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Grateful to Have a Job, and Bone-TiredPosted on Sep 9, 2009There was a New Yorker cartoon last spring picturing a nearly empty galley ship with only two slaves still pulling their oars under the grim eye of the master. In the caption, one of the slaves says to the other: “At this point, I’m just happy to still have a job.” It turns out that this is the mantra of the new economy and its icon: the grateful worker. When I Googled “grateful to have a job”—this is how I quantify trends these days—I came up with 3.7 million hits. Gratitude is in. I thought of this when reading the statistics boasting that productivity was up again, this time by 6.6 percent. This “good news” means that more work is being done in the same time. But this doesn’t say anything about the people working harder and whether they are engaged in what economists call a “speed-up” with all of its Charlie Chaplin implications for our own “Modern Times.” Nor does it say how many workplaces have four people doing the work once done by six or eight. The spotlight of the Great Recession has been properly on the nearly 10 percent of workers who are unemployed. But there has been far less said about the collateral damage on the 90 percent who “still have a job” but are looking at the empty seats. Fearfully. Gratefully. Advertisement The government doesn’t track how many are doing the labor of their former co-workers. Nor does it quantify economic anxiety. The closest we get to numbering the grateful worker is in the figures showing that job-leavers—those who voluntarily quit—are at an all-time low. Trust me, they aren’t all staying because they suddenly love their bosses. And while we’re on the subject, I’m willing to wager that many people on those unpaid furloughs are actually working at home. And a whole lot of stunningly productive workers aren’t putting in for overtime. In what economist Heather Boushey calls the “gloves-off economy,” even those with jobs are feeling powerless, unable to say no. “This really puts employers in the driver’s seat,” says Boushey, “and the back-seat driver can’t even suggest putting on the brakes.” The most immediate effect is on families. The dirty little secret is that workers with families—make that moms—are still seen as “less productive.” “Discrimination against mothers is still the strongest and most open form of discrimination,” says Joan Williams at UC-Hastings College of the Law. “When employers have to cut, they turn to the underperformers who may be readily confused with mothers. People who see them targeted are afraid. ” It’s not a coincidence that the number of pregnancy discrimination complaints went up by 12 percent in 2008. For that matter, the number of workers calling the Hastings WorkLife hot line with stories of being targeted for caregiving has doubled. We have even seen a decline in births in California and Florida, where the housing crisis hit hardest. The talk of work-life balance has fallen as fast as a 401(k). There is still a stigma attached to flextime, and only half of workers get a single paid sick day. As Debra Ness of the National Partnership for Women and Families says, worried workers are “less likely to ask for benefits and less likely to use them if they have them.” Indeed, if fear is more contagious than the swine flu, what’s going to happen when workers choose between putting their health on the line and their jobs? After the dot-com bubble burst, we got a jobless recovery. Will the Great Recession and the grateful worker end up with a benefit-less recovery? In Mel Brooks’ famous routine about the 2,000-year-old man, he’s asked what they used for transportation in the old days. His answer: “Mostly fear.” The fear that he was being chased by an animal. Well, fear is what keeps a lot of people productive. Fear is what makes many of those still working become averse to change when we need it most. How will we know when the Great Recession starts to lighten up? Maybe when gratitude begins to grate. Ellen Goodman’s e-mail address is ellengoodman1(at)me.com. © 2009, Washington Post Writers Group Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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A Progressive Journal of News and Opinion. Editor, Robert Scheer. Publisher, Zuade Kaufman.
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By Sasha, September 16 at 10:17 pm #
I’m a technical writer who has been unemployed for the
Report thispast 10 months, and I just looked at Cisco’s job
website. They have 22 openings for technical writers in
India, plus one opening for a documentation manager
there too, and just one opening for a technical writer
in the US!
By nestoffour, September 13 at 4:51 am #
My friend has been working in Customer Service for United Airlines for ten years, second shift. She punches out at midnight every day she goes to work (not much of a life to be had that way). Immediately after 9/11, the employees who were not laid off had to agree to doing the work previously done by three people, with a significant pay cut, and reduced benefits. Those remaining live in constant fear of being laid off. In the meantime, the CEO makes a killing.
Report thisBy Big B, September 12 at 4:50 pm #
My fellow americans, don’t feel bad, for the bleeding of jobs to the third world will end soon. Because very soon, americans will be just like those third world workers, we will live in such abject poverty that we will gleefully accept any shitty job for any shitty salary with little to no benefits. We will have become a corp friendly nation with a facist government that has no labor or enviormental regulations. And of course, no corporate tax structure.
in short, we will be India.
Report thisBy chringram, September 11 at 9:31 pm #
My husband now works and average of 150 hours per work week. In January, his company arranged a massive conference call where the CIO informed everyone that they were within 15% of their goal to make 40% profit for the first fiscal quarter of 2009 and would be doing so by OFF_SHORING 90% of their jobs. He also announced that all remaining US staff would be given a 4% pay cut, AND that they would be expected to take up the slack and “mentor” aka teach the new off-shore recruits their jobs. For the last 3 years the company has not even given a cost of living raise. We stay because we need the health insurance. My husband has accumulated over 8 weeks of vacation. He tried to take just two and they basically said you are too important-if you leave-don’t come back. We are not alone. We already have a group of 15 people who are employed and are experiencing the same treatment. I love this country-but given the un-checked power of corporations to mangle worker rights and create subsistance slaves in the name of maximizing profit,I don’t know that we can afford to continue to live like this!
Report thisBy MK Ultra, September 11 at 8:37 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
This article hits the spot! Just today, I re-read an e-mail sent by my employer last year around this time informing us wage slaves that the 5 to 6% yearly raise we weren’t getting had been reduced to 2% due to the fact that (now, hang on to this one!) there was more business coming in due to the bad economy and more employees had to be hired to get it done. Yep! You heard that right! The bastards got more business, hired more people, made more money and cut whatever little we weren’t even getting to begin with. Of course, the sickening e-mail goes on to detail how our very generous employer is committed to pay 50% of our health insurance (no, please, don’t ask what we get for that!) and how they had set up a 401k for us sheep (with no contributions but with a maintenance fee which we must pay) and how well paid we were and blah blah blah… The following month, the head honcho’s voice over the loudspeakers announced how many million (yes, millions!) dollars we had made and how he had posted record earnings (yes, we made the money but he posted the record earnings). You gotta hand it to them, they do have ballz! And when things are bad, they take even more advantage of us serfs.
Report thisBy Anarcissie, September 11 at 2:59 pm #
Well, the ruling and owning classes are never going to treat you, or anyone, any better than they have to. This is why people used to form unions and cooperatives. Where are yours?
Report thisBy Gloria Picchetti, September 11 at 10:43 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
I had quite a run around with an American made vacuum cleaner company because customer service can’t understand English because customer service is in the Middle East. In a letter I explained that I live in Chicago where on a daily basis I here Spanish, French, Polish, German, and many Asian dialects, and many Middle Eastern dialects. That is only some of the languages I hear depending on which neighborhood I am traveling. So why doesn’t the company bring customer service back to the US particularly Chicago. A rude, loud, ignorant lady called to say they are an international company and told me not to write more letters.
Report thisBy larkohio, September 11 at 7:11 am #
I am one of those grateful to have a job people, but the volume of work I have had this summer, has been overwhelming. I see this with others as well.
Report thisBy bane-richter, September 10 at 5:56 pm #
Workers rights in this country are an appalling joke. If you don’t like someone’s haircolor you can destroy their lives by throwing them out on the street - employers have been getting more militant by blocking attempts to prevent the recently discarded from obtaining unemployment insurance - anything to lower overhead. No one cares about the workers, including many workers themselves, who’ve perversely taken up the side of their abusive overlords, kind of like cops in a dictatorship.
Report thisJust one more reason the US is a fear driven society of destructive consumption - so-called “work” is actually pure hell.
By Libra96, September 10 at 11:38 am #
The beatings will stop, when attitudes improve.
Report thisBy C.Curtis.Dillon, September 10 at 2:53 am #
I am not at all surprised that businesses are using this downturn to further intimidate their workers. Fear of layoffs makes employees very agreeable. That is when these slugs move against hard won benefits. I would be very interested to see stats about benefit losses in this downturn. They must be horrendous.
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