Culture The Great Resignation Is Accelerating - A lasting effect of this pandemic will be a revolution in worker expectations.

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I first noticed that something weird was happening this past spring.

In April, the number of workers who quit their job in a single month broke an all-time U.S. record. Economists called it the “Great Resignation.” But America’s quittin’ spirit was just getting started. In July, even more people left their job. In August, quitters set yet another record. That Great Resignation? It just keeps getting greater.

“Quits,” as the Bureau of Labor Statistics calls them, are rising in almost every industry. For those in leisure and hospitality, especially, the workplace must feel like one giant revolving door. Nearly 7 percent of employees in the “accommodations and food services” sector left their job in August. That means one in 14 hotel clerks, restaurant servers, and barbacks said sayonara in a single month. Thanks to several pandemic-relief checks, a rent moratorium, and student-loan forgiveness, everybody, particularly if they are young and have a low income, has more freedom to quit jobs they hate and hop to something else.

As I wrote in the spring, quitting is a concept typically associated with losers and loafers. But this level of quitting is really an expression of optimism that says, We can do better. You may have heard the story that in the golden age of American labor, 20th-century workers stayed in one job for 40 years and retired with a gold watch. But that’s a total myth. The truth is people in the 1960s and ’70s quit their jobs more often than they have in the past 20 years, and the economy was better off for it. Since the 1980s, Americans have quit less, and many have clung to crappy jobs for fear that the safety net wouldn’t support them while they looked for a new one. But Americans seem to be done with sticking it out. And they’re being rewarded for their lack of patience: Wages for low-income workers are rising at their fastest rate since the Great Recession. The Great Resignation is, literally, great.

For workers, that is. For the far smaller number of employers and bosses—who in pre-pandemic times were much more comfortable—this economy must feel like leaping from the frying pan of economic chaos, only to land in the fires of Manager Hell. Job openings are sky-high. Many positions are going unfilled for months. Meanwhile, supply chains are breaking down because of a hydra of bottlenecks. Running a company requires people and parts. With people quitting and parts missing, it must kinda suck to be a boss right now. (Oh, well!)

The great resignation is not the only Great R-word overhauling the labor force.

Leisure and hospitality workers might be saying “to hell with this” on account of Americans deciding to behave like a pack of escaped zoo animals. Call it the Great Rudeness. Airlines in the United States reported that, by June 2021, the number of unruly passengers had already broken records—doubling the previous all-time pace of orneriness. The Atlantic writer Amanda Mull has chronicled America’s epidemic of bad behavior, from Trader Joe’s tirades to a poor Cape Cod restaurant that had to close briefly in the hope that its clientele would calm down after a few days in the time-out box. Cabin-fevered and filled with rage, American customers have poured into the late-pandemic economy with abandon, like the unfurling of so many angry pinched hoses. I don’t blame thousands of servers and clerks for deciding that suffering nonstop rudeness should never be a job requirement.

Meanwhile, the basic terms of employment are undergoing a Great Reset. The pandemic thrust many families into a homebound lifestyle reminiscent of the 19th-century agrarian economy—but this time with screens galore and online delivery. More families today work at home, cook at home, care for kids at home, entertain themselves at home, and even school their kids at home. The writer Aaron M. Renn has called this the rise of the DIY family, and it represents a new vision of work-life balance that is still coming into focus. By eliminating the office as a physical presence in many (but not all!) families’ lives, the pandemic may have downgraded work as the centerpiece of their identity. In fact, the share of Americans who say they plan to work beyond the age of 62 has fallen to its lowest number since the Federal Reserve Bank of New York started asking the question, in 2014. Workism isn’t going away; for many, remote work will collapse the boundary between work and life that was once delineated by the daily commute. But this is a time of broad reconsideration.

Finally, there is a Great Reshuffling of people and businesses around the country. For decades, many measures of U.S. entrepreneurship declined. But business formation has surged since the beginning of the pandemic, and the largest category by far is e-commerce. This has coincided with an uptick in moves, especially to the suburbs of large metropolitan areas. Several major companies, such as Twitter, have announced permanent work-from-home policies, while others, such as Tesla, have moved their headquarters. Several years ago, I wrote that America had lost its “mojo,” because its citizens were less likely to switch jobs, move to another state, or create new companies than they were 30 (or 100) years ago. Well, so much for all that. America’s mojo is back, baby (yeah), and it may lead to a better-job revolution that outlasts the temporary measures, such as unemployment super-benefits and rent protection, that have nourished it.

As a general rule, crises leave an unpredictable mark on history. It didn’t seem obvious that the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 would lead to a revolution in architecture, and yet, it without a doubt contributed directly to the invention of the skyscraper in Chicago. You might be equally surprised that one of the most important scientific legacies of World War II had nothing to do with bombs, weapons, or manufacturing; the conflict also accelerated the development of penicillin and flu vaccines. If you asked me to predict the most salutary long-term effects of the pandemic last year, I might have muttered something about urban redesign and office filtration. But we may instead look back to the pandemic as a crucial inflection point in something more fundamental: Americans’ attitudes toward work. Since early last year, many workers have had to reconsider the boundaries between boss and worker, family time and work time, home and office.

One way to capture the meaning of any set of events is to consider what it would mean if they all happened in reverse. Imagine if quits fell to nearly zero. Business formation declined. In lieu of an urban exodus, everybody moved to a dense downtown. It would be, in other words, a movement of extraordinary consolidation and centralization: everybody working in urban areas for old companies that they never leave.

Look at what we have instead: a great pushing-outward. Migration to the suburbs accelerated. More people are quitting their job to start something new. Before the pandemic, the office served for many as the last physical community left, especially as church attendance and association membership declined. But now even our office relationships are being dispersed. The Great Resignation is speeding up, and it’s created a centrifugal moment in American economic history.



And it'll keep happening. Just sit down and have a chat with a sane and well-adjusted normie, none of what's going on sits right with them, and they're starting to see through the bullshit.
 
I like the article because there is a lot of truth in it which we could all agree on. I have all but given up on hiring people, I increased the wage offer and still got nothing good walking in the door and then when I even removed the wage offered and said negotiable, I still didn't get any applicants.

The irony is this forced me to do something I did want to do - look abroad to have the parts produced and shipped here to cut out the need for the position here. As it turns out, in the long run it is much cheaper to outsource and cut out an entire process here in the USA.

This is not how I wanted it to go, but it is how it is going to go. I now feel dirty about it. I took my USA made product and now have to have most of it done abroad to make it. That makes me feel uncomfortable.

Did you try checking if a worker can be taught? A lot of jobs say "require X experience and Y degrees" when you can have a trained employee do it if he is motivated to learn from you.

Of course if you are a doctor you can't self train an apprentice from the ground up, or if you need 100 pound steel beams lifted all way, 70 pounds Kelly may not cut it no matter how much she hits the gym.
 
Maybe the boomer remover worked.
I'd say the opposite. The boomers are working. This one is and surprisingly enough, the majority of the folks on my remote team are in fact boomers. Ones that you might expect to retired, including myself at 66. Why is that?

Well, it's easy work (if you have the right skill set), it pays well, and I only have to commute from my bedroom to my office in my own home. Why not keep working and earning good ching?

The one thing that the Great Resignation has done has taken a lot of younger talent out of the market, those that could ladder climb a bit to replace me. I base that statement on the fact that I'm recruited near daily with similar job offers. There simply aren't enough experienced people out there that are good at what I do. The recruiters know that and the competition between them right now let's me write my own meal ticket. Unless the economy goes totally tits up, I see myself working until 70 or beyond with no issues. I genuinely like and enjoy what I do and can't see myself just spending my twilight years going on cruise ships with a bunch of fucktards I don't know or even want to know. Spent a few years doing that already in life -- it was called the US Navy!

So, while the younger generation seems to be sorting out what they want out of a job, career, life, family, etc., most of us boomers figured that shit out years ago and are more than happy to work for a decent paycheck and no hassles.
 
And with the office as the last physical community gone, people are entirely isolated and separated with no sense of community. They will not fight to protect the rights of fellow men or neighbors because they have no connection to fellow men or neighbors. We are being set up to become tax cattle just like in Britain.
 
From a conspiracist angle it does make sense, people won’t resist “being happy and owning nothing”
Yes they will, because that's against human nature.

Having your personal leisure time abridged and your freedom of choice removed is not natural, it grates at first, but as it goes on, that grating becomes intolerable to the point that the threat of death itself (even if only a "social" death) is preferable.

The PTB probably won't spark a revolution, but, they will just be ignored because nobody will follow an "eat the bugs" law, just like they don't really follow the current mandates even though they supposedly have the backing of the almighty state top to bottom....

PL: Went to the local pizza place last night, despite stern warnings on the door that by order of the God-Governor all patrons must be masked and it will be strictly enforced? 2/3rds were not, nobody fought with the staff over this, nobody fought with each other over this, everyone just ordered their shit and had a normal night of it, no police ever showed up. The only cop I later met face-to-face and made small talk to while we both waited at the same red light together wasn't wearing a mask and seemed as chill as usual for cops around here.

Ultimately, the state doesn't have the ability to enforce this stuff if people just quietly refuse to give a fuck, they don't have the sheer number of cops, or courts or space on the docket to prosecute when the refusal rate is that high.... and that was BEFORE large chunks of the enforcement apparatus itself refused to care either.

The threats of enforcing the "own nothing, eat bugs, take jab and get excited for next jab" orders are ultimately just that when even the most dedicated Good Citizen has had enough (and, like herd immunity, the critical mass of just enough people refuse to comply that attempts to force it cause the system to break down, not grow all-powerful) and disengage from the machine that creates the ability to actually carry out those orders.

The Progressive NWO built their machine to react strongly to being attacked, but it ultimately has no setting to deal with being ignored should the public demonstrate the will, since the gears of that machine only turn by hand of the public itself.
 
Just because they are locking us out of normal life doesn't mean we have to become Netflix pleasure drones. I see this as the best chance we have had yet to start forming paralell economies.
There's a lot of resentment for big businesses who threw their 'pandemic heroes' in the trash as soon as profits fell 1%, and the government has pretty much locked out or replaced the unvaccinated in the job market through policy. This on top of the blatant social engineering coming from the almighty megacorps and a condescending corporate and media class is more than enough motivation to withdraw from the economy proper. People really like their WalMart and Mandalorian but maybe we've finally reached a turning point now that everything is on the line.
In my opinion, people should stop working where possible to learn skills that will save money and have trading value rather than simply focusing on earning money. Yeah, I know, that sounds gay and won't work in some places but think about the amount of things people now believe can only safely come from the store that were all made at home 70 years ago (...basically everything) and it does add up. At the very least people should avoid working at WalMart et al because it causes shortened hours and less profits for them and they deserve it for implementing neverending price hikes on their worthless crap.
Personally, I've been growing and making what I can outside of work and take day trips around the rural areas to stock up on anything else from farms. Overall much less expensive than going to the store and it doubles as entertainment.
Obviously things are different in places where they have curfews and COVID cops, because I guess they really could arrest you for bringing your neighbor a cup of sugar. Most articles I've seen about this topic end up having some weird fluff statement about Biden's amazing recovery plan or only take office workers into consideration, this article seemed more open-ended so I figured it was the right thread for me to chime in on.
 
I like the article because there is a lot of truth in it which we could all agree on. I have all but given up on hiring people, I increased the wage offer and still got nothing good walking in the door and then when I even removed the wage offered and said negotiable, I still didn't get any applicants.

The irony is this forced me to do something I did want to do - look abroad to have the parts produced and shipped here to cut out the need for the position here. As it turns out, in the long run it is much cheaper to outsource and cut out an entire process here in the USA.

This is not how I wanted it to go, but it is how it is going to go. I now feel dirty about it. I took my USA made product and now have to have most of it done abroad to make it. That makes me feel uncomfortable.
I thought you lived in Australia...
 
I like the article because there is a lot of truth in it which we could all agree on. I have all but given up on hiring people, I increased the wage offer and still got nothing good walking in the door and then when I even removed the wage offered and said negotiable, I still didn't get any applicants.

The irony is this forced me to do something I did want to do - look abroad to have the parts produced and shipped here to cut out the need for the position here. As it turns out, in the long run it is much cheaper to outsource and cut out an entire process here in the USA.

This is not how I wanted it to go, but it is how it is going to go. I now feel dirty about it. I took my USA made product and now have to have most of it done abroad to make it. That makes me feel uncomfortable.
Automation and outsourcing really need to be more restricted. There's probably cases where it's necessary or totally impractical not to allow it, but evey tech company doesn't need Pajeet answering for customer service.

Not that you shouldn't have done it, we should almost always take advantage of the best legal options available to us for as long as they exist.
 
I think this is stretching it as the other "crisis's" mentioned led to TECHNOLOGICAL innovations, which for the lockdowns is absolutely the advancement and acceptance of telework and refocus on stronger network infrastructure to support it by the way.

The reason people are not going back to work is because employer's are requiring masks, sanitization and a dozen other "safety measures" that has effectively destroyed water cooler culture, the social aspect that most people look forward to at work. Add on rapid inflation due to the year American's sat on their asses collecting massive unemployment checks and stimulus funds that makes the old salaries and hourly wages no longer as valuable as they once were pre-pandemic and you have a situation where it is simply not worth going back to work, at least at the moment.

Its not a change in cultural attitude, its just circumstances that makes working no longer worth it for many low wage employees. Once the government defaults on the massive debt it can't afford the other shoe will drop and people will be begging for work in order to simply survive.
Enough people are realizing that they can make a realistic career out of doing random shit for money on the internet or selling their own knick knacks that they don't have to go work for some corporate entity for 10 an hour where management is always compensated well enough and hired from far away enough that they have to relocate, which relegates it to single young people or single elderly people, and selects for vanity. So they'll always drive a car at most a few years old, sit around joking with each other most of the day or acting as yes men for people who can't understand the meaning of the word "no." And after that expect employees who at best take home $25k annually before taxes to suck up to them. Sure, there are some great ones, and having great leaders makes work enjoyable, and something even to be proud of. But self serving pricks who only care about metrics and their own asses are only tolerable when they don't decide to micro-manage operations in order to try and appear better while sacrificing the underlying quality of work to meet the new standard.


So, living with that, and then now, you don't have a job. That's okay, its a pandemic and now the government is replacing your paycheck, hell they may even pay your rent. Well this will only last two weeks, guess its alright to blow it, not like you can expect it to be reliable income. But then the weeks begin to turn into months, and all this time, you've had nothing to do. Early on, you probably sat around watching Netflix or Youtube. Maybe you took the time to explore more of your interests, even the more mundane ones that you never previously felt were worth the limited time you had after your job(s). You got closer to family, you learned new skills. Hell, some of them fairly marketable, particularly when months of people having money given to them keep happening. And you figured that since you didn't need to go to work, you might as well downsize and instead of paying off a car loan, you'll just sell the car and keep the difference to buy something a little older, but known for reliability. Now your monthly obligations are your rent(still being paid for you)/mortgage(forbearance and/or downsizing thanks to remote work if you still have a job), utilities, and food. Cutting out a $300-$500 dollar monthly obligation frees up a lot of cash. Maybe you're even saving on utilities thanks to financial help from some of the more boring stuff you watched on YouTube to fill your time, or you just decided to cut out lots of streaming services you didn't watch anyway. Sure, each one is small, but it adds up, and now you've freed up an additional 50 to 100 bucks. Now you have a perfectly reliable means of transportation, less expenses to worry about, and possible even a hustle that generates that income you'd need to cover those expenses.

Why the fuck would you go back? The glut of single people, the long amount of time people had to do nothing, and the shitty work that preceded it, means that the idea of groveling for substandard compensation is no longer on the table. At some point, "gig work" becomes "self employment," and well the massive amount of money flowing through the economy means that you can pick up work for contractors, get certified for some trade skill, or whatever else gets you $1500 a month. Even if you're still doing conventional work, you don't have to go back to some shithole where some joe schmoe who ain't even got anything meaningful in their life treats you like shit to fill the void where family and/or community would be. Had two jobs? Lost one? Maybe your budgeting got you to a place where you could afford to only have one job. Maybe the spouse lost the job, same deal. Now one of you spending time at home caring for the kid allowed you to cut out the daycare, plus who would want to send their child out in a pandemic that kills their grandparents? Why go back and miss out on all the wonderful moments you would've missed had they been at daycare? So you can brownnose some jerk who sits around, and does very little other than try to exert their will on others, all to call yourself a "hard working man/strong independent woman"? Just to meet societies demands that you conform to a mold that keeps you from being who you want to be?




Quite frankly, everyone is aware that there is more than enough shit to go around, and has figured out how to get by on far less than they thought they needed before they had the time to sit and think about their lives.
 
Today: Haha yaaass slay those corporate fatcats my fellow workers, the gibs will never ever dry up!

Tomorrow: Why are there no job openings? And why is everyone with a job from India or Nigeria?

Seriously though, how is anyone at all falling for this obviously manufactured Workers Rise Up astroturf? Especially right now, when unskilled labor is paying out the ass just for people to show up?

I can't tell if it's just lazy assholes rationalizing being a leech or if people are actually dumb enough to believe the act.
 
I can't tell if it's just lazy assholes rationalizing being a leech or if people are actually dumb enough to believe the act.
Little of column A, little of column B.

As I said earlier in this thread, circumstances AT THE MOMENT simply don't make unskilled/low wage jobs worth it. Once the shoe drops with the federal debt ever more rapidly becoming an ever larger expense that the government simply can't afford, the market will collapse and gibs will disappear into the wind. Once that happens people will be begging for work at even lower wages.
 
circumstances AT THE MOMENT simply don't make unskilled/low wage jobs worth it.
I live uncomfortably close to a leftist stronghold and there are still countless small business, unskilled labor jobs that are paying 20, 25 an hour. So I don't know how much better the circumstances can get.

If you actually live in a city and won't or can't work away from the city, sure. Every city job is horrible and there are not good jobs left. But that's kind of like saying there are no good coffee shops in the sewer. It kind of comes with the territory. Leave the sewer and you'll find your situation will improve.
 
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