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Workers in the accommodation and food service industry organized the most strikes and lockouts in 2022, with over 90% of actions led by organizers at Starbucks. But overall, education workers made up the majority of those involved in labor actions, reflecting roughly 60% of all demonstrating workers and 56% of all strike days. Even nonunion employees staged walkouts, organizing nearly a third of all actions.

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Though labor actions did increase from 2021 to 2022, numbers are still far lower than records hit in the late 2010s, or those of decades past. The last comprehensive report from the BLS, which dates back to 1979 (pdf), recorded 4,827 work stoppages—over 11 times the activity seen in 2022.

What are US workers demanding?

The majority of work stoppage demands were related to concerns like pay, healthcare, and retirement benefits.

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Filling the gaps in US labor data

The Cornell-ILR Labor Action Tracker and accompanying annual report were both started in 2021 to fill a gap in federal statistics that has existed for decades. In 1982, due to funding cuts under the Reagan administration, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) changed the way it captured data on work stoppages, dropping any actions with less than 1,000 workers from the public record.

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The lack of data “leaves practitioners, policymakers, and scholars misinformed about the true level of workplace conflict,” says the report, which aims to give a comprehensive view of US labor activity.

The greater visibility of small-scale organizing could prove an asset to workers as behemoths like Meta, Tesla, and Amazon continue to quash union efforts. And as the labor movement continues to grow, the question remains for employers on whether they’ll rethink their approach in responding to employee demands.

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