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In 2011, out of 3000 union workers, 2500 were females. The number of non-union workers was 700, of which, 250 were men. In 2013, out of total 6,000 workers 4,4000 were members of union . The number of male workers was 1,650, out of which 500 did not belong to any union. Tabulate the given information.

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Solution

Year↓ Union Workers Non-Union Workers Total
Male Female Total Male Female Total
2011 500 2500 3000 250 450 700 3700
2013 1150 3250 4400 500 1100 1600 6000

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Q. Prior to 1975, union efforts to organize public-sector clerical workers, most of whom are women, were somewhat limited. The factors favoring unionization drives seem to have been either the presence of large numbers of workers, as in New York City, to make it worth the effort, or the concentration of small numbers in one or two locations, such as a hospital, to make it relatively easy. Receptivity to unionization on the workers’ part was also a consideration, but when there were large numbers involved or the clerical workers were the only unorganized group in a jurisdiction, the multi-occupational unions would often try to organize them regardless of the workers’ initial receptivity. The strategic reasoning was based, first, on the concern that politicians and administrators might play off unionized against non-unionized workers, and, second, on the conviction that a fully unionized public work force meant power, both at the bargaining table and in the legislature. In localities where clerical workers were few in number, were scattered in several workplaces, and expressed no interest in being organized, unions more often than not ignored them in the pre-1975 period.
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