Paraphrasing the classics. It is the housing market stupid.
Really, Even living in a place with very low population density(Rural Mass/NH). Rents are high (and scarce), you need at least 250K to buy a small house. Houses are old, Lot's are big, big distances, very few new houses are built every year. I can't even image how blue collar families do it. If you think about it, it even makes local companies less competitive, since they need to pay more so people can barely survive.
Our keystone national housing policy focuses on appreciating prices.
A sensible national housing policy would focus on improving the characteristics of the housing stock (improving energy efficiency, removing lead, etc). Of course the building code moves forward over time and new housing generally beats older housing on metrics like that, and there are occasionally tax incentives for making improvements. but none of that comes close to the mortgage interest deduction in scope.
It would also focus on affordability. It's clear enough that with 40 or 50 years for the policy to work and ~1/2 of the nation not having much of any wealth that home equity is not the path to universal prosperity.
In the US, housing is treated as an asset, which is a huge mistake. In place like Germany, most people are renters because: rents stay fairly low, the government reassesses population periodically to allow more houses to get built, and renters have plenty of rights. Here, we allow houses to act as a hybrid place to live, ATM, and stock.
I'm not sure the northeast, particularly any part of Massachusetts, is the best place to talk about the housing market. You will still have basically all the upward pressure on prices that you do in Boston et al with the exception of the large population.
If you look at a place without the statewide tax climate of a MA/NY/CA it's easy if not trivial to find ~$100k houses that are practically mansions.
Read the comments in this article which is linked to in the Medium article. You'll see some very in-depth and (correctly) critical analysis of the theory that housing is the root cause of inequality.
Houston is one of the most economically segregated cities and they are always building new cheap houses and apartments there, especially in the exurban developments where they build tract homes endlessly and sell them for $150k.
For a city without zoning, Economic segregation is hard, and believe Houston is not the most economically segregated City. The Houston suburbs, I completely agree, no where are gated communities more fashionable than Houston suburbs.
>Millennials have spent almost their entire working lives in a labor market that is loose—with too many job seekers and too few jobs—and where private-sector labor unions are almost entirely absent. Certainly, monetary policy that promotes employment while making it easier for workers to form unions would help Millennials make up lost ground.
The issue I have with this is it promotes a certain ideology—that job-seekers have the right to hold jobs even when there are too few. This article completely ignores the other paradigm, that if you don't have a job, it's up to you to make yourself valuable to employers.
I'm not trying to argue for one ideology or the other, I just think it's absurd to ignore the existence of one or the other.
I always take issue with the idea that people should just make themselves more "valuable" to get a job.
While it sounds like a good idea in principle, it ignores the fact that without a job many people simply won't have the resources to make themselves more valuable.
It creates a catch 22 situation, and the people it effects the most also happen to be the people who will struggle the most to break out of that situation.
Personally I don't feel it is difficult to make yourself valuable enough to get "a" job. Maybe not "the" job, but "a" job. Which gives you enough resources to get "the next" job. Which you repeat until you get "the" job. It's the ladder and we climb it.
It really boils down to it is the law of the jungle out there and you want something so it is up to you to figure out how to get it.
And this is coming from someone that was homeless in the winters of Minnesota. I've been there.
Unfortunately, there are far too many people who confuse self worth with market worth/salary/net worth, etc. I have in the past worked many more hours in higher-stress jobs in order to make more money. I choose now to work fewer hours in a lower-stress job for somewhat less money. The market is free to assign more monetary value to jobs of the former type. I don't consider my worth as a person to be tied to how the market values my job.
> If you aren't attractive to a life partner, you don't get a life partner. Why should a work partner or an employer be different?
Because you don't necessarily die of starvation or become a burden to the state if you don't get a life partner, unlike what happens if you don't have any source of income?
Lack of touch will kill babies. The research wasn't extended any further because it is too harmful for ethics boards to allow. And loneliness is very harmful to one's own health which has been verified by research as well. Compare this to all the forms of welfare that do more than give the basic necessities to not die because they significantly improve qualify of life. We are social creatures, yet when we discuss needs we deserve to have met, people seem to forget that.
Sure, lots of things affect your quality of life, some slightly and some greatly.
However, the job market is qualitatively different, which is why it should be held to different standards. Loneliness is definitely harmful, but still many people don't want sexual/life partners. However, everyone needs to eat and have some sort of shelter and access to health services. If you lack money for this, you either die or become a burden to someone else, possibly the state.
Coming back to what I believe was the parent's point when they said "in America the market determines your self worth", your worth as a person isn't -- shouldn't be! -- how much money you make or even whether you have a job. That simply doesn't seem right to me.
>but still many people don't want sexual/life partners. However, everyone needs to eat and have some sort of shelter and access to health services.
First, only eating is really required, and it requires far less than a healthy diet. The rest of that you can find people who forgo. Also, there are some who choose to not eat and a subset of them do hold this choice until they die (which tends to be soon after and caused by not eating). Consider some monks who mummified themselves through strict control of their diet as one extreme example.
So what do we consider a need? If you'll live 40 years on gruel but 50 years on a balanced diet, is the balanced diet a need? What if the difference is 5 years and 15 years respectively? What if it is 3 months and 10 years and 3 months respectively?
>your worth as a person isn't -- shouldn't be! -- how much money you make or even whether you have a job
Then what should be? And what ever criteria you do choose to determine your worth to others, what of people who lack that criteria through no fault of their own?
>When society doesn't value you as a human being, you don't value yourself as a human being.
There are many cultures that don't value people based on how much they earn. I think valuing people based on economic success is largely tied to Indian and Asian culture. As a white person from a white family in the middle of the US, no one that I care about values me based on my salary. Some cultures seem to be more obsessed with economic status than others. To me, it's repulsive.
> As a white person from a white family in the middle of the US, no one that I care about values me based on my salary.
As someone of the same background and also from the middle of nowhere mid-US, I can say this is certainly true. It seems a bit different on the coasts.
That said, even my family doesn't think too highly of the unemployed, which seems a bit inconsistent.
>There are many cultures that don't value people based on how much they earn.
But how many cultures value people regardless of who or what they are? Even if it isn't tied to financials, it is tied to something and there are the haves and the have nots. You can even artificially create such values among children if you give them information to suggest that some arbitrary characteristic is a have and competing arbitrary characteristics are have nots.
If there are too few jobs, it's just a game of musical chairs. The number of jobs is not a natural phenomena, but a varying outcome of the parameters of our economic system of managed market capitalism. It's very natural for citizens demand better management of the economy to create more jobs when there are too few.
Indeed the right to work is a part of the universal declaration of human rights[1].
(Whether we should continue the system of unemployment post-material-scarcity is a whole another question, but a replacement system doesn't seem quick to arrive).
- To the _number of people who want/demand a job_ because the system they've grown into told them that they had to study to get a good job to have a good life(and that they will get a job if they get a good degree)?
- To the need for more jobs for the economy to work?
- To a wild guess disguised as a "this is how the economy should work" by people who got a degree or an office so now what they say is supposed to be right?
- To something else?
There's a difference between having a right to work (that is, not being prevented from working re: discrimination) and demanding a work (notwithstanding with: is there something one could do?).
If it's a game of chairs, unless you abide "the state/system", there's no one but you to get a chair or build a new one for you. Or for you and some others. Or someone else to step in and build a chair for you. But that's not a given.
Economy is not some abstract deity (believers in the "free market" like to imagine it as some kind of self-regulating mechanism that ends up in the best possible way, when it facts it's just a sum of human activity, that doesn't even play by the naive economist assumptions of people following their self-interest half of the time and that can end and does end up in all kinds of shit).
Economy is something people (not just the state, everybody) can decide upon how they want it and build it.
It's just that currently only the big players make those decisions with their law purchasing power -- instead of the people at large with representative laws.
So, "having enough jobs for everybody" could be such a decision people could make, and work towards it.
Big players, that, when overrun by the people or serious shakes (French Revolution, WWI, WWII, Russian Revolution), just let some room for the people to reorganize things a bit better (and they did) and then, new big players step in.
What's going to be interesting is that now, the "big players" are not going to be states only. There are companies too (as in, groups of people organizing themselves; but also as in, groups of people whose actions is hugely driven by a small number of owners). There's something brewing.
Right, I like to say that capitalism is really just a distributed algorithm, for solving interrelated questions about how to allocate your resources.
Like any algorithm, you risk Garbage-in-Garbage-out. It's the role of society (and government) to put the right framework in place. (For example, ensuring that it is not profitable to assassinate rival CEOs.)
The state protects wealth. Being born now in the west is like joining a game of monopoly two hours in. All the squares are owned. Round you go.
As we get more efficient less human labour is needed for a finite amount of land/resources. If inequality is high most valuable land is owned by a few people.
The rest of us must pledge ever more labour for the right to subsist.
The rich are very much relying on the state to keep order as inequality rockets. Guess what would happen if we had no police force to enforce collection of taxes primarily from the middle classes? Or nobody to stop someone calling into question why they can't stand in a particular spot "because that land has been owned by my family for generations".
> Being born now in the west is like joining a game of monopoly two hours in. All the squares are owned. Round you go.
Appropriate in that Monopoly (or more precisely, the game it ripped off, The Landlord's Game) was created to demonstrate the inequality that derives from private ownership of land, and how a land-value-tax a la Henry George removes the inequality.
"The state protects wealth. Being born now in the west is like joining a game of monopoly two hours in. All the squares are owned. Round you go."
You've made this analogy a few times in the past few days and I think it is flawed.
It's only like a game of monopoly, joined two hours in, if in monopoly the players are periodically removed from the game (death) and have their assets divided up among new players (wealth taxes OR the dilutive effects of transfer to heirs whose number is greater than the original player).
Also: imagine 50,000 more property squares that nobody wants. Detroit Place. Haiti Way. Rural Spain Parkway.
I think you would do well to read historical accounts of families - both modern and historic - and get a wider perspective of how this actually works out in the real world.
Inheritance tax may not work as quickly as you'd like, but the avoidance that you refer to only goes so far. People multiply. They have kids. Those kids have kids. Not everyone has the intelligence and drive to produce 1%-style outcomes. The wealth dilutes. And then there is none.
In fact, even with no inheritance tax whatsoever, the old dictum "wealth never survives three generations" ("Fu bu guo san dai") absolutely asserts itself.
Of course there are edge cases. Let's not waste our time indexing all of the rothschilds and windsors and duponts.
The point is: all of the squares are not taken and the squares that are taken come up for grabs all the time:
In my view the economic system exists to serve the people instead of the other around, so I will pick the first option. But taken broadly, so accommodating necessary compromises to maintain the capacity of the economy (keep producing jobs and valuable output and so on). Like I said in my original comment, whether we want to maintain a system with the concept of unemployment is a whole another discussion.
Also,
> There's a difference between having a right to work (that is, not being prevented from working re: discrimination) and demanding a work (notwithstanding with: is there something one could do?).
The concept as discussed in the universal declaration of human rights does include the supply of jobs: "just and favourable conditions of work and to protection against unemployment"
I totally agree with your view (the system is built/exists to serve the people).
But the supply of jobs must not be void of meaningful/useful jobs; and the State/system is very, very unqualified to create such jobs - it tends to build on the jobs necessary to self-sustain (on the practical and political planes), and not much more.
Most qualified to create those new jobs/missing chairs are the people, on their own, or through the business they build. Then the (clever) support of the state or of big players is required to make those grow in their turn.
You may demand something out of a system. Which can self declare "everyone ought to get a job". But the system on its own is not capable of providing.
Note. I'm heavily biased. I'm French, living in France. And I am beyond amazed how this country is run on the economics level.
If there aren't enough chairs for you, and you think you can provide value, then go into business for yourself. You don't have to rely on a pre-existing employer to give you work.
Assuming this is a serious question it is because working for yourself is not that easy. It requires sales and marketing to get your value out there to the people that are willing to pay for it.
Working for someone else is easy because there is an established system to connect you to the people that are willing to pay for your value. That channel doesn't exist for everyone, especially people with skills in areas that do not commonly hire contractors, like IT.
Because value is a combination of human labor AND the means of production and the means of production aren't owned by working people. I can start making cheeseburgers but McDonald's owns the efficient equipment, the marketing, the good locations to sell them, etc. such that I can't possibly make profit outside their system. So I'm forced to essentially rent space in their kitchen in order to be compensated.
...that if you don't have a job, it's up to you to make yourself valuable to employers.
Most people do not have the opportunity to make themselves valuable.
It's generally understood that at this point in history most people shouldn't really have to work at all. The whole point of technology is to make living easier for everyone. The root of this problem, as far as I can understand it, is misallocation of capital, not of "jobs". The efficiency of the free market is telling the labor market, "hey, you don't need to do this job anymore." So why are we still forcing these people to work? They should be allocated the capital gains reaped from market efficiencies that are a result of technological innovations.
The basic problem is that this idea that people shouldn't have to work goes against centuries of religious thinking which is strongly embedded in American culture. The idea of the Protestant/Puritan work ethic is that hard work is a sign of God's grace and centrally important to the character of a person and society as a whole. Sometimes you will hear people talk about this directly, but more often it's just implied because it has become awkward to assert religious ideas on society explicitly.
Until that cultural pillar of hard work defining a person's character and place in God's kingdom goes away, we will be stuck with this idea that people are defined by their work.
I still believe that hard work is necessary for a civilized world to continue. When the Pilgrims first landed they needed everyone to pitch in so they said if you don't work you don't get food. We have advanced to a point where we still need that incentive, but allow people to be more creative in how they add value to society. My gripe is that people shouldn't be forced into menial tasks because they didn't have the opportunity to "make themselves valuable" earlier in life.
There still needs to be some sort of incentive to actually do work. I'm sure most of these people in the article would rather be writing novels or creating art or something better than flipping burgers or the like.
I think the best incentive is to just make work more interesting. Even sweeping floors can be interesting if you can listen to your favorite podcasts while doing it. The menial stuff can mostly be automated, and it that will only accelerate in the future, leaving the most interesting jobs. When we have an increasing population with less work to do, the main problem we run into is finding new work and making it meaningful. This is a good problem to have.
Actually, the main problem is stopping greedy individuals from capturing the majority of benefit gained from the automation, or debt-slaving their fellow humans via rent extraction. Aside from those, I agree with you completely.
What gives you more self-worth, learning a new programming language and completing a project in it, or sitting on the couch and watching TV?
I personally believe the ancients understood this, from the usual parables. Idle hands are of the devil, and lead you to fill your time with something. Most of the easy somethings are drinking, eating and junk entertainment.
Technology may give us less to do, but at the expense of less opportunities for developing self worth. Even some of the founding computer members understood this--Wiener, a member of the "Dream Machine" crew mentioned it in the book "Cybernetics".
Perhaps I may clarify the historical background of the present situation if I say that the first
industrial revolution, the revolution of the “dark satanic mills,” was the devaluation of the
human arm by the competition of machinery. . . . The modern industrial revolution [i.e., the
computer revolution] is similarly bound to devalue the human brain. . . . The answer, of course,
is to have a society based on human values other than buying and selling. To arrive at this
society, we need a good deal of planning and a good deal of struggle. . . . (Wiener, 1948, pp.
37-38, bracketed words added)
Well, you're comparing "learning a new programming language and completing a project in it" with "sitting on the couch and watching TV". There are things you can do instead of "working" that isn't being a couch potato.
For example, learning how to play an instrument, picking up painting, attempting to master chess, or Go, are all things that you could do instead of working and are still personally enriching, if not financially enriching. They may not boost the economy directly but they will make the culture a better place nonetheless. There is a lot of untapped potential that could be explored if people have a guaranteed basic income and didn't have to work that dead-end, minimum-wage job.
Of course we still need a lot of human labour to make society run. I mean who wants to do menial labour, or plough snow at 4am so the morning commute isn't a complete disaster.
So I don't have an answer, I just think you're falsely equating "not working" with "idle hands".
I completely agree. And there's an opportunity to get even more meaning out of work when it's your choice of what to learn and do rather than dictated by market conditions or necessity to survive.
"The idea of the Protestant/Puritan work ethic is that hard work is a sign of God's grace and centrally important to the character of a person and society as a whole."
I can't comment on the "God's grace" part, but hard work is indeed centrally important to the character of a person and society as a whole.
My point wasn't to take a position on this but rather to point out that this is a deep-rooted cultural belief tied with religious values, which is the hardest kind of thing for a society to get over. It definitely has pull beyond the religious crowd, but that's how these kinds of things propogate, from sermons to unstated cultural assumptions.
Personally, I would value smart and effective work over hard work any day. If we get to the point where the most effective work is also fun and enjoyable rather than a burden, we'll be better off for it.
?? People should be defined on the actions they take, which is generally the goals, groups (industries) they belong to and work within. Otherwise it opens the floor to losers that think they are defined by whatever mix gender color, disabilities they have. You may think I'm being harsh, but I'm starting to see that now at conferences. "I'm Tina, I'm cis-gendered disabled" It's like they want to put some kind of moral hierarchy on people based on whatever minority label sticks.
I think I'm miscommunicating here. I'm not saying that people should be defined by anything in particular, just that this idea of a work ethic tied to being evidence of being a good person blessed by God is a traditional cultural concept which started in Europe and took root in America and then many other places in the world as well.
What you're talking about is an effort by people to be more inclusive by communicating things about themselves that they want others to be aware of. I can understand how this can be awkward and annoying, but it also has positive effects of bringing out these kinds of unstated assumptions like the idea of a work ethic.
If you look at history, groups tended to be more cohesive and share cultural values. This made it easy for most people to relate to each other because they could rely on certain unstated agreements. Now that we have more of an interconnected world, it's important to figure out how we can live together despite different understandings and identities. Not everyone is on board with this kind of diversity, but it's hard to see how we can move forward without finding some way to connect to people who aren't like us, and so far one of the solutions put forward is to over-communicate.
All Good points here. I'm not sure people are hung up on traditional religious values when it comes to respecting other people for hard work. We all just innately identify and respect with people who see their roles in contributing to society. I want to meet "bob the ditch digger" more than "bob, the son of serial killer" Same Bob, but with the label he controls and moves forward society with.
It's such an old idea that it's lost most of it's religious connection, but it still gets amplified in people's minds through Sunday sermons. But interestingly, we're constantly inventing new reputation systems like the one here on Hacker News that can define people in other ways. You should read Accelerando if you're interested in a speculative fiction take on future ways of defining a person's worth.
Because the US has a trauma from the cold war related to anything social this will never happen in the US. There will have to be 50%+ unemployment before anything like that happens here.
1. to scare people who are still required - do this or be destitute like them
2. to stop people sitting around and concluding that the system stinks, that people shouldn't be living in luxury because they inherited wealth and that we shouldn't have to pay high rent to exist
> Most people do not have the opportunity to make themselves valuable.
I disagree. You can make yourself valuable in many ways, not tied to any job you're prospecting to win.
Making yourself a valuable person to society is where everyone unemployed should be. That's how you win the respect of people who work. That's what it's about. Now how one does that could be in many forms. And it's not necessarily something that needs to take up more than a couple hours a day even. in fact you find that people who work not only put in their 8 hours, they follow that up with volunteering, speaking at engagements, mentoring, helping others at church, all kinds of things.
There's the heart of the issue though. When you're on food stamps you're not thinking of creative ways to make yourself valuable because you don't have time or energy. You're thinking about how to feed your children and family. You're working two menial jobs that suck up any time and affect your mental health, thus further degrading any possibility of you finding some creative avenue to make yourself valuable.
I don't buy the "too few jobs argument". We got told this 30 years ago when computers started becoming mainstream and households had one person going out to work. Certain jobs get automated but more bullshit jobs get created.
The % of total population that works has continued to drop.
However, promoting BS jobs makes society worse. EX: 80+% of all time and effort spent on medical billing is simply economic dead weight.
Medical billing reduces doctor effectiveness requiring more doctors, more people training doctors, and doctors to work longer hours doing crap work (filling out forms).
Remove bullshit jobs and only a small fraction of the population actually works. Long term we can make an endless hell where paperwork is what 98% of humanity does, or we can just chose another system.
PS: In the US over 50% of all money spent on healthcare goes to Overhead that has nothing to do with patents. In many cases it’s cheaper for people with insurance to go to private doctors who don’t accept insurance. [Think about that for a bit.]
Your example of medical admin expenses is useful. The reason why many activities are no longer viable is due to the amazing increase in efficiency of rent extraction. Same for land.
You've came from a point of view that is basically orthogonal to the way almost everybody (I've talked about, obviously) talks about the issue.
I hold the ideology that society should organize itself in a way that makes it easier to both create things that will demand new jobs, and make yourself suitable for work to some of those things.
Everywhere I look, it seems society is going the other way, making both of those activities harder.
Agreed on this one. Every time a company buys up another company just to make money from patents, they are destroying others opportunities for creating wealth and all the people who would team up and work with and for them.
This only tells one half of the story. Because rent extraction is so high in modern western economies usually people have next to no savings and are always two pay checks from ruin.
If people had more financial independence they would be able to choose to enter the labour market or not. For example now due to high land costs both parents must work. Some may like this, but many do not, yet they have no choice. This puts pressure on the labour market.
The current system sees rent rise to extract all productivity gains. Until this ends we will always see unemployment no matter how productive we become even if it's very clear that most people need not work full time to meet the needs of the country as a whole.
Millenials have spent their whole lives in a system with very efficient rent extraction.
If productivity jumps land prices will follow and back again we go to the bread line.
"This article completely ignores the other paradigm, that if you don't have a job, it's up to you to make yourself valuable to employers."
This paradigm totally ignores basic economics. If there is a greater supply of people looking for work, wages will go down for all employees across the board.
Now of course, wages vary from person to person based on skills, connections, and industry. So it's possible to improve your position relative to other potential employees. But across the population, overall wages will stay flat or go down.
That's an important point. Further, isn't it odd how we (Americans? The media? People in general?) talk about "jobs" in such a weird way. As if they exist in nature and just need to be dug up and distributed. Getting to a more accurate way of talking about 'jobs' could help so much from wage inequity, to labor negotiation, to post-scarcity problem solving.
The article is certainly not being even-handed between the human perspective and the business perspective, but can you blame it? It was written by a human, not a business, after all.
It focuses on the circumstances for young Americans now and in the past, and tries to understand why -- it notes workers have no power which is why they are worse off than how they were in the past, and suggests giving them more, which by necessity takes power away from their opponents, companies. But I don't think it's necessary that they explicitly state that, it's clear enough. In fact, the article states that it is a brief designed to make that particular argument and outline that position. It's okay for an article to present a position without trying to be "fair and balanced" or consider all points of view, in fact it's generally more insidious and dishonest when they make that attempt; let the opposition make their own, strong case. If you try to make it for them you'll inevitably make a weaker one than they deserve.
There has always been an ideology, always believable but never supported, that justifies the few damaging the many or their society as a whole for their own benefit.
You enumerated one that matches today's world view. Previous eras would justify it with some eugenics hand waving and before that would be an invocation of divine will. And just as they did, todays adherents will say that past justifications were nonsense but today's are correct.
But the result is the same; general harm done for the benefit of a few and nice story of facile ideology that justifies it.
I'd be interested in seeing the change in wage distribution by profession. In the 70's it was still possible to exit high school and move into manufacturing jobs that paid 2-4x minimum wage. Those jobs are largely gone now, and the opportunities for 30-year-olds with high school only are more often (I speculate) Walmart or Starbucks or Chipotle type jobs. There is a higher percentage of college educated that may balance that out, but we need to see the distribution to understand it.
People I know that skipped college and began working and saving right after high school (all as waiters), were able to purchase a home, or a two-family, or three units for investment purposes with the rock bottom prices/foreclosures during the housing crisis.
They have been able to accumulate some wealth on service industry salaries.
They don't make much less than many of their counterparts with liberal arts degrees, who without the head start graduated into the recession with nothing.
For many the opportunity cost of college was high.
I dated a bartender for a few years and one of my best friends waits tables, so I've ended up meeting a fair number of industry people. I have no idea what you're talking about. They're almost all renters. And this is in St. Louis, where housing is cheap. (Also, I'm in my thirties. Not talking about people just starting out.)
My cousin bought his first foreclosure for 33k during the south Florida housing bust. He has two more now, all from waiting tables and being extremely thirfty.
A 140k two family amortized over 30 years at 3.5% can be free to live in for the owner occupying one unit. That can be done in Connecticut for example.
This is how some of my non colege educated millenial friends are getting by quite well.
It's no surprise that the Center For American Progress pins the blame for this on lack of labor participation among Millennials, but I don't buy it. We're talking about a sub-2% drop compared to Gen X.
Also, if people don't participate and you actually have use for labor, that would drive the cost of labor up, not down.
As it is, the vast majority of labor skirts the minimum wage because nobody wants people to do anything anymore. The utility of a fleshy meatbag is at all time lows, and will only continue to decline as we carve chunks out of the labor market through automation.
It is also unreasonable to expect an entire generation to work in the very limited purview of STEM. Enough people just do not have the mindset for it and it is already hurting the overall quality of engineering how market forces are pushing people ill suited for such professions into them for survivals sake.
The only reasonable answer is the recognition that, for most of our population, we have nothing productive for them to do, but they should not be punished for being unemployable when it is through no fault of their own. It is our job to raise and educate and mold them better to get a higher yield of analytic minds, but those who do not acquire the skills at the early ages when they form cannot be condemned to a life of poverty for something out of their adult control.
I was referring to unionized labor participation between Gen X (30 in 2004) and Millennial (30 in 2014) as defined by the article, meaning that its overall effect on Millennial income is negligible enough to approach zero.
Small absolute differences but that's still a ~22% decrease in union membership at the same age.. It could definitely affect wages, and certainly does for those in formerly union jobs.
Another issue worth noting is getting past the set requirements to be evaluated by a human. I'm 30, without a college education, and worked for Apple retail as a 'Genius' for 5 years. That meant enough at the time to get me a job at Hulu with the expectation of upward mobility. Unfortunately, Hulu's executives made poor decisions and the type of work I was doing was unbearable. After leaving, I've been unable to find a job due to my application submissions missing a key component to even be considered; a college degree. Now, no one cares I worked for Apple like they used to.
The whole college degree as a filter thing is the laziest thing a company could do to quickly get through a stack of applications. On the other hand the market is apparently in their favor enough that they can afford to use lazy filters like these that might lead to missing out on an awesome employee.
There really needs to be a way to get honorary degrees of some sort where you've put in the work. College degrees are something focused to complete, which shows initiative, but in terms of classes and skills they are so unfocused i'd rather see somebody so focused within a niche with no degree because they knew college would hurt their ambition.
Honorary degrees are usually granted to people who have achieved something particularly noteworthy in the field, or who make large donations to the school. I think what you're actually asking for is academic credit for work experience. And indeed some of the lower-tier online colleges such as University of Phoenix or Kaplan University do offer that option. So if you just want to check the box of having a Bachelor's degree then that might be an option, but be aware that many employers don't take such degrees seriously.
What's with the downvotes? Somebody actually going to refute that college degrees aren't as focused? Because that's pretty hard to argue given all of the requuired non-essential tasks and all the electives which are just whatever classes that you have to pay for, but can be complete throwaways.
Are you a developer? In my experience probably 75% of places I've interviewed at do not care or ask about my lack of degree, just if I have the skills experience and personality to do well at what they are looking for.
And all of the places that didn't call you into an interview pitched your resume as soon as it came in because you didn't have a degree listed. The parent's point still stands.
Not that I disagree with your overall point, as I don't have a degree myself and stay employed just fine. But I'd bet money I've been filtered out of some places due to the lack of a degree.
Huh? That chart in figure 3 tells it all; on the assumption that an employer in the 80s valued a college degree as much as a company in the 2010s, then as more people attain a college degree, it's value (i.e wages) won't move up. In fact you'd expect it to go down but that increase in "productivity" probably offset the downward pressure.
If you asked me, the problem facing workers in their 20s and 30s is that people are having longer careers, either by choice or by necessity. This is coupled with a job market which has never really recovered from the mid 2000s peaks. Until the Baby Boomer generation really begins to retire, the job market will remain tricky to navigate. Compound it all with an ever increasing cost of living (basically, the cost of housing) in pretty much every market and you get the bleak landscape we have now.
They state the causes of lower Millennial average pay is an incomplete recovery causing lower participation in the labor market, and lack of unions to force higher wages.
They then go on to say that the Fed should continue depressing interest rates, and that employers should start providing significant parenthood benefits.
I'm not sure with the last two -- continuing to depress capital for businesses and increasing the costs of an employee -- will encourage greater hiring or higher wages.
If it's not profitable to make loans, banks won't provide the capital many businesses need to grow their staff since profits instead have to be more conservatively retained to protect against cash flow fluctuations.
I thought that recent economic research was demonstrating that, when controlled for position and employment type, male and female salaries weren't significantly different. I'm not sure this one makes complete sense as a solution to the problem of employers not hiring people, but I'd definitely be interested to see more analysis on the hypothesis that greater gap coverage for maternity leave could help keep women on track and such, that's particularly cool.
Graduates are increasingly less prepared for the working world and burdened with large student loans. It should come as no surprise that higher levels of education have not improved Millennials' standing.
There are more distractions and diversions than ever that prevent youth from otherwise doing something constructive with their time. And universities have been dumbing down curriculum to bring in more (less qualified) students that are buoyed up by federal loans.
My empiric opinion is that it's very common among millennials to 'follow their passion'. 'Weakness' that is exploited by business people when negotiating salaries. Mix it with post-scarcity economics and globalization and the phenomenon is explained.
I agree. Older generations made emotional promises that made sense in that moment of History - 'graduate from a good college and the world is yours' - forgetting that there are ever changing dynamics that easily refute that judgement: e.g. supply and demand. You don't earn a good sallary because you know a lot, you earn a good sallary because the skills that you are able to market have a favorable demand/supply ratio that inflationate their value.
Moreover, it was promised (because when people graduated from college in 1973 it made sense) that any college degree was your white collar meal ticket. I still think people who advocate undergrad liberal arts/humanities are delusional or have a vested interest (like they themselves have non STEM degrees)
"By all rights, Millennials—people born between 1981 and 1997—should be the highest-paid generation in American history. They are, after all, the most likely to hold a college degree and are working in a period of unsurpassed productivity"
This syllogism is not only unfounded, but basic economics suggests the opposite is true.
I think what he means is: More people hava a college degree. That means more people are in competition to get "white collar" jobs. More competition on the "white collar"-job market, creates incentives to lower the cost per person (There is a bigger share of people willing to be paid less than a generation before). Therefore the average salary per person drops.
Also, "more productive" means fewer people are needed to do the same amount of work, so labor prices are being pushed down from the demand side too (as long as the total work being done doesn't keep pace, i.e. low growth).
I do _not_ have a degree in economics, and am content to admit I only understand basic principles. My implicit point is that the credential does not "make one productive"; it qualifies one to perform in jobs that _carry_ higher productivity in the market. Without a commensurate increase in those jobs to match the higher proportion of the population obtaining the credential, the supply and demand equilibrium point moves.
By all means, if there is data or more sophisticated principles at work, please correct me.
Productivity is a word that has a meaning. It is a measure of the amount of economic output that can be produced with a given amount of labor, measured in time.
So for example if a worker can produce 20 lunches instead of 15 lunches of equal quality an hour, his productivity is higher.
I think you lost the plot by assuming the original article was implying that because of college degrees productivity must be higher. That's not what it said, it was saying that more workers have college degrees and also productivity is at record high levels.
The effect of the former could be arguable, but the result of the latter should be higher wages. It's a genuine concern to try to figure out what's going on if that's not what's happening.
Okay, but I don't see the author's measure of productivity either. He seems to take your definition, as applied over the _entire economy_, and suggests that when applied to the individual wage level (presumably dividing by population) there is a conundrum. My suggestion is that there is a simple (if incomplete) explanation for this. An extreme example can illustrate my point well: if you took the entirety of Silicon Valley's tech workers and air-dropped them with no provisions into an aboriginal tribe in the Amazon rainforest (and they automatically knew the native language), who would be more productive in the local economy?
Can you please clarify for the sake of readers (and me) how it is significantly different in the real world if the market of value-commanding labor changes under people's feet instead of transplanting them to a completely foreign environment?
The authors definition and "my" definition and everyone's definition are the same because it's a commonly understood economics term.
He's not talking about air-dropping people into the Amazon he's talking about workers productivity here in this economy and their wages in this economy, thus comparing apples to apples. And he's talking about the wages of an entire generation, not applying it down to some individual level.
This shouldn't be confusing, these concepts are commonly understood by many, and are called macroeconomics. The only thing at issue here is your mischaracterization of this as somehow being opposed to "basic economics," with which further inquiry has revealed you clearly are unfamiliar.
Twice now I've asked for correction, taking you at your word that you have an economics degree and that it is a good proxy for your superior knowledge to mine, clarifying myself in the process despite other commenters demonstrating they understood my original intention, and twice now you've refused to do that, and attack me instead of shedding any light.
>I think you lost the plot by assuming the original article was implying that because of college degrees productivity must be higher. That's not what it said..."
I cited an unbroken snippet from the article which clearly evinces a causal relationship. The context is, "should be the highest-paid ... They are, after all the most likely to hold a college degree". That's just reading comprehension, not economics. If you don't want to address that, fine, but your deliberate misreading of the author and my example is not likely fooling anybody here.
"AND are working in a period of unsurpassed productivity"
Those are two things. Having a college degree is debatable but certainly is associated with higher wages. Higher productivity is definitely correlated with higher wages.
You said the opposite was the case. You're wrong, but either way the burden is on you to explain why on earth you think those two things should cause lower wages.
I already explained this: the author's disconnect, as I see it, can be explained by challenging the assumption that the college degree inherently "creates" the increased productivity, and considering whether the market for the jobs on the higher side of the mean or median in the productivity-wage correlation is not met by the college degree.
In addition, and as a related aside, doesn't automated production challenge the "definite" productivity-wage correlation even in work typically reserved for college degreed workers? (Genuinely asking here, as I haven't seen this talked about very much in the material I read, though I want to know more about it.)
You keep saying that, despite my quoting it twice. We made some progress when you highlighted that the second explanatory sentence contains two causes, and that at best I only addressed the first one - IF I did at all, which I agreed.
Now you're back to denying what can be demonstrably seen to be so by applying very straightforward reading comprehension, and ignoring my last comment altogether, where for a 3rd time I sincerely asked you to educate us on a subject I still believed you might have some authority to speak on. Frankly, it sounds like you just want to hide behind your economics degree, and I'm beginning to doubt you have the knowledge to share.
Great example of first-order thinking that animates so much seemingly progressive policy. College graduates earn more == produce hordes more college graduates!
>By all rights, Millennials—people born between 1981 and 1997—should be the highest-paid generation in American history. They are, after all, the most likely to hold a college degree and are working in a period of unsurpassed productivity.
"By rights"? This article goes off the rails right there in the first sentence. It's hard to know where to start with how wrong this is.
If the demand for your skill doesn't change and twice as many people have it, in aggregate the people with that skill are going to make less money. The idea that we're going to educate ourselves into prosperity as a society is daft - if we could all do brain surgery it would be a minimum wage job.
The over-schooling of the millennials is a massive misallocation of resources, fueled by debt, cynical college administrators, weak politicians, credulous bureaucrats, and parents doing the wrong thing for the right reasons. That's not the kind of thing that makes you wealthier. Quite the opposite.
Unemployment ,I graduated in 1981 , newly minted , state certified in welding 1750 cr. hrs. With a lot of hope went for a welding job in Toledo , the line was 100 yds. long . I got up there, the guy shook his head at the guy next to him and said this is the guy we need ; looked at me and said son look behind you all of those guys have families to feed ! Unemployment I could tell you all about unemployment !
The problem is that spending $10 on capital to make the existing work force more productive is often a better investment than spending $10 on some more labor. It's difficult for labor to argue its importance in such an environment.
That's why I'm separating capital investment out from labor.
New equipment helps the business earn more, which of course gives them the option to pay their employees more, but if there are lots of people willing to be employees, they business probably doesn't need to pay more.
There's no need to bowdlerize swear words on HN, but there is a need not to post things like "Are you fucking kidding me". Civility has to do with how you treat your fellow users. Please eliminate incivility from your comments here.
Really, Even living in a place with very low population density(Rural Mass/NH). Rents are high (and scarce), you need at least 250K to buy a small house. Houses are old, Lot's are big, big distances, very few new houses are built every year. I can't even image how blue collar families do it. If you think about it, it even makes local companies less competitive, since they need to pay more so people can barely survive.
This resonated a lot with me. https://medium.com/the-ferenstein-wire/a-26-year-old-mit-gra...