Source: In These Times
By the time Covid-19 hit, Lily, 28, had been with her employer for four years and in her part-time role for the past two. Not once in those four years had her hourly wage moved above the state-required minimum in her upstate New York townā currently, $12.50. Lily was living with her parents to save money, and, because her job was in ticketing sales for professional sports, it was competitive. She hadnāt given much thought as to why she was paid so little; she was just grateful to work in the industry sheĀ loved.
But when Lily was furloughed during the pandemic, she had aĀ creeping suspicion her labor had been undervalued. With professional sporting events shut down, she took on remote work, first as aĀ customer service agent, then as aĀ New York contact tracerāāājobs that paid nearly double what she had been making. āāI was like, āāOh, Iām worth more than minimum wage,āā Lily says. (Lily is aĀ pseudonym requested in fear of retribution from future employers.) āāI didnāt even realize how bummed IĀ was. AĀ plane ticket was 25% of my net worth. IĀ was worrying about putting gas in my car to get toĀ work.ā
These remote jobs were temporary, however, and when Lily started interviewing for new positions, she was disappointed to find many companies still only offering just about minimum wage. One job offered an extra $2.50 after negotiation, but Lily turned it downāāāthe venue was also an extra hour away, and she still needed to coverĀ gas.
Lily has mostly been relying on savings to get by after spending over aĀ month hunting for full-time work, hoping to find aĀ job that allows employees to work remotely on aĀ permanent basis. Her goal is a $20 wage, but she worries whether that goal is realistic. She had a āābig, revelatory momentā when she was earning more money, she says: āāI started eating healthier. IĀ bought myself workout clothes for the first time in years. You can have all the therapy sessions in the world, but an influx of cash will really change the way you feel aboutĀ yourself.ā
A pernicious corporate narrative suggests that workers like Lilyāāāwho ask for aĀ decent wage and marginal flexibility from an employerāāāare simply lazy. Many understaffed employers have chalked up their problems to workers coasting on unemployment benefits or stimulus checks. They complain about the federal unemployment supplement and the states that have loosened the strings on unemployment payments (such as requirements to continually search for aĀ job or to accept anyĀ offer).
But the 26 mostly red states that recently terminated the $300 weekly unemployment supplement from the American Rescue Plan, purportedly to incentivize workers, did not all see an immediate increase in job searches. Many workers have valid reasons not to return to work regardless of any āāincentivesāāāāone of the top reasons being the exorbitant cost of child care. As the pandemic closed daycares and schools and left parents in the lurch, many two-parent households realized it would be cheaper for one parent to stay home rather than work. Others are wary of exposure toĀ Covid-19.
To be fair, thereās evidence that for some people, pandemic relief measures (or pandemic savings) have enabled joblessness by choice. AĀ June survey by the jobs website Indeedā.com found aĀ fifth of job seekers were not urgently searching for work because of their āāfinancial cushion.ā AĀ Morning Consult poll that same month found 13% of people receiving unemployment checks had turned down job offers because of that short-termĀ stability.
To deem this unemployed behavior āālazy,ā however, one must be predisposed to thinking work is some sort of moral imperative. Rarely have workers had the freedom to be selective about where, when and how much they workāāāto decide their own fates. In light of this profound shift, perhaps itās understandable that workers are unwilling toĀ settle.
There are more existential questions, too. Workers are re-evaluating what role work should have in their lives, whether itās important to their sense of self, what they would do with their time otherwise. Some may decide the jobs they left are what the late anthropologist David Graeber termed āābullshit jobs,ā work āāthat is so completely pointless, unnecessary, or pernicious that even the employee cannot justify its existence.ā After such aĀ revelation, how could employers expect workers to return to business asĀ usual?
In her seminal 2011 book The Problem With Work, Kathi Weeks argues that wage labor (one of the least-questioned arrangements in U.S. culture) is actually aĀ social convention, not an economic necessity. As workers have become more productive and automation has picked up more slack, not much serious consideration has been given in the United States to the idea of reducing work hours. Instead, people work more and more. According to Weeks, having aĀ job confers moral goodness and other virtues upon those who perform it, which is why people rarely question whether work is, in itself, good. If they did, they might see how work limits their pleasure, creativity andĀ self-determination.
The post-work future Weeks imagines, citing the scholarship of Paul Lafargue, would allow us to expand āāour needs and desires beyond their usual objectsāāāāto understand how we want to spend our finite time in the world, then go do it. The refusal to work is an important step toward getting there, according to Weeks. When workers reduce the hours they spend working (or stop working altogether), they are rejecting the idea of work as our āāhighest calling and moral duty ⦠as the necessary center of social life.ā It also allows workers to organize toward their revolutionary visions while improving their presentĀ circumstances.
The current historical moment isnāt without its precedents. AĀ kind of mass work refusal took place in the 1970s, when one in six union members went on strike, demanding more control over their workplaces and more dignity. But the anti-work flashpoint was quickly āāco-opted by managerial initiatives as an excuse for work intensification,ā Weeks tells In These Times. Employers attempted to make work āāmore participatory, more multi-skilled, more team-based so that you could work even longer andĀ harder.ā
The pandemic-era shift seems more promising, Weeks says: Todayās workers are fed up with intensification. They are not merely thinking about what other kind of job they might have, but about whether they want to work at all (and how little work they can get awayĀ with).
āSo many of the criticisms we are hearing about are focused on both the quality of work, the low pay and brutally intensive pace of so many jobs, and the question of quantityāāāfor example, the long hours needed to make enough in tips in restaurant and service work and the added time of commuting to most jobs,ā Weeks says. āāThe overwhelming response to the prospect of returning to work as usual is that people want more control over the working day and more time off work to do with as theyĀ will.ā
Without work taking up 40 or more hours each week, those who lost their jobs to the pandemic have discovered other ways to fill their time. Baking bread became such aĀ popular quarantine hobby that it verged on clichĆ©, but many who tried it found it comforting and deeply satisfying. One might say the bakers were not alienated from their labor for onceāāāthey got to eat the bread at the end. Others found themselves with more energy to dedicate to activities like yoga, gardening and rollerĀ skating.
āI ⦠got really into cooking at home, because IĀ really do love to cook,ā Caleb Orth, aĀ 35-year-old in Chicago, told the New York Timesā podcast The Daily in August. āāIt was aĀ hobby of mine before IĀ lost my job,ā he said. But at the restaurant where heād worked 80Ā hours aĀ week, heād tired of making āāsomebody elseās food, the same thing over and over and over. So during Covid, Iād be making meals at home, and IĀ got really intoĀ it.ā
Many like Orth expressed amazement at how good it felt to be doing things that were good for their well-being. Work suddenly seemed like it might just be one element of life, not the center ofĀ it.
When the bar where Jessica McClanahan worked shut down in March 2020, she set about creating aĀ small art studio in her home in Kansas City, Mo. She filled aĀ corner of her living room with drawing and book-binding supplies, acquired an antique desk from aĀ friend and assembled aĀ small altar for cherished objects. McClanahanās boyfriend, who had worked with her at the bar, got laid off around the same time; he fixed himself an art studio upstairs. While the two collected unemploymentāāāabout $325 weekly, each, plus a $600 weekly federal supplementāāāthey fell into aĀ routine. They would wake up each morning, have breakfast, then make art in their respectiveĀ spaces.
āSometimes IĀ would just mess around and not really do anything,ā says McClanahan, 37. āāBut IĀ got to be like, āāOh, do IĀ want to draw aĀ picture? Yes. Iām gonna do that. Do IĀ want to paint? Make aĀ book? Take photographs? IĀ also taught myself how to embroider. It was just aĀ free-for-all for creativity, which IĀ havenāt had in aĀ long time.ā She made aĀ leather-bound sketchbook for her boyfriend for Christmas, aĀ guestbook for his parentsā 50th wedding anniversary and dozens of postcards to send to friends across theĀ country.
McClanahan, who has aĀ masterās in library science and went to art school, had long intended to spend more time on creative pursuits. When she started her bartending career in 2005, she saw the service industry as aĀ reliable way to make rent and pay off student loans. While her friends were making minimum wage at art galleries, she made hundreds in tips in aĀ single night. But it got harder to make time for art, especially when she became aĀ bar manager. McClanahan says she felt glued to her phone even when she wasnāt on the clock, troubleshooting crises at work, fielding texts from people who called in sick and answering emails fromĀ vendors.
After trying out aĀ few other jobs during the pandemic, McClanahan decided to go back to bartending when restaurants reopenedāāābut quickly realized she couldnāt return to the lifestyle she had as aĀ manager. āāI was really stressed all the time, and IĀ kept saying to myself over and over, āāI donāt know why IĀ am spending so much time worrying about something that isnāt even mine,āā McClanahan says. The downtime while she was unemployed gave her āāfreedom and peace ofĀ mind.ā
āThat really got the ball rolling for me in terms of thinking about what Iām willing to tolerate at my job going forward,ā McClanahanĀ adds.
Some employers are starting to see obvious solutions to their so-called labor shortage: better conditions, signing bonuses, higher wages, stronger benefits. The federal minimum wage is still not $15, but aĀ growing number of companies have begun offering it (including giant corporations like Target, Best Buy, CVS Health and Under Armour). In aĀ press release, Under Armour executive Stephanie Pugliese called the move a āāstrategic decision ⦠to be aĀ competitive employer.ā
With the federal unemployment extension set to expire September 6, as this issue went to press, the 13% of workers who have refused jobs because of that stable income may no longer be able to simply opt out. Regardless, the new skepticism of work as aĀ de facto good will likely stay. Our time, after all, is ourĀ lives.
Neither Lily nor McClanahan is presently receiving unemployment, and they both now work in the service industry. Lily believes this job is aĀ temporary arrangement, while McClanahan plans to continue as aĀ bartender.
āAfter having five different jobs during the pandemic, Iāve come back around to the idea that this is the kind of work IĀ want to be doing if IĀ have to work at all,ā McClanahan says. āāBut my attitude toward devoting all of my lifeblood to work has definitelyĀ changed.ā
MARIE SOLIS has written for the New York Times, The New Republic and The Nation.
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