WAECEconomicsProduction

Trade union represents:

AEmployers
BWorkersCORRECT
CGovernment
DBanks
AI
Toasta AI Explanation
Why the answer is B, and why the others tempt you.
**The reasoning** A **trade union** (or labour union) is an organized group formed *by workers* to protect their collective interests. Think of it as workers joining forces to negotiate better wages, safer working conditions, and fair treatment from employers. In Nigeria, examples include the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU). These unions speak *on behalf of workers*, not for management or government. The core principle: **collective bargaining** — workers have more power together than alone. **Why the wrong options tempt you** - **A) Employers** — This confuses who unions *negotiate with* (employers) versus who they *represent* (workers). - **C) Government** — Government may regulate unions or mediate disputes, but unions advocate specifically for workers' rights, not government policies. - **D) Banks** — Completely unrelated. This might catch someone not paying attention. **Quick takeaway** Trade unions are workers standing together to fight for their rights — remember: *union* means *unity among workers*.
Want this in Pidgin, Yoruba, Igbo or Hausa? Sign up free →

Practice more Economics questions

WAEC Economics has thousands more questions like this — with AI explanations on every one.