Number of workers involved in major work stoppages, 1973–2021
Year | Number of workers |
---|---|
1973 | 1,400,000 |
1974 | 1,796,000 |
1975 | 965,000 |
1976 | 1,519,000 |
1977 | 1,212,000 |
1978 | 1,006,000 |
1979 | 1,021,000 |
1980 | 795,000 |
1981 | 728,900 |
1982 | 655,800 |
1983 | 909,400 |
1984 | 376,000 |
1985 | 323,900 |
1986 | 533,100 |
1987 | 174,400 |
1988 | 118,300 |
1989 | 452,100 |
1990 | 184,900 |
1991 | 392,000 |
1992 | 363,800 |
1993 | 181,900 |
1994 | 322,200 |
1995 | 191,500 |
1996 | 272,700 |
1997 | 338,600 |
1998 | 386,800 |
1999 | 72,600 |
2000 | 393,700 |
2001 | 99,100 |
2002 | 45,900 |
2003 | 129,200 |
2004 | 170,700 |
2005 | 99,600 |
2006 | 70,100 |
2007 | 189,200 |
2008 | 72,200 |
2009 | 12,500 |
2010 | 44,500 |
2011 | 112,500 |
2012 | 148,100 |
2013 | 54,500 |
2014 | 34,300 |
2015 | 47,300 |
2016 | 99,400 |
2017 | 25,300 |
2018 | 485,200 |
2019 | 425,500 |
2020 | 27,000 |
2021 | 80,700 |
Notes: The Bureau of Labor Statistics does not distinguish between strikes and lockouts in its work stoppage data. However, lockouts (which are initiated by management) are rare relative to strikes, so it is reasonable to think of the major work stoppage data as a proxy for data on major strikes. Data are for work stoppages that began and ended in the data year. Data are for public- and private-sector workers.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Major Work Stoppages in 2021” (news release), February 23, 2022, and related table, “Annual Work Stoppages Involving 1,000 or More Workers, 1947–Present.”