Little change in union affiliation in 2011

Published January 27, 2012 5:00am ET



The Department of Labor has released its annual averages for unionization in the United States.

The raw number of private sector union members rose slightly, but declined (almost imperceptibly) as a share of the total number of U.S. workers. In government, unions shrank in absolute terms, but grew as a percentage of a shrinking public sector workforce.

Here is some of the data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (full table here).

  2010 2011 YOY
INDUSTRY Employees Union Employees % Union Employees Union Employees % Union Union gain/loss
Private sector 103,040,000 7,092,000 6.9 104,737,000 7,202,000 6.9 110,000
Federal government 3,670,000 984,000 26.8 3,568,000 1,004,000 28.1 20,000
State government 6,328,000 1,969,000 31.1 6,261,000 1,973,000 31.5 4,000
Local government 11,035,000 4,670,000 42.3 10,621,000 4,586,000 43.2 -84,000

Also worthy of note: The number of non-union workers represented by unions declined by about 50,000, to 1.53 million.