&B legacy
- Biden’s legal team went to Justice Dept. over what they viewed as unnecessary digs at his memory
Recommendation
Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo Defy Gravity in Wicked Trailer Released During Super Bowl 2024
President Joe Biden to travel to East Palestine next week, a year after derailment
This teen wears a size 23 shoe. It's stopping him from living a normal life.
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Company says it will pay someone to listen to 24 hours of sad songs. How much?
This early Super Bowl commercial from Cetaphil is making everyone, including Swifties, cry
How many Super Bowls have the Chiefs won? All of Kansas City's past victories and appearances