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Union membership in Turkey stands at 14.4 percent

In this file photo, Ferhat Uyar, 27, a worker for Yemeksepeti Banabi motorcycle couriers speaks at the offices of Freight workers' union Nakliyat-İş in Ankara on February 11, 2022. Uyar was one of thousands of Yemeksepeti Banabi delivery workers on strike for higher pay and better working conditions, supported by the Nakliyat-İş union. As inflation rises in Turkey, so is the number of workers including motorcycle couriers demanding their rights through strikes and protests across the country. The cost of living has soared in Turkey after the annual rate of inflation reached nearly 90 percent in 2022. Adem ALTAN / AFP

Only 14.4 percent of workers in Turkey, excluding civil servants, are members of a union, the state-run Anadolu news agency reported on Thursday, citing data from the Ministry of Labor and Social Security.

Out of a total of 16,163,054 workers registered in Turkey’s social security system, only 2,330,098 are members of a union, according to Anadolu.

The data further showed that the Turkish Metalworkers Union has the largest membership among all unions, with 258,928 members. It is followed by the All Municipal and Public Service Workers Trade Union (Hizmet- İş) and Öz Sağlık-İş, the health and social service workers union, with 256,625 and 199,587 members, respectively.

The data found an increase of 0.16 percent in the rate of unionization compared to July 2022.

One out of every four workers in Turkey was protected by a collective bargaining agreement at the end of the 1980s, when the almost continuous decline of coverage began. The lowest membership rate was in 2013, but since then it has risen slightly.

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