Trucker Access › Forums › World News › US dockworkers press on with second day of strike, with no deal in sight | Transport News
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October 3, 2024 at 12:00 am #42202Sandy PhillipsParticipant
US President Biden urged for a quick deal to end the standoff, which threatens to drain billions from the US economy.
Tens of thousands of United States dockworkers have continued to strike for a second day, keeping shipments at major eastern dockyards at a standstill.
Containers at 36 ports stretching from Maine to Texas piled up on Wednesday, as the dockworkers appeared no closer to a deal with their employersâ group, the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX).
The stoppage is aimed at securing higher wages and better protections for the 45,000 workers in the International Longshoremenâs Association (ILA), but experts fear it could spur stinging economic losses and higher inflation in the month before presidential elections.
The market forecaster Oxford Economics projects the standoff could drain between $4.5bn and $7.5bn from the US economy for every week that passes.
âTime for them to sit downâ
White House officials, fearing an economic dip, urged USMX to engage more with the port workersâ demands, which include a 77 percent wage hike over six years and a ban on automation.
âItâs time for them to sit at the table and get this strike done,â Biden told reporters on Wednesday.
He said ocean carriers had raked in huge profits during the COVID-19 pandemic and should fairly compensate the workers who kept their businesses booming.
âThey made incredible profits, over 800 percent profit since the pandemic, and the owners are making tens of millions of dollars from this,â Biden said.
The presidentâs transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, also urged the port employers to make more concessions.
âThe companies need to put forward an offer thatâs going to get the workers to the table,â Buttigieg said. âWe actually think the parties economically are not as far apart from each other as they may think.â
In its final offer, before negotiations collapsed, USMX offered to raise wages by 50 percent and keep current automation checks in place.
âThe longer the strike, the deeper the damageâ
While a short-term stoppage is expected to have minimal effects on US consumers, a prolonged strike could spell trouble, analysts say.
âThe longer the strike action goes on and the longer it takes the US government to intervene, the deeper the damage will be to the economy and the longer it will take for ocean supply chains to recover,â said Peter Sand, chief analyst at shipping data company Xeneta.
Biden has the authority under the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act to order the union members back to work, but he has avoided taking such action.
The Democrat has long touted his ambition to be âthe most pro-union president leading the most pro-union administration in American historyâ, and he made history in September 2023 by becoming the first sitting president to join a picket line.
In the midst of the current standoff, Biden has directed his team to watch out for potential price gouging that benefits foreign ocean carriers, according to the White House.
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