Unions provide a large wage benefit to manufacturing workers in jobs similar to cannabis processing, particularly Black and Latinx workers: Union premium for proxy cannabis processing and production workers by race and gender
Specification | All | Women | Workers of Color | Black | Latinx |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
(1) Basic controls | 28.0% | 26.7% | 32.4% | 22.0% | 38.5% |
(2) With additional demographic controls | 24.4% | 23.2% | 27.4% | 21.8% | 31.7% |
(3) Controlling for industry and occupation (no additional demographic controls) | 26.5% | 23.7% | 29.8% | 21.9% | 35.0% |
(4) Controlling for full demographics, industry, and occupation | 23.6% | 20.8% | 26.4% | 21.8% | 30.6% |
Notes: The union premium is how much more in wages workers covered by a union contract earn than similar nonunionized workers in cannabis processing proxy jobs. All results p-value < 0.01. For a full discussion of the methodology, see the Appendix.
Extended Notes: The premium is exp(b)-1, where b is the coefficient on union status with log of wages as the dependent variable. All results p-value < 0.01. All models include basic controls for educational attainment, age, full-time/part-time work status, usual weekly work hours, year, and state. Additional demographic controls include gender, race/ethnicity, marital status, and citizenship status. Our preferred estimation (Specification 3) does not include these additional demographic controls. While such demographic characteristics are associated with differences in pay, these differences often reflect labor market discrimination rather than differences in job skills and qualifications. To estimate the union difference for a specific demographic group, the sample is limited to respondents of that group (female workers, Black workers, etc.) before calculating the premium. For a full discussion of the methodology, see the appendix.
Source: EPI analysis of 2010–2019 Current Population Survey ORG data (EPI 2021a).