Forget about a secure future:
Today’s jobs don’t even offer a secure present. The era of one-company careers
is largely gone, and now the latest shift in labour markets is piling on the
anxiety for many who do manage to get hired. They’re likely to land in an
arrangement that falls short of what jobs used to be like.
Driving cars for Uber is the
poster-child for this alternative work, but it extends across the spectrum,
from contract graphic design to on-call lab technicians to factory hands hired
through agencies.
How many new jobs fall into
this category? All of them. Or at least, all the net new positions — more than
9 million — created in the US since 2005, according to a study this year by
Lawrence Katz and Alan Krueger of Harvard and Princeton universities.
Put it down as another cause
of this year’s electoral revolt, ammunition for the argument that something’s
fundamentally wrong with the economy. Plenty of Americans like the flexibility
in the new world of work, but many more are there involuntarily — and finding
their income is volatile and benefits hard to come by.
“This plays into growing
insecurity and, in many cases, anger,” Katz said. “Particularly for middle- and
low-wage workers — the case where you had aspirations to a more permanent job
with a high-wage employer, and increasingly those types of employers outsource
them.”
The US jobless rate, hovering
around 5 per cent, is near what economists call full employment. Other data
help to square that fact with the grievances driving presidential campaigns by
Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders. Wage growth has been modest, labour
participation is down and Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen last week flagged
an “unusually high” number of people working part-time because they can’t find
anything longer-term.
Then there’s the nature of the
openings created during seven years of recovery. Katz and Krueger’s study,
updated in late April, looked at four groups: independent contractors, on-call
workers, workers for temporary-help agencies, and those provided by contract
companies. The government hasn’t surveyed this slice of the workforce since
2005, so the paper is a first look at the Great Recession’s impact.
It found that workers in all
“alternative” categories are paid less than their counterparts in traditional
employment and are likely to work fewer hours.
Gabe Luchkowsky’s job at an
auto-part assembly plant in Avon, Ohio, might once have fallen into the
permanent category. The 35-year-old found the position last year via a temp
agency, after being laid off from a full-time post at a community college. At
$12 an hour, it was a relief at first, until the absence of basic guarantees
sank in.
“Everyone feels more secure
and stable with an actual employer,” Luchkowsky said. “When you’re a temp,
there’s always rumours going around that you may be hired in or are getting a
raise, or the union is going to come in. But nothing ever happens.”
Something may be happening
now, though — after Luchkowsky and about 60 fellow factory workers joined a
union and threatened to shut down the plant with a strike. He said his employer
is now negotiating permanent contracts that would help give him what he’s
looking for: “wage increases, benefits, paid time off and holidays — all of
that.”
Katz and Krueger’s research
shows that among the alternative workforce, independent contractors are happiest
with their lot — 84 per cent of them prefer working for themselves.
“You make your own hours, you
are your own boss, you don’t have to answer to anyone,” said Dina Scherer, 34,
a wardrobe stylist and personal shopper for eight years. She finds some clients
via the task-matching website Thumbtack and has also contracted to work for
companies including American Express Co.
Scherer, who lives in New
York, does acknowledge a downside: “You have to drum up your own business. You
do hustle a lot. Sometimes you don’t know where your next job is coming from.
It does bring a little bit of anxiety.” Another group, on-call employees, are
split fairly evenly on whether that status suits them. About three-quarters of
temp workers hired via an agency would prefer a permanent job.
Katz and Krueger say more
research is needed to pin down the causes of the shift, but they advance a few
tentative explanations. It could be the impact of the Great Recession — in
which case the phenomenon might prove temporary. If technology is driving
change, by making it easier and cheaper for companies to contract out tasks,
it’ll be harder to roll back.
Gene Zaino sees a combination
of the two forces at play — one that’s benefiting his business, MBO Partners.
It handles back-office tasks for independent contractors, ranging from billing
and collection to making sure taxes get paid. More than 50,000 use the service,
typically people doing “knowledge work”.
“We were standing at a
shoreline for many years, and all of a sudden a tidal wave hit,” he said. “Our
services are in high demand.”
Companies buffeted by the
recession are less keen to make the long-term investment of hiring, he said,
while technology can identify “a contract-talent workforce that’s easy for them
to dip into and pull out of.”
Too easy, some economists
argue: The balance between employers and their workers has gotten out of whack,
with knock-on effects for the whole economy.
“The general suppression of
peoples’ ability to earn a good wage is part of what is leading to slower
overall growth, what some people call secular stagnation,” said Lawrence
Mishel, president of the Washington-based Economic Policy Institute. “It contributes
to the ornery politics that we have now.”
On the campaign trail,
candidates promise to bring back old-style jobs and spend less time talking
about how to make the new kind work better for more people. One politician
who’s addressed the issue recently is Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren of
Massachusetts: She said last month that health and retirement benefits, and
labour laws, need an update.
In the new world of work,
those stabilisers are being eroded — a sense that comes across in the titles of
books on the topic: “The Precariat” and “The Tumbleweed Society.”
Adam Cobb, an assistant
management professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, says
the change is largely driven by financial markets, which reward companies that
hold as few assets as possible — including workers.
Economic statistics alone
can’t capture the loss. “We take pride in what we do and a good job gives our
life a narrative,” Cobb said. “There are consequences for how we think about
ourselves and our place in society once we lose that connection to our work.”
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