The 'Take This Job and Shove It' Recession
So hey there Corporate America, the Fed and your neofeudal cronies: take this job and shove it.
This time it really is different, but not in the way the Wall Street shucksters are claiming.
Conventional economists, politicos and pundits are completely clueless about the unraveling
that's gathering momentum beneath the superficial surface of "reflation" because they don't
yet grasp we're entering an unprecedented new type of recession: a 'Take This Job and Shove It'
recession which is unlike any previous downturn.
Long-time readers know I've addressed the emergent class structure and systemic decay of
the socio-economic order for many years. Just as a quick refresher, here are a few
of the dozens of essays I've written on these topics:
America's Nine Classes: The New Class Hierarchy 4/29/14
The Managerial/ Professional Class Is Burning Out 3/28/16
America's Metastasizing Class Wars 8/27/20
This Is How It Ends: All That Is Solid Melts Into Air 9/10/20
This Is Why Inflation Will Rip Everyone's Face Off 9/17/20
What the chattering class of apologists, toadies, lackeys, factotums and apparatchiks missed
about the pandemic lockdown was the tidal change in perceptions of work and life enabled by
a withdrawal from the deranging frenzy of work: once people had time to reflect on their lives,
mortality, goals, identity and the soaring costs and dwindling rewards of their efforts
to "get ahead" via slaving away in a dead-end job / career, the tune that began to haunt their
subconscious ruminations was Johnny Paycheck's timeless classic,
Take This Job And Shove It (2:31).
Whether anyone in the halls of power cares to notice or not, a mass withdrawal from the
workforce is underway. What's remarkable about this swelling exodus is that it isn't
confined to one class of workers: low-wage workers are jumping ship en masse, but so are
mid-level white-collar workers and well-paid but overworked technocrats in the top 10%.
As the professional apologists frantically spew rah-rah PR about the "recovery" (you mean
we're all addicts and are now "recovering"?), the workforce is finally awakening to the emptiness
of the PR: the rewards of the economy have flowed to two classes: the Financial Aristocracy
(a.k.a. the New Nobility in our neofeudal economy), the top 0.1% who now own more wealth
than the bottom 80% of American households, and speculators, from the scammers on
Wall Street to the daytraders gambling their stimmy payments.
The reality that wages have stagnated for the past 50 years is finally sinking in, and
people are responding accordingly. By any realistic measure, most workers have lost
ground when the purchasing power of their wages in the 1980s is compared to what their earnings
buy now in healthcare, childcare, rent, higher education, property taxes, etc.
The erosion of labor's value has been catastrophic for the bottom 60%. As I recently noted,
I was making $12 an hour in 1985, an OK wage but nothing special, and after 36 years of inflation,
many workers are still earning $12 an hour--or less. Measured in purchasing power, wages have
declined since the early 1970s.
Take a glance at the chart below of wage's share of the economy and observe it's been in a downtrend
since the early 1970s.
Meanwhile, the cost of big-ticket expenses such as healthcare, childcare, rent/housing and higher
education have tripled. Even high-earners such as physicians have lost ground, as their
salaries in 1985 bought far more goods and services than their salaries do today.
Young high-earners have been flocking to the FIRE movement for years: financial independence,
retire early is the upper-middle class way of saying Take This Job And Shove It,
as the goal is to save enough earnings by scrimping and saving to exit the workforce for good
while still in your early 30s.
Lower-wage workers are finding other workarounds. Much to the consternation of
employers, many are milking the extended unemployment payments. But beneath the radar, others
have carved out informal-economy niches or found ways to slash their living costs--for example,
constructing a micro-home on a cheap plot of rural land and saying good-bye to McMansion dreams and
$2,000 a month rents for tiny apartments in decaying urban cores.
Even highly paid people are realizing that the meager rewards of slaving away to make Corporate
America another couple trillion in profits isn't worth their life. As desperate employers
offer overworked technocrats bonuses to keep them slaving away, the workers are ploughing the bonuses
into bets they hope will pay off and fund their escape from neofeudal serfdom sooner than planned.
While the apologists, toadies, lackeys, factotums and apparatchiks serve their neofeudal lords
for pennies tossed in the sawdust, the most productive workers are melting away. Nobody
dares mention the number of physicians and nurses who are leaving America's sickcare system;
once again, the pandemic served as a catalyst for action to be taken on
long-simmering frustrations.
YOLO (you only live once) isn't just about making risky bets in bubblicious markets--it's about
deciding to do something else with you life other than make Corporate America another couple
trillion in profits or keep your small business afloat as taxes, fees, penalties, surcharges,
rent and every other expense soars.
The pandemic posed a question few had time to ponder: what's the point?
What no financial analyst dares confess is the corporate profits they cheer every quarter have
come at a cost that many Americans will soon be unable to bear. Millions of highly experienced,
essential employees are either planning
to quit, retire, cut their hours or switch to lower stress jobs.
It isn't easy to escape the clutches of the Corporate-State neofeudal system; the costs (tangible
and intangible) of self-employment have been rising steadily for decades:
The Troubling Decline of Financial Independence in America (August 28, 2015)
The Fading American Dream of Working for Yourself (October 2015)
Social Mobility between classes has decayed, and people are finally beginning to grasp this.
After you do
all the right things--borrow a fortune to get a college degree, build your resume
with low-paying jobs working ridiculous hours, etc., you eventually realize you're
a precariat just like everyone else. Maybe a better paid precariat, or maybe a poorly paid
precariat, but this is all the Financial Mobility you're ever going to get.
The Top 0.1% winners in this system are protected by the Federal Reserve, while the losers
are stripmined by crushing taxes. Even if they don't
understand the exact mechanisms of the Federal Reserve's bag of tricks, they now understand
the rich get richer and the state protects them from the precariats and serfs doing all the work.
The Federal Reserve can conjure up trillions of dollars out of thin air to further enrich the
nation's parasitic elite, but they can't print experienced, motivated workers or people with
entrepreneurial skills.
The danger to the state is not who rebels but who opts out.
Outright rebellion suits the state, as it can turn its monopoly on force on the
citizenry. But when those keeping everything glued together have had enough and find a way to quit,
the entire system starts unraveling in ways the state is powerless to stop.
If the Technocrat Caste opts out, the private sector loses its tax donkeys and managerial expertise.
If what remains of the middle class opts out, what's left of America's civic glue disappears.
If the working poor opt out, the scut work required to provide the upper classes with
their comforts will not get done. (Hey, Mr. State Bureaucrat and Mr. Financier, here's a saw and a knife.
Butcher your own meat.)
There's only so much inequality and unfairness a workforce can bear, and America is well
past that point.
To those who claim "people can't afford to quit," just watch. Those who've had enough
are finding ways to opt out. There's plenty of woodwork to disappear into.
So hey there Corporate America, the Fed and your neofeudal cronies: take this job and shove it.
This time it really is different, but not in the way the Wall Street shucksters are claiming.
So take this job and shove it, I ain't working here no more. I'm stepping off the rat-race
merry-go-round, thank you very much. You can find some other sucker to do your dirty work and BS work,
all for the greater glory and wealth of your New Nobility shareholders. I'm outta here.
So I won't get rich, that dream died a long time ago. What I'm interested in now is getting my
life back and getting the heck out of Dodge as things unravel.
Of related interest:
My book Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy a Bewildering Economy
is a primer for those seeking sustainable self-employment in the nooks and crannies of the economy.
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