by Charles Hugh-Smith
A society of the increasingly overworked and involuntarily idle is not a stable or happy one.
Though I don’t have any data on this, anecdotal evidence suggests
the nation’s workforce is dividing into two classes: the overworked and
the idle. The overworked work more than 40 hours a week and are
increasingly given impossible workloads, while the idle can’t find any
work or can only get part-time jobs with limited hours.
This bifurcation crosses income and class lines: highly paid and
poorly paid workers alike are overtasked, and both the highly trained
and low-skilled are idled.
The income stratification in the U.S. workforce suggests that America is now a Three-and-a-Half Class Society (October 22, 2012):
The entrenched incumbents on top (the “half class”), the
high-earners who pay most of the taxes (the first class), the working
poor who pay Social Security payroll taxes and sales taxes (the second
class), and State dependents who pay nothing (the third class).This class structure has political ramifications. In
effect, those paying most of the tax are in a pressure cooker: the lid
is sealed by the entrenched incumbents on top, and the fire beneath is
the Central State’s insatiable need for more tax revenues to support its
entrenched incumbents and growing army of dependents.
In Bifurcation Nation (June 24, 2013), I discussed the cultural and political divides that overlay these income-based classes:
There is a palpable zeitgeist that the nation is bifurcating into
two camps which no longer overlap or communicate using the same
cultural signifiers and symbology.There is also a growing awareness that
the divide between very wealthy and the middle income households has
widened into an enormous canyon of inequality.
These classes are coalescing into a Tyranny of the Majority,
where the entrenched incumbents in State fiefdoms and state-funded
cartels are joined by state dependents in demanding higher taxes on the
25% who pay 90% of the Federal income taxes.
This leads to a systemic question: Is Democracy Possible in a Corrupt Society? (November 12, 2012)
We can phrase the question as WTAFA Corollary #1: (named in honor of my book Why Things Are Falling Apart and What We Can Do About It (print) (Kindle)):
If the citizenry cannot replace a dysfunctional government and/or
limit the power of the financial Aristocracy at the ballot box, the
nation is a democracy in name only.If the citizenry cannot dislodge a
parasitic, predatory financial/political Aristocracy via elections, then
“democracy” is merely a public-relations facade, a simulacra designed
to create the illusion that the citizenry “have a voice” when in fact
they are debt-serfs in a neofeudal State.
In other words, the overworked are powerless to change the system they serve. The
overworked often have big mortgages to pay, kids in college, huge
medical bills and a high-cost lifestyle that is a legacy of better
times, a lifestyle they try to maintain even as their net income after
taxes and healthcare insurance declines year after year.
The involuntarily idle are equally powerless, of course, but they
tend to think the status quo is rewarding the overworked. The
overworked, meanwhile, look with envy on the involuntarily idle who
manage to live pretty well on government programs and transfers.
There are structural reasons why the managerial and most productive classes are increasingly overworked. Our
entire economy is suffering from diminishing returns: global
competition is eating away at profit margins, and increasing debt no
longer boosts the gross domestic product (GDP).
To maintain profits and output, managers are given additional duties
even as support staff is trimmed. I have often wondered if the
fascination with the TV series Mad Men wasn’t partly the result
of our amazement at how little these guys actually worked and how many
had secretaries/admin assistants.
This phenomenon is also visible in low-pay service work, where
adverts for poorly paid administrative jobs demand familiarity with a
dozen software programs, and fast-food workers are expected to maintain a
punishing level of productivity for minimum wages.
This trend to loading existing employees with more work while keeping
pay more or less the same is seen as cost-effective: training a new
hire is both costly and risky, as once the training is complete the new
hire will likely be poached by a competitor who doesn’t have an
expensive training program.
The overworked, from minimum wage earner to manager, are increasingly unsympathetic to workers in government fiefdoms who work less than 40 hours a week and enjoy luxe benefits and pay scales that are simply unavailable in the private sector.
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) unions who recently went on strike,
paralyzing public transit for 6.5 million inhabitants of the San
Francisco Bay Area, were apparently caught off guard by the public
animosity to their demands for 23% raises on top of their
50%-above-market base salaries and unavailable-at-any-private-job
benefits.
Memo to BART union members: the overworked earn on average slightly
over half ($47,000) of what you earn for “driving” an automated train
and staffing station offices ($80,000), and those who earn more than you
in the private sector often work 50% more than your 37 hours a week in
highly stressful jobs. The highly paid private-sector techies you envy
constitute 2% of the workforce, and they work a lot more hours than you
in intrinsically insecure industries.
The self-employed are in the Red Queen’s Race, running as fast as they can to keep from falling into poverty. The self-employed pay all the taxes and healthcare costs paid by the employer, so their Real-World Tax Rate is 75% (July
5, 2012). The self-employed people I know are working the equivalent of
two jobs to earn the net of one job, and that’s if they’re doing well.
Thus it’s no surprise that the ranks of the self-employed have thinned:
The stress levels of the overworked are high due to impossible
workloads, while the involuntarily idle suffer from financial stress and
depression. This is one systemic reason why the nation’s mental and
physical health continues to deteriorate.
Yes, there are pockets of state fiefdoms and private sectors where
workers are well-compensated for low-stress work, but these are
exceptions, not the norm. No wonder those who can do so are quitting
and filing for Social Security or tapping their 401K retirement plans
to get by, or otherwise opting out of the labor force.
A society of the increasingly overworked and involuntarily idle is not a stable or happy one. Pressure
is building along multiple fault lines beneath the supposedly expanding
American economy. What’s really expanding are stress, ill health,
chronic depression, financial insecurity and the frustrations of the
powerless.
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