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Topic: The Labor Market Is Broken - page 2. (Read 201 times)

legendary
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Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
December 05, 2022, 08:32:23 AM
#11
It is possible that the entirety of wage increases over the past 50 years have gone mainly to CEOs and executives. Wealth growth flatlining for other income brackets, could have reached a breaking point where having a job and working full time no longer allows many to pay their bills. In which case, the point and motive for working declines.
Isn't that just capitalism? Money gets more and more concentrated, and it's up to government to prevent that. The US isn't very good at preventing it, and the EU mainly acts in the interests of large corporations too, so the current result isn't really a surprise.

A market crash seems unacceptable to central banks nowadays, so the classic "reset" won't happen. What's left? War?
hero member
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December 05, 2022, 08:21:49 AM
#10
Of course there are other explanations.

It is possible that the entirety of wage increases over the past 50 years have gone mainly to CEOs and executives. Wealth growth flatlining for other income brackets, could have reached a breaking point where having a job and working full time no longer allows many to pay their bills. In which case, the point and motive for working declines.
"Today to reach the level of wealth is not the only way to work." How many people work in this world, but on average they are workers of their employers, not to mention that after working part time they are not paid by their employers for certain reasons, so workers cannot claim their salary. Part time work is no longer optimal in this technological era, as in developed countries they have placed jobs using time and are paid according to the work and time they spend.

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It is known that many homeless living on the streets have full time jobs which do not allow them to afford the cost of rent. Not having to pay monthly rental fees greatly reduces the cost of living to only food and basic necessities. Basic living costs being more affordable, and it is possible that some beggars in the streets even manage to earn greater income than they would with a full time job.
In my area there are still quite a lot of people who have physical disabilities, such as the homeless whose income is far greater than casual daily labourers, the work they do is not risky and quite easy to do, they just walk or stay somewhere while begging.
So damaged is human life now, working part time but there is no guarantee of the salary or wages they get. The cost of living is high, basic needs are out of control and recession is happening everywhere, it's getting harder for middle and lower class people to get jobs, forced to work because of demands but their income is meager.

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If indeed labor markets are broken. What does the long term outlook resemble. What can average and ordinary people do to mitigate the dangers.
"Skill and dare to get out of the comfort zone", the phrase that best describes the current conditions. The next question is whether humans have the skills and dare to leave their comfort zone.

Technology has developed, there are many promising prospects that can be utilized in this space, so that humans do not need to work as slaves who are not paid according to standards, or the simplest thing is that people must learn to invest, especially in bitcoin which has become king in crypto, regardless of the impact , fluctuations, and conditions that will be caused by the investments made by people. That's why I say people have to dare to get out of their comfort zone.
hero member
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December 05, 2022, 06:21:05 AM
#9
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If indeed labor markets are broken. What does the long term outlook resemble. What can average and ordinary people do to mitigate the dangers.

If the US labor market is broken beyond repair, the only way for the ordinary people to survive would be immigration, which is also expensive.
The rental costs being too high and the fact that many workers can't afford house/apartment in the USA is more like a housing/real estate problem, rather than a labor problem.
I'm not an expert, but AFAIK, the US labor market was flooded with Latin American people, which kinda deviates the supply of workforce.
Just like the rednecks in South Park keep saying "They took our jobs"... Perhaps reducing the immigration coming from Latin America might help for solving the problem. Maybe Trump was right about closing the border(I'm not a fan of Trump).
hero member
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Vave.com - Crypto Casino
December 05, 2022, 05:43:16 AM
#8

and it is possible that some beggars in the streets even manage to earn greater income than they would with a full time job.

If indeed labor markets are broken. What does the long term outlook resemble. What can average and ordinary people do to mitigate the dangers.

I agree with you that the work system has broken down. That is the government salary paid jobs, they can not afford anything near better living because of inflation as the main cause and that is why every home to survive have other things to do to raise money by the side. In Africa and especially in Nigeria unlike before where the culture is that the man is the bread winner of the family and goes out to struggle to feed the home, this is no longer happening like that as the reality of the economic hardship is even biting the women folks when the husband can't sustain the family from what he is able to bring, the womei now works and in some families are now the bread winners.

People have resorted into different means of survival and at the end of the day, what comes in from those means far outweighs government salaries. Begging and corporate begging is what some people have found to do. When you go to eateries, you see the service attendants there from the gates, doors and those in service expecting you to drop some change for them and this happens across the world not only in Africa, that is corporate begging.
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
December 05, 2022, 04:51:42 AM
#7
its not that there are alot of non-employed adults.

its that these non employed adults are just not in FULL TIME employment. and instead doing part time/freelancer/self employed/contractor/gig-economy

if you want to blame gen-z then you are kissing ass of large corporations that refuse to give people an actual fulltime employment contract and instead treat them as non employees by saying they are contractors/freelancers and paying them equivalent to under minimum wage

out of 335mill population there is: 215m+ working age people*

of which for the last 20 years the total working age population  
have had a steady line (bar covid) of a 66-62% participation total
where the biggest offset is in the 15-19 bracket  of 47%-37%**

thus yes there massive dip of 15-19 participating in work which jarred the overall numbers for the total the most.

but. its things like education and gig economy.. where both are causations of corporations needs.

corporations want either graduates or contractors. not the normal unqualified "employees"


*https://www.statista.com/statistics/241488/population-of-the-us-by-sex-and-age/
age        male    female      working age
00-04    09.62   09.2      
05-09    10.38   09.92      
10-14    10.99   10.46      
15-19    11.02   10.54      21.56
20-24    10.97   10.55      21.52
25-29    11.38   11.01      22.39
30-34    11.67   11.43      23.1
35-39    11.26   11.04      22.3
40-44    10.59   10.51      21.1
45-49    09.88   09.91      19.79
50-54    10.44   10.47      20.91
55-59    10.63   10.94      21.57
60-64    10.33   10.90      21.23
65-69    08.75   09.65   215.47 total
70-74    07.12   08.15      
75-79    04.47   05.43      
80-84    02.7     03.63      
85+       02.18   03.80


**https://www.bls.gov/charts/employment-situation/civilian-labor-force-participation-rate.htm
which changed
from ~47%-43 2002-2004 then
from ~43%-34 2006-2010 then
from ~34%-37 2010-2022 then
hero member
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Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
December 05, 2022, 03:14:17 AM
#6
It is possible that the entirety of wage increases over the past 50 years have gone mainly to CEOs and executives. Wealth growth flatlining for other income brackets, could have reached a breaking point where having a job and working full time no longer allows many to pay their bills. In which case, the point and motive for working declines.
This is highly possible judging by what is happening in our society where the rich are getting richer, and the poor are getting poorer. The money is not circulating as it should and labourers are working more but not much to show for it as an accomplishment.

It is known that many homeless living on the streets have full time jobs which do not allow them to afford the cost of rent. Not having to pay monthly rental fees greatly reduces the cost of living to only food and basic necessities. Basic living costs being more affordable, and it is possible that some beggars in the streets even manage to earn greater income than they would with a full time job.
This is part of the issues of the disparities in our society, yet this homeless living could work if you don't have wards. It would be inhumane to be capable of an apartment no matter how small it is but subject your wards to such conditions for the sake of cutting costs. Having said that, some of these people living this life are lazy, we should not pity their situation much. Yet, the rich should also learn how to give out either through gifts or increased wages or salaries for such situations to reduce.
sr. member
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Merit: 332
December 05, 2022, 02:42:33 AM
#5
If that is the current outlook of the labor force in the U.S. then I am no longer surprised why outsourcing companies are thriving today. The future is remote as some would say. A local employee would feel a $30 per hour is the fair amount for a particular task but employers who hires someone outside of the country or online may be able to pay for $10 per hour for the same job.

That "unfairness" they feel may turn out for the worse if more and more businesses choose to outsource.


This is true. A job that pays $10 an hour is a big deal for a lot of people in developing companies and what is not known is that there are real brilliant talent in these developing countries. A lot of them just need an opportunity. So what these outsourcing companies do is go for the ones with the most of experience and they get the job perfectly well with way lower cost. More and more business will start to outsource once they see the advantages of doing so.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
Blackjack.fun
December 05, 2022, 02:38:49 AM
#4
Of course there are other explanations.

That people got free money and got used to it, that a lot of them are still thinking they might get another free check and are living and debt or from savings, still dealing with that miraculously something will happen and they will never need to go to work again? The whole r/antiwork sub is full of those daydreamers, just wait another year went the savings are gone and the credit is maxed, and you're going to see a hiring spree like never before.
Before even thinking it twice, this is not something global and one should look over the ocean



Month after month of record-breaking employment levels.
legendary
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Catalog Websites
December 05, 2022, 01:36:33 AM
#3
I recently read a great book on negotiation and deal theory by Jim Camp, First Say No.  

In this book, the author criticizes the Win-Win negotiation strategy.  He writes that such a negotiation strategy does not lead to profitable deals, as it allows a participant with a stronger negotiating position to manipulate his opponent.  As a result, both parties to the transaction and the entire social society as a whole suffer.  

In the field of employment in the labor market, the Win-Win negotiation strategy has a positive effect only if there is a developed system of trade unions.  

Trade unions and employment laws allow for deals that are beneficial to society as a whole and to both sides of the negotiation
sr. member
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Merit: 413
December 05, 2022, 01:34:03 AM
#2
If that is the current outlook of the labor force in the U.S. then I am no longer surprised why outsourcing companies are thriving today. The future is remote as some would say. A local employee would feel a $30 per hour is the fair amount for a particular task but employers who hires someone outside of the country or online may be able to pay for $10 per hour for the same job.

That "unfairness" they feel may turn out for the worse if more and more businesses choose to outsource.
legendary
Activity: 2562
Merit: 1441
December 05, 2022, 01:10:16 AM
#1
Quote
Employment is an ultimatum game, where playing along might get workers less than employers, but refusing to play gets everyone zero.

Inflation is up. The stock market is down. Unemployment is just 3.5 percent. Yet labor force participation remains stubbornly low, with only 62.3 percent of the civilian population working or actively looking for work—well below pre-pandemic levels. And even before the pandemic, that figure had been steadily declining for years.

There are plenty of uncharitable theories about why the American work force is shrinking as a percentage of the population, resulting in 10 million unfilled jobs and a lot of well-wrung hands. The most common is simply that Kids These Days don't want to work and it'll be Gen Z's fault when the U.S. is no longer a global economic superpower.

A substantial number of younger people are not, in fact, keen to get hitched with an employer. In 2022, "for every [25- to 54-year-old] guy who is out of work and looking for a job," American Enterprise Institute economist Nicholas Eberstadt told the Fifth Column podcast, "there are four guys who are neither working nor looking for work."

But the Kids These Days hypothesis is complicated by the fact that while the labor force participation rate includes people 16 and older, the largest component of the most recent reduction appears to be older people who took retirement early and/or previous retirees who have not rejoined the work force at the rates they once did. This trend may well reverse itself if the stock market continues to decline and retirement accounts evaporate, but for now it looks like baby boomers turning on, tuning in, and dropping out—however belatedly—are at least as much of a labor force problem as wayward youths.

What these two groups have in common can be found in an old chestnut of game theory: the ultimatum game. Even if you don't know the 1982 paper that popularized the experiment, you've certainly encountered the phenomenon. Imagine two people, one of whom is given $10 and told to propose a way to split the money with another person—a stranger, let's say. The catch is that if the stranger doesn't agree to the deal, they both get nothing.

Economists and psychologists alike love this experiment because it captures an interesting facet of human behavior that appears irrational at first glance. Surely the second man should accept any deal offered by the first. So what if he's offered just a penny? Free money is free money! Who cares if the other guy gets to keep $9.99? Instead, across all cultures and contexts, people reject offers they perceive to be unfair: The details vary, but human beings turn down money with astonishing consistency if they think they're being done dirty.

This allegory* to economic unfairness may well be what unites the "quiet quitters" of Gen Z and the early boomer retirees: They increasingly perceive the terms of employment to be so off-kilter that they would rather not work at all, even if that decision screws them over in the end.

"The process of contracting a worker is often close to ultimatum bargaining," explained Elwyn Davies (then with the University of Oxford) and Stanford University's Marcel Fafchamps in a 2016 paper exploring the effects of competition on behavior within the ultimatum game. "The employer specifies a job description and proposes a wage and the worker accepts or rejects."

So if employment is an ultimatum game—where playing along might get workers less than employers, but refusing to play gets everyone zero—what is causing the perception that the terms of employment are no longer worth accepting, even when both parties would benefit?

Positive views of capitalism more generally have slipped since 2019, with 39 percent expressing negative views in an August Gallup poll. Another Gallup poll found an uptick of 3 percentage points in people who say they are "completely dissatisfied" with their jobs, while the number of people who were "completely satisfied" fell 8 points.

The perception that conventional jobs are essentially offering workers a pittance while greedily holding back the bulk of the wealth is common in places like the r/antiwork subreddit, which has 2.3 million members. In fact, there's at least one discussion of the ultimatum game itself on that subreddit, which pulls some figures on companies' revenue vs. worker compensation and concludes: "If working for Apple was the ultimatum game, the proposer just got $100. They're offering you 23 [cents], and they keep $99.77. Deal or no deal?" The relative sizes of these numbers might also explain why simply raising wages hasn't brought people into the workforce, especially when paired with increased awareness of and dissatisfaction with the gap between CEO pay and worker pay in large corporations.

Early retirement also makes some sense on this accounting. Older people may have expectations about what their compensation or responsibilities should be, with reference to either the generation who retired before them or to their younger colleagues. When they are not offered what they perceive to be their due, they would rather zero out their income than continue to work.

Paul J. Zak, a neuroeconomist who has done experimental work on the role of empathy and perspective-taking in the ultimatum game, cautions against an approach that is "too econo-centric." Large and unpredictable government subsidies to individuals and corporations erode the broader sense that hard work will be rewarded and is worth pursuing, even if the wages offered previously seemed fair. There is almost certainly more at play than wage and price levels alone.

The pandemic threw a wrench into this and every sociological and economic question and will continue to annoy academics looking for patterns for at least another century. Many jobs did get appreciably worse during the height of COVID, when death suddenly became a possible side effect of working in the grocery store, a factor that shouldn't be underestimated. But decreases in labor force participation predate the pandemic.

In many ways, work is better than it has ever been. It is less dangerous, requires fewer hours, is less physically taxing, and affords the purchase of better stuff than for most of human history. But the supply chain interruptions of recent years paired with rapid changes in the terms of employment during the pandemic may well have disrupted the sense that the deal workers were being offered was fair.

The temptation of the ultimatum game is to dismiss the results as irrational and therefore bad. It's easy to dismiss workers as lazy or employers as short-sightedly selfish. But the consistency with which individuals in nearly all situations perform in the ultimatum game actually highlights something good about people: They care about what is fair and they will devote significant effort to making deals where everyone wins. The authors of that 2016 paper found, for instance, that in an environment with multiple employers and multiple employees, the offers tended to start higher and employees tended to do better overall. Competition causes employers to think harder about what workers want and to offer it as seamlessly as possible.

Right now there's something broken in our economy that is preventing employers and employees from cooperating with each other. The result is that too few deals are being struck and everyone is suffering. The challenge ahead is how to rebuild a sense that the game is fair and everyone is playing in good faith.

https://reason.com/2022/12/01/the-labor-market-is-broken/


....


Here we have a deep analysis with the potential to explain trends being current labor markets being broken:

Quote
What these two groups have in common can be found in an old chestnut of game theory: the ultimatum game. Even if you don't know the 1982 paper that popularized the experiment, you've certainly encountered the phenomenon. Imagine two people, one of whom is given $10 and told to propose a way to split the money with another person—a stranger, let's say. The catch is that if the stranger doesn't agree to the deal, they both get nothing.

Economists and psychologists alike love this experiment because it captures an interesting facet of human behavior that appears irrational at first glance. Surely the second man should accept any deal offered by the first. So what if he's offered just a penny? Free money is free money! Who cares if the other guy gets to keep $9.99? Instead, across all cultures and contexts, people reject offers they perceive to be unfair: The details vary, but human beings turn down money with astonishing consistency if they think they're being done dirty.

This allegory* to economic unfairness may well be what unites the "quiet quitters" of Gen Z and the early boomer retirees: They increasingly perceive the terms of employment to be so off-kilter that they would rather not work at all, even if that decision screws them over in the end.

Of course there are other explanations.

It is possible that the entirety of wage increases over the past 50 years have gone mainly to CEOs and executives. Wealth growth flatlining for other income brackets, could have reached a breaking point where having a job and working full time no longer allows many to pay their bills. In which case, the point and motive for working declines.

It is known that many homeless living on the streets have full time jobs which do not allow them to afford the cost of rent. Not having to pay monthly rental fees greatly reduces the cost of living to only food and basic necessities. Basic living costs being more affordable, and it is possible that some beggars in the streets even manage to earn greater income than they would with a full time job.

If indeed labor markets are broken. What does the long term outlook resemble. What can average and ordinary people do to mitigate the dangers.
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