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Businesses The Almighty Buck Science

Sociologist: Job Insecurity Is the New Normal 585

Mr.Intel writes: Allison Pugh, professor of Sociology at University of Virginia, and author of The Tumbleweed Society: Working and Caring in an Age of Insecurity, says workers in the U.S. are caught up in a "one-way honor system," in which workers are beholden to employers. She says that the golden era when Americans could get a job, keep it, and expect to retire with an adequate pension are over. JP Morgan Chase has cut 20,000 from its workforce in the past 5 years, last year HP cut 34,000 jobs, and many others have announced layoffs. In this interview Pugh talks about the social effects of this "insecurity culture."
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Sociologist: Job Insecurity Is the New Normal

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:12PM (#50236491)

    How about a blast from the past.. "within the capitalist system all methods for raising the social productiveness of labour are brought about at the cost of the individual labourer; all means for the development of production transform themselves into means of domination over, and exploitation of, the producers; they mutilate the labourer into a fragment of a man, degrade him to the level of an appendage of a machine, destroy every remnant of charm in his work and turn it into a hated toil; they estrange from him the intellectual potentialities of the labour process in the same proportion as science is incorporated in it as an independent power; they distort the conditions under which he works, subject him during the labour process to a despotism the more hateful for its meanness; they transform his life-time into working-time, and drag his wife and child beneath the wheels of the Juggernaut of capital."

      Karl Marx, Capital, Vol 1: A Critical Analysis of Capitalist Production

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @07:27PM (#50236855) Journal

      Look son, we're a tolerant crowd around here, but you go spouting that Commie Pinko crap off in some placers, yer likely to get yer head sawed off by some good ol' boys.

      Stick to the Bible, son. It's for the best.

      • by tburkhol ( 121842 ) on Monday August 03, 2015 @07:24AM (#50239187)

        Stick to the Bible, son. It's for the best.

        This is what the Lord has commanded: Gather of it, every man of you, as much as he can eat; you shall take an omer apiece, according to the number of persons who each of you has in his tent. And the people of Israel did so; they gathered some more, some less. But when they measured it with an omer, he that gathered much had nothing over, and he that gathered little had no lack; each gathered according to what he could eat (Exodus 16:16-18

        All that believed were together, and had all things in common; And sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all men, as every man had need. (Acts 2:44-45)

        You shall not oppress a hired servant who is poor and needy, whether he is one of your brothers or one of the sojourners who are in your land within your towns. You shall give him his wages on the same day, before the sun sets (for he is poor and counts on it), lest he cry against you to the Lord, and you be guilty of sin.Deuteronomy 24:14

    • by garyisabusyguy ( 732330 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @07:31PM (#50236877)

      Yeah, it is called 'Enhancing Shareholder Value' these days

      The current variation on the theme involves identifying employees that are owed pensions, converting said pensions (long term debt held by the Company) into 401k's, owned by the employee (at a rate below what the pension should have paid out at), then removing the employee from their position while replacing them with contract labor

      This looks really great on the balance sheet, but faces long-term viability as companies face loss of job knowledge and higher long-term contracting costs, that outweigh the fudged numbers they used to make the idea look feasible. Unfortunately, the ass-hats that come up with these ideas usually get bonuses and leave their positions before the shit hits the fans and shareholders are left holding the bag of a broken company and out of control contracting fees

      • The current variation on the theme involves identifying employees that are owed pensions, converting said pensions (long term debt held by the Company) into 401k's, owned by the employee (at a rate below what the pension should have paid out at), then removing the employee from their position while replacing them with contract labor

        While I understand your point, in the US at least ERISA laws do protect pensions to a reasonable extent. But what is happening, almost universally, is the discontinuation of defined-benefit pensions as a benefit. If you have one already, you generally get to keep it, although it might get frozen. But if you don't have a defined benefit plan, you're not going to get one. A 401k or equivalent is all you're going to get, maybe with some limited matching or company contribution. These days you're pretty much on

        • by NicBenjamin ( 2124018 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @09:15PM (#50237357)

          It's much worse if you're not financially literate.

          I work retail, at Home Depot. And some of my coworkers who actually have very good brains (one is a plumber), have made the interesting mistake of quitting their previous jobs, taking the cash from their 401k, and then not rolling it over to a new 401k within the 60 day period, which led to them a) paying full income tax on it, and b) paying a 10% penalty. One found out from his tax guy before he spent it, so he ended up with enough to pay off his house note and not much else; the plumber is still paying off the IRS.

          This is a whole lot more complicated then operating a pension, and there's nobody you can call from your Union (who a) knows you personally because you worked together, and b) probably has a long history of dealing with the issues of people like you and your pension system) to talk to when you get confused.

      • by im_thatoneguy ( 819432 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @10:06PM (#50237623)

        One thing I've noticed too is that when they try to transition from a well cared for workforce to one in which the company essentially says "Work hard, but be ready to get fired at any moment" suddenly a lot of costs start adding up for the company. Suddenly people who might have clocked out for lunch before now start 'working' at their desk. People who would even buy supplies from time to time in order to keep working would just sit idly doing nothing if they didn't have everything they needed waiting on the company to provide everything. Someone who might not have religiously used all of their sick days now uses up every paid sick day available because their throat tickles. Oh and all of those employees you used to classify as independent contractors, a few of them just filed paperwork asking the IRS for guidance on their status. The company now owes 5 years of back taxes on 15% of their payroll. Goodbye last 5 years of profits.

        When you become a stickler for rules as an employer you'll suddenly discover that your employees are also really good at finding rules that benefit them.

    • Troll (Score:2, Insightful)

      by p51d007 ( 656414 )
      Oh goodie, someone spouting Karl Marx. What's next? Lennin, Stalin, Mao, Obama? I'll take my chances with free market capitalism over socialism ANY DAY. Name one country, where the people have moved UP in life, that runs under socialism. China doesn't count because the MAJORITY of it's citizens don't live in Hong Kong or Peking (Beijing).
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 )

        I'll take my chances with free market capitalism over socialism ANY DAY.

        There is an old commie saying: "You keep doing what you been doing and you're going to keep getting what you got."

        And what you got is the "new normal". P.T. Barnum had a name for people who believe in "free market capitalism".

      • Re:Troll (Score:5, Insightful)

        by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @09:21PM (#50237397) Homepage

        Do not confuse Stalinism or Maoism with socialism, those first two where strictly police states with the masquerade of what ever political system they were pretending to be. This being no different to Nazism.

        So want to see socialism, first the psychopaths have to go, quite simply they will corrupt any ism they are a part of, attempt to turn it into an authoritarian state where they have control and can dominate and exploit the citizens of that society.

        Socialism is the system that the majority of people were born into, the family unit, a socialist government is basically about expanding the socialism of the family unit into the greater community to gain the all to obvious outcomes, a caring and sharing society of human beings and the extended family concept.

        The 'Free Market' is straight up marketing lie because it is wholly and totally dependent upon nothing in that market ever being Free, everything 'owned' and 'controlled', so that those with the most can control and exploit those with the least. With everything that can be owned being owned, including all of the essentials to life, so that denial of life becomes the tool of exploitation of the not free at all market place of human lives.

        Either we shift to socialism or die as a species, that is the choice, suck it up.

        • Re:Troll (Score:4, Insightful)

          by khallow ( 566160 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:39PM (#50237991)

          So want to see socialism, first the psychopaths have to go, quite simply they will corrupt any ism they are a part of, attempt to turn it into an authoritarian state where they have control and can dominate and exploit the citizens of that society.

          The problem here is that your so-called "psychopaths" are normal humans exhibiting normal human behavior. That's the thing about capitalism and markets, you don't need to get rid of normal human behavior in order for them to work well.

          The 'Free Market' is straight up marketing lie because it is wholly and totally dependent upon nothing in that market ever being Free, everything 'owned' and 'controlled', so that those with the most can control and exploit those with the least. With everything that can be owned being owned, including all of the essentials to life, so that denial of life becomes the tool of exploitation of the not free at all market place of human lives.

          You don't even know what a market is. It's not some magic controlling beast, it is merely an avenue for trade - trade which you don't have to participate in.

      • Sweden. Better example than Norway, because Sweden's economy is based in manufacturing and export of those manufactured goods, rather than dependent on a single intrinsically valuable but eventually limited natural resource.

        On the other hand, look at how Norway handles their oil wealth, as opposed to other oil rich countries. Norway invests their oil money in the future of all citizens, rather than using it to line the pockets of the wealthy few.

      • Re:Troll (Score:5, Insightful)

        by martas ( 1439879 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @10:03PM (#50237609)
        So, we mustn't heed Karl Marx's analysis of the problems of capitalism, because his proposed solution has never been successfully implemented? Does that also mean we should disregard Dr. Robert Gallo's discovery of the HIV virus, because it has not been cured yet?
        • Re:Troll (Score:4, Informative)

          by khallow ( 566160 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:53PM (#50238047)
          The difference is that Dr. Gallo both never claimed to have a cure and never had that cure fail repeatedly and spectacularly in the real world. I think the abject failure of Marx's solutions is a strong indication that his analysis is deeply flawed. But you don't need to take my word for it. There's already a quote from the beginning that we can study:

          "within the capitalist system all methods for raising the social productiveness of labour are brought about at the cost of the individual labourer; all means for the development of production transform themselves into means of domination over, and exploitation of, the producers; they mutilate the labourer into a fragment of a man, degrade him to the level of an appendage of a machine, destroy every remnant of charm in his work and turn it into a hated toil; they estrange from him the intellectual potentialities of the labour process in the same proportion as science is incorporated in it as an independent power; they distort the conditions under which he works, subject him during the labour process to a despotism the more hateful for its meanness; they transform his life-time into working-time, and drag his wife and child beneath the wheels of the Juggernaut of capital."

          The obvious rebuttal is that the premises are false. For example, labor unions are a typical social construct in capitalism that doesn't result in the claimed consequences. Or consider job search engines. Are workers worse off because the hiring process has been improved a bit? Are we, workers worse off due to technological improvements to worker productivity like computers or air conditioning?

          Why should we trust this spew of verbiage when the initial assumptions are patently false?

          And let us not forget that so many people, the middle class (or "bourgeoisie"), just aren't living with this sort of drudgery. Marx tried to ignore this group and categorize thema as being more or less enemies of the working class ("proletariat").

          • Re:Troll (Score:5, Insightful)

            by martas ( 1439879 ) on Monday August 03, 2015 @12:25AM (#50238175)

            The difference is that Dr. Gallo both never claimed to have a cure and never had that cure fail repeatedly and spectacularly in the real world.

            Again, what does the cure have to do with the critique? Had Dr. Gallo proposed a cure that was shown not to work, would you be barebacking Nigerian prostitutes?

            The obvious rebuttal is that the premises are false. For example, labor unions are a typical social construct in capitalism that doesn't result in the claimed consequences.

            I don't even know how to begin responding to this. Labor unions grew out of socialist movements in order to organize workers against capitalist forces. In the analogy, claiming that labor unions somehow disprove Marx's observations regarding capitalism is like claiming that condoms disprove AIDS. And that's without even mentioning the fact that Marx would have been very much pro-union, despite your claim of "the abject failure of Marx's solutions". It's just that he knew capitalist forces would continuously fight to erode the power of workers, even unionized ones, which, again, is exactly what's happened in the US from the 70's onward.

            Or consider job search engines. Are workers worse off because the hiring process has been improved a bit? Are we, workers worse off due to technological improvements to worker productivity like computers or air conditioning?

            You can certainly cherry pick examples of technological improvements which seem to have benefited workers (though in the case of hiring practices, I'd argue most recent changes have been horrible for workers), but that's not what the quote is about. The claim in the quote is that the more industrialized production becomes, the less the power of the worker, and the larger the alienation of the worker from the fruits of their labor. The massive increase in prevalence of high turnover, low-wage, low-skill jobs in the US over the last several decades is stark evidence that what Marx was talking about is still happening to this day. This isn't some sort of hypothetical, many people can see that this is happening and it's being discussed heavily in society, especially since the recession. Hell, the very article whose comment section we're in right now is about this!

      • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

        One?
        Just one?
        That's a pretty low bar.

        Here's 12:
        Denmark
        Norway
        Finland
        Sweden
        Netherlands
        Belgium
        Canada
        Ireland
        New Zealand
        France
        Germany
        UK

        Of the 13 richest nations with the most productive workforces and well-off populaces, 12 are socialist or have extensive state sponsored welfare programs.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @09:17PM (#50237375) Homepage

      I don't think it's just the companies that have changed though, it's the market the companies live in. Before there were plenty of fairly sheltered waters, where you were competing with the shop down the street but it was obvious the town needed a shop like yours. Weathering the bad times was possibly more a game of attrition than truly caring for the workers. Today it's all about globalization and open markets with huge waves like on the open ocean.

      Jobs are washed away and probably never coming back, the large multinationals that have caught the huge global waves make tons of money while the small local or regional businesses get crushed. I don't think they have a choice anymore, really. That is to say, I think companies that tried this "cradle to grave" approach to employment would be crushed by the markets. And the ones who are big enough to have a choice, well they're stockholder driven and don't have any particular allegiance to anyone so they'll just squeeze out all the profit they can.

      On the bright side, they can't really carry on this race to the bottom without actually pulling people out of the gutter. China and India has seen wages and living standards increase considerably, as they chase new cheap labor that in itself becomes a scarce resource to be competed for. That will cut into the profitability of outsourcing, of course balanced by your pay not being worth as much abroad. Because they make decent money now too.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday August 03, 2015 @07:43AM (#50239243) Homepage Journal

        It's got worse as companies got larger and the people at the top more separated from the people at the bottom. In a company of 30 people, the boss having to let five people go means speaking to them personally and experiencing the reaction of the other staff. In a company of 300,000 people an exec decided to get rid of 5,000 people in another town and delegates the job to a subordinate, never even meeting those people once.

        It's enabled managers to avoid that unfortunate human trait of compassion, feeing them to make hard nosed business decisions where employees are just another resource. The reason Japanese companies last so long is that the managers, no matter how high up, feel personally responsible when they have to make people redundant, like it's a personal failure and something they should apologise for. In the west they feel the opposite - it's a triumph, money was saved and the business streamlined, and they deserve a fat bonus.

  • Thank you for the blinding flash of the obvious, Ms. Pugh.
    • Thank you for the blinding flash of the obvious, Ms. Pugh.

      What she says is not "obvious". It not even true. The "lifetime employment" of the past is a myth, based on false nostalgia. For most people, it never happened. Average job tenure is as high today as it ever was. We may have fewer people employed for 30 years at the same company, but we also have far fewer people employed as migrant workers or day laborers. Overall, people today have more job security than in the past, not less.

  • by gweilo8888 ( 921799 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:13PM (#50236499)
    Consumers want more product for less money: Greedy.

    Companies want higher profit margins off their products: Greedy.

    Investors want higher returns on investment: Greedy.

    Upper management sees that there is no way to fulfil all of the above and still give themselves huge pay rises without laying off half the riff-raff and making the other half work twice as hard for half as much: Greedy

    Cue ever-decreasing circle as consumers earn less and want even more for it, in the hope of compensating for their shrinking earnings, thus repeating the circle. No single tier here is to blame; we ALL are in a more abstract manner. The blame lies squarely with basic human nature and the words "I want".
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:28PM (#50236587)

      Consumers want more product for less money: Greedy.

      I did NOT ask my employer to ship my job overseas. I did NOT ask that they move the division overseas. I did NOT ask to train some Chinese guy about what a pointers and basic programming - let alone dipshit CS topics - because employers are ALL liars when they say they cannot get qualified workers. Liars. Period. There are NO exceptions.

      This consumer wants to keep his AMERICAN made good stuff but is stuck with Chinese made crap - and it's all crap - because my I cannot afford more. Thanks in part to my education loans. CS degrees are NOT a guarantee to a decent life.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        When you bought that TV from China, you voted with your money that their workers are better than domestic ones.

        When you bought that foreign car, you voted with your money that auto workers in that country are better than domestic ones.

        When you bought imported food because it is cheap, you voted that local farms are worthless compared to whatever fillers get tossed in the food.

        When you bought at Amazon or Wal-Mart instead of paying a little more at a nearby grocery store, you voted for the race to the bottom

        • by TWX ( 665546 )
          I've wanted the country-of-origin to be prominently displayed on the front of the packaging for a long time. Certainly there are some things that I will buy that are imports, but I think that the average consumer doesn't even check country-of-origin, and it's all the more insidious when long-running American brands are offshored while still masquerading as being American.

          The most insidious was when we went to an Ethan Allen store several years ago to buy some bedroom furniture. We had been looking at a
        • Can you name any television companies that are completely American made and sold in big box electronic stores?
        • by Noah Haders ( 3621429 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @08:07PM (#50237019)

          When you bought that foreign car, you voted with your money that auto workers in that country are better than domestic ones.

          a lot of fords and chevys are made in mexico, and a lot of foreign brands are made in US. careful when you fling your jingoistic mud.

        • by ultranova ( 717540 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @11:19PM (#50237907)

          Only got yourself to blame, bub.

          Only if you aren't familiar with the concept of false consciousness [wikipedia.org]. Your job got shipped overseas, so now you can only afford imported goods. You voted for a candidate because there's only two choices and the other is outright insane. You didn't have a choice and thus are not to blame.

          Simply admit you fell for the lies of a conman, join your local labour union or comparable organization, and push it ever leftward. The only thing the system wants or needs from you is your support, overt or silent, so refuse to give it unless you get something in return, besides dreams of making it rich and getting to be the oppressor yourself.

      • by Jack9 ( 11421 )

        This is not insightful. This is typical denial. Hey mods, wtf?

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        I did NOT ask my employer to ship my job overseas

        Remember all those fairy tales about the jinn that grants you three wishes, and how they never quite work out the way people think they do? It's the same with economic policy.

        This consumer wants to keep his AMERICAN made good stuff but is stuck with Chinese made crap - and it's all crap - because my I cannot afford more.

        Well, you can't get American made stuff at Chinese prices because Americans (like you) are not willing to work for Chinese wages and under Ch

    • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:51PM (#50236689) Homepage Journal

      When were those conditions NOT true?

      Answer, never. It's something more. Perhaps the level of greed increased somewhere, perhaps the short term consequences for taking it too far diminished.Perhaps someone gained disproportionate control of the government.

      So let's see here, OH, it looks like corporate profits are at an 85 year high and wages are at a 65 year low! [nytimes.com]

      Hrmm, where DID that wealth go?!?

    • by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @07:11PM (#50236775)

      That would have been true about 15 years ago.

      These days you seem to have forgotten that most of the truly physically productive jobs have already been outsourced to other countries (China, Mexico, etc), and you are now sliding down the slippery slope of those countries refining their ownership, capital, and trade situations to take advantage of this.

      Japan was once the 'cheap labor' for the US.... and yet people never seem to see a trend.

      My only suggestion? Stop damn well following the crowd and consuming every little luxury you can convince yourself you deserve on credit!
      Learn a practical skill or three (and no, manipulating office politics is not a practical skill).
      Live somewhere that is sustainable n what you can actually contribute.
      Take a walk in a park on a nice day and revel in the fact that you are alive.. and that doesnt actually cost (well, much).
      Oh, and perhaps treat your friends/family with due care and respect, because when shit happens - everyone needs some support.

      Oh, sorry, not in line with the American Dream? oh well, good lucky with that.

      • That's lovely (Score:4, Interesting)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @09:25PM (#50237405)
        Now where do I start? 1. The "Luxuries" you speak of are pretty much Cell Phones, cable tv / Internet and eating out once a week. These are a drop in the bucket next to the cost of a car/house/college education. Get rid of all the luxuries you want, it won't make up for the 40 years of declining wages while productivity has more or less doubled.

        2. I like this one: "learn a practical skill". Reminds me of a neighbor of mine who'd been to night school 3 times and each time seen her new career outsourced. What you really means is "Somehow develop a significantly higher IQ as if by magic so you can get the STEM degree that you couldn't get when you were 18".

        3. The working class doesn't get to pick where they live. It's expensive as hell to up and move. You live where you're born and hope for the best. If people could just move somewhere that's better there'd be no 3rd world countries.

        4. See Point # 1.

        5. See this [youtube.com]. Specifically the chorus ("Turning 30, 40, 50 gotta move in with my Parents...").

        Fuck the American Dream. It's a bill of goods we've all been sold.
    • Except that companies and the "upper management" guys are getting richer and richer every decade, whereas the rest of us is getting poorer and poorer.

      Facts:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • Unions (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:18PM (#50236513)
    It's not a surprise really. Right now, unless you happen to live in one of the few states where companies are required to offer you more than simply at-will employment, or you're one of the few people still in a union, you pretty much have few protections against the company deciding to fire you tomorrow, whether in the name of downsizing, outsourcing, or just deciding that they don't want to pay someone with your level of experience instead of getting some fresh undergrad desperate to pay off student loans who'll work for a fraction of your salary.

    And yes, as much as people decry unions, and the abuses that comes with unions, that's your answer in terms of balancing the power. One person alone just doesn't have the power, unless they're being hired for an executive/C-level position. Can unions abuse their power? Absolutely, so stay involved, vote in your union elections, make sure your union reps are doing their jobs. It's sometimes easier said than done, but it can be better than the alternative. That's what we had to do the last time things were like this, roughly 100 years or so ago.
    • Re:Unions (Score:4, Insightful)

      by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:25PM (#50236561)

      Yea, because the steel workers protected their jobs...oh wait, the steel industry is gone. Well there's the auto industry, unions did a fine job running them into bankruptcy.

      but it can be better than the alternative.

      You think there's only one alternative? I think there are several. First, forget about pensions; 401k plans are much better and have replaced them for most workers. Second, plan on having something you can offer to employers besides the threat of a revolution or strike; good workers can find good jobs.

      • Re:Unions (Score:4, Insightful)

        by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:36PM (#50236625)

        Second, plan on having something you can offer to employers besides the threat of a revolution or strike; good workers can find good jobs.

        Anything you can do can be taught to someone else willing to work for less.

        Have you so soon forgotten Disney's attempt to replace their techs?
        http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-disney-technology-h1b-20150617-story.html [latimes.com]

        Seems that the only thing that stopped that was the publicity it got once the techs started complaining.

      • Re:Unions (Score:5, Informative)

        by Rhywden ( 1940872 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:42PM (#50236659)

        I'm not quite sure why you're lambasting him for suggestion unions by listing the times where unions were indeed a hindrance... because he made this very point himself:

        Can unions abuse their power? Absolutely, so stay involved, vote in your union elections, make sure your union reps are doing their jobs.

        Or did you only read what you wanted to read? In fact, I think you stopped thinking the moment you read the word "unions".

      • The problem is half the people in the workforce are below average.

        As an employer, the issue isn't greed: the next person I am going to have to fire doesn't perform at a level that I can break even on his time. If I could command higher billing rates for him, I might be able to just barely break even, but ultimately he isn't able to do anything that a new graduate would, at 35% lower salary. He will be able to get another job, but he will have a real pay cut.

        When margins get compressed a business cannot ca

        • The problem is half the people in the workforce are below average.

          As an employer, the issue isn't greed

          of course not! damn those mathematicians and their definitions!

          you sure do sound like a swell boss! smart too, even!

        • The problem is half the people in the workforce are below average.

          half the people are below the *median*. if the distribution of people's abilities is symmetric then it will be true for the average as well, but there's no reason to think that.

      • by TWX ( 665546 )

        You think there's only one alternative? I think there are several. First, forget about pensions; 401k plans are much better and have replaced them for most workers.

        How are defined-contribution plans better than defined-benefit plans?

        If the 401k plan wasn't tied to the specific company I might be able to see your argument, but given that it's tied to the employer and all of the things that employer could do (ie, ride the company off the rails) I don't see how it could be considered better.

    • Re:Unions (Score:5, Insightful)

      by misexistentialist ( 1537887 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @06:38PM (#50236637)
      Instead of spending millions lobbying why don't the unions start worker-owned companies? Because they can't cease making demands of "capitalists" anymore than a flea can jump off a plump dog
    • Right now, unless you happen to live in one of the few states where companies are required to offer you more than simply at-will employment, or you're one of the few people still in a union, you pretty much have few protections against the company deciding to fire you tomorrow,

      Ah, yes, because that's exactly what skilled people want: getting paid and hired/fired not based on how good they are or how much they contribute to a company, but based on criteria like seniority and other kinds of b.s. that unions c

  • Crony Capitalism (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 02, 2015 @07:09PM (#50236765)

    The big corporations have bought enough presidents and members of congress (in BOTH parties) who allow them to violate the rules of the marketplace. We no longer live in the American free market place, we live in a split economy run by cronies. The average person lives in the consumer half, foreign workers live in the producer half, and the big corporations, investor class, and politicians live astride those two halves (enjoying the benefits of each half and dodging the downsides of each half). This is absolutely NOT free market capitalism.

    These corporations demand all the protections of the American marketplace (including things like large consistent marketplace, a stable legal system, stable banking system, intellectual property laws that are actually enforced, and more) but then when the natural laws of supply and demand would hurt them (in labor costs) they ship work out of that market or import cheaper workers into it thereby escaping the rules of the marketplace. BOTH parties let them do it in exchange for "campaign contributions".

    Do not vote "R" or "D". Vote for the individual, of whatever party and stop letting them destroy the middle class by using "wedge issues" to distract you. They want you to vote R or D to "protect choice" or to "stop abortion", or to "protect marriage equality" or to "preserve traditional marriage" but the reality is that these things are all being decided by judges in courts and the politicians on both sides have no intention of solving any of them (solving them would remove the issue and eliminate a tool for motivating the party base). What is CERTAIN, however, is that most of these politicians on BOTH sides of the aisle will do whatever the wall st investment bankers who fund their campaigns tell them to do (i.e. continue the destruction of the middle class). There is a reason why the establishment candidates of BOTH parties ("->Hillary" and "Jeb!") share so many Wall St banker backers.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I've been working for 25 years to try and beat this system. I hate it. I hate that I can take a corporate job where I'm told what kind of pants to wear, what angle to sit at in my seat, and be given more work than a person can complete in a reasonable timeframe, complete it anyway, and be given even more as a "reward". Alternatively, I can go work for a startup where I have more flexibility, but less security. My "solution" has been to live cheaply. I live in a small paid-off house. I drive paid-off cars. I

  • So when they let you go, you can say you gave it the *ol' college effort*.
  • ..because I heard they were hiring.
  • says workers in the U.S. are caught up in a "one-way honor system," in which workers are beholden to employers.

    The idea that US workers are "beholden" to employers is ridiculous; it isn't company loyalty that keeps employees with the same employer, it's the cost and difficulty of changing jobs. A big part of why it is so costly and difficult to change jobs is government regulations and government-mandated benefits.

  • by MacTO ( 1161105 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @07:51PM (#50236957)

    I don't know if this is representative, but I've found that employees who are treated as disposable often treat their jobs at disposable. In other words, job hopping is often at the employee's initiative. They are ready to look for new work the minute their old job feels a bit more insecure, and are ready to jump at a new job if they are offered new benefits. Note that I said benefits, not security. It is assumed that job security does not exist so it is not something that is worthwhile seeking.

    The sad thing is that it hurts employers as much as it hurts employees. It costs money to look for new employees. It costs money to vet new employees. It costs money to train new employees. It costs money to terminate employees or have employees resign. It also costs money in lost productivity in the intervening period. It also adds a great deal of risk, since there is no guarantee that the new employee will be of any value or, if they are of value, that they will be a good fit. Yet a lot of businesses don't seem to realize the impact on the bottom line because churn is not broken out when the accounting is done. Rather, it is a bunch of different expenses that fall in different categories -- if they are even recognized as expenses to start with.

  • Two way street (Score:5, Interesting)

    by paiute ( 550198 ) on Sunday August 02, 2015 @08:58PM (#50237271)
    Some decades ago, the multinational I worked for was all excited to get us to work like the Japanese, who were so gungho that they gathered before work to sing the company song. We responded that we would gladly do that in return for guaranteed lifetime job security. (Crickets.)
  • one-way loyalty (Score:5, Informative)

    by v1 ( 525388 ) on Monday August 03, 2015 @07:32AM (#50239215) Homepage Journal

    A couple jobs ago I was chatting with another employee, we were discussing some "ominous signs" such as HR shredding documents like she was preparing for a parade. The topic of "giving notice" came up. The other guy said that if he found a good job somewhere else he'd walk with zero notice.

    The manager overheard this and stepped in on the conversation, trying to berate us with "that's not how it's done in business, I expect you to give me at least two weeks' notice if you're going to quit!" I turned to him and said "so, how much notice will you give ME if you're going to lay me off or fire me?" (huff) (huff) (snort) is about all I got back, he couldn't even form words let alone a coherant sentence to respond to that. So I added, "I'll give you as much notice as I believe you'll give me." So rather than answer me, he just stomped away.

    I don't think they consider just how much more inconvenient being unemployed is, compared to having to hire someone to replace a single employee that departs unexpectedly. For the boss, it's inconvenient. For the employee, suddenly losing their income, possibly the only income for an entire family, can be devastating. And yet they expect to be provided with notice, while providing none themselves. Sselfish, arrogant, and inconsiderate!

    So everyone with a clue began job hunting. I had found new work, it wasn't nearly what I had now, but the writing was on the wall in pretty bold print at this point, so I accepted it. I showed up on a Thursday evening to start my (3rd) shift, and the gal from HR was in the parking lot with her hatch open, handing out unemployment packets. The entire center had been closed, everyone there got laid off that day, no one even was offered a transfer. I found out later that our manager had known this was going to happen for months.

    My new job started on Monday. (total time unemployed - two days) Unfortunately, that's how they play the game, so that's how I have to play it too. If they don't like that, they have no one to blame but themselves, I'm just playing by their rules.

  • by sabbede ( 2678435 ) on Monday August 03, 2015 @07:56AM (#50239305)
    Some huge corporations are shrinking? Is somebody suggesting they want to? Instead of talking about how much it stinks for workers, why not talk about why its happening?

    No business wants to shrink, or find out they have to lay off thousands of employees to survive. They are every bit as interested in stability and security as their employees. But it seems nobody wants to talk about that, everyone would rather assign blame or demand radical changes to fix a symptom without asking what the cause is. Or worse, saying "we know what the cause is, it's the greed of evil [corporations/unions]!", assuming their bias is correct and going no further.

    Maybe, the "era of security" was an aberration stemming from the absence of international competition in the aftermath of WWII and the devastation wrought on the industrial base of every other developed nation? Is it actually good for workers or the economy if workers spend their entire working lives in the same job? Have we forgotten that a dynamic economy means even established businesses can be forced to shrink in order to survive? What about the high levels of economic uncertainty they have had to contend with of late?

    What if it's better this way? Maybe not having a guaranteed job-for-life is better for everyone in the long-term. Can we consider that? What if too much security causes stagnation, making it an unstable condition that necessarily leads to less security in the long term?

    Does this article do anything more than let people vent their biases? Flamebait from the start?

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