American Decades
Labor in the 1960s
Labor at High Tide.
By the mid 1960s, labor's future appeared bright. Real wages were rising, union numbers were strong, and during the presidencies of Kennedy and Johnson organized labor felt it had friends in the White House. With the advent of the Great Society the AFLCIO leadership believed the administration was picking up where the New Deal had left off in providing benefits such as health care to the lower classes. Working hard for passage of Johnson's progressive domestic program, the AFL-CIO won plaudits from many liberals.
Changing Work Patterns.
Organized labor's apparent strength, however, was fleeting. During the 1960s the percentage of blue-collar workers (those generally in the manufacturing sector) as a proportion of the total work-force declined so that by 1970 the typical American worker was a white-collar employee. Fewer relatively high-paying industrial jobs were available for unskilled workers....
[The entire page is 565 words long]
1960's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Agriculture in the 1960s
- The Big Three and the Auto Industry
- Unsafe at any Speed
- The Volkswagen Beetle
- The Boom on Wall Street
- Credit Cards
- Dow Chemical and Student Activists
- New Environmentalism
- Franchising
- An Wang and High-Tech Electronics
- IBM and the Computer Industry
- Kennedy versus Big Steel
- Labor in the 1960s
- Rise of Conglomerates
- Trading Stamps
- Women and Work
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1960-1969
