Here's Why America's Labor-Shortage Will Drive Inflation Higher
Great swaths of the American
workforce are already on strike or slipping away from the dead-end treadmill.
America's labor shortage is complex and doesn't lend itself to the simplistic
expectations favored by media talking heads. The Wall Street cheerleaders
extol the virtues of "getting America back to work" which is Wall-Street-speak for
getting back to exploiting workers to maximize corporate profits.
Long-term demographics have combined with cultural changes and Covid-Lockdown epiphanies
to completely re-order America's labor force beneath the superficial surface of "re-opening."
No one post can do justice to such a complex topic, so I'll touch on a few of the many
inter-connected (and often mutually reinforcing) dynamics.
1. Boomers are leaving the workforce in droves. The statistics are incomplete but
we know that a larger percentage of Boomers have been working longer than
previous generations. A Pew Research 2018 study documents this:
Baby Boomers are staying in the labor force at rates not seen in generations for people their age.
Now Boomers are leaving the workforce. Some are retiring, i.e. qualifying for pensions
and/or Social Security benefits, while many others who have been drawing retirement benefits
while they continued working are quitting the workforce. A November 2020 report discusses
this reversal:
The pace of Boomer retirements has accelerated in the past year: (pewresearch.org)
This is 3.2 million more Boomers than the 25.4 million who
were retired in the same quarter of 2019.
According to the Social Security Administration, around 3.2 million workers signed on for
their Social Security retirement benefits in 2019,
and around 2.7 million more people qualified for disability benefits or as dependents of
retirees or disabled workers.
Fast Facts & Figures About Social Security, 2020
That may not seem like a lot of people out of a workforce of around 160 million. But recall
that millions of Boomers have been working into their 60s and 70s. The number of those
workers who have retired for good is unknown, but anecdotally, it is consequential.
(Social Security reports 178 million people
had some income that qualified for Social Security, but around 20 million of these incomes
are extremely low: eBay sellers, occasional gig workers, etc. earning a few hundred or few
thousand dollars a year. The primary workforce is around 160 million people.)
Why have they left? They're fed up with their line of work, they don't like the way
their industry has transmogrified, they're burned out from being "sandwiched" between caring for
very elderly parents (80 and older) and supporting their children or grandchildren, and they're
tired of working after 50+ years. (I myself have logged 51 years of employment.)
2. There aren't enough skilled replacements for experienced hands-on workers who have left
the workforce. Here's what the superficial analyses miss: what matters isn't the total number
of people seeking jobs or the job openings--what matters is how many people are able to
replace skilled workers who have left the workforce and are willing to work for the wages
being offered.
In other words, there may be 10 million people available for work but if few have the requisite
skills and experience, then 1.5 million openings for welders, pipefitters, crane operators, etc.
will go begging, and a bidding war will jack up wages for the scarce qualified workers.
Culturally, the push to make every young worker a college graduate has left the nation
shorthanded in skilled hands-on tradecraft workers of the sort that actually keep the nation
running. If everyone wants to be a celebrity chef, social media influencer, software guru,
YouTube star, environmental studies major, RobinHood millionaire speculator, etc., then it's no
surprise that there are insufficient experienced replacement workers for the nation's
aging workforce of skilled trade workers and technicians that keep the power lines, refineries,
chemical plants, water treatment facilities, electrical grid, plumbing, etc., functioning--
to name just a few of the hundreds of skilled crafts that are losing much of their aging workforce
to retirement.
There are no 100-day wonders in these fields. It takes years of training and experience to master
these trades.
3. The pandemic lockdown provided tens of millions of workers with an epiphany about their
lives, careers, values and aspirations. This reckoning has overturned many of the assumptions
being made about the Gen-X and Millennial workforce.
Recall that the economy is a self-organizing, emergent system of millions of individual
assessments and decisions. On a larger scale, what we see is unprecedented turnover as
over 4 million workers are quitting their jobs every month. The reasons are varied--burnout
from insane workloads, rage-quitting over intolerable working conditions, absurd demands from
Corporate HQ and having had enough of being cussed out by customers, and seeking better
opportunities elsewhere--but the bottom line is work in America is undergoing a revolution
few want to recognize because it's changing the terms of the exploitation the status quo holds
so dear.
What YOLO (you only live once) and FIRE (financial independence, retire early) are telling us
is that work is often misery in America. The FIRE proponents are saying we don't want
to slave away our entire lives to pay debt, enrich billionaires cavorting in self-glorification
and over-consume in a waste-is-growth wasteland.
By setting the goal of exiting the workforce at 35, they're saying they don't want to work 30
additional years for nothing of any real value.
YOLO (you only live once) has many manifestations, but it boils down to "there has to be
a better way to live than this." This includes avenues from trying to amass a fortune
in daytrading to cobbling together side hustles to building a micro-house and getting
by on a fraction of middle-class expenses to starting an enterprise on one's own terms.
Keeping YOLO and FIRE inspired workers on the dead-end treadmill of stagnant wages is not going to
work. To entice these escapees back to the grinding wheel is going to take much higher pay
and levels of employee empowerment Corporate America hasn't the foggiest idea about.
4. America is profoundly unhealthy, diminishing the workforce in ways few dare to consider.
Fully 10% of the workforce is on permanent disability. Some are free-riders, of course,
but most have real health issues.
Unfit for Work: The startling rise of disability in America (NPR)
America's health problems extend from mass addiction to drugs, porn and social media to
the physical decay of poor diets and low levels of fitness. To ignore the impact of
chronic poor health on the workforce is to cling to an absurdly high level of denial.
Bottom line: the workforce is shrinking as poor health sweeps millions into disability or
low levels of participation in the economy. Employers will have to raise wages to attract
healthy, productive workers.
5. America's economy and society no longer have roles for millions of average workers.
In past generations, there were undemanding we just need a warm body jobs for people
who for whatever reason were not up to being the super-productive, super-motivated worker
of Corporate America's dreams.
There are few undemanding jobs left in America. Every job is demanding, regardless of pay.
Fast-food, hospitality, janitorial, agricultural work--all are highly demanding. Many people
simply don't have what it takes to work under unrelenting pressure for 8+ hours a day. Many
others are unfit for physically demanding work.
The fantasy is that all workers are clay that can be shaped into the ideal worker with sufficient
training and motivational rah-rah. The reality is America's family structure has failed
in many cases, its educational system has failed in many cases, its War on Drugs Gulag has
failed, its so-called safety net has failed in many cases, and as a result a great many people
are incapable of demanding work of the kind every employer now needs.
6. The pendulum of exploitation and wealth/income inequality has reached an extreme that is
now reversing. As noted yesterday, when you push the pendulum to an extreme of inequality,
it will swing to the opposite extreme minus a tiny bit of friction.
This will lead to types of labor disorder that are currently unthinkable for the mainstream punditry,
for example, wildcat strikes at fulfillment centers and Big-Box outlets and the
enraged trashing of symbols of Corporate/Financier/Wall Street excess.
Add all this up and the conclusion is revolutionary: great swaths of the American
workforce are already on strike or slipping away from the dead-end treadmill. The terms of
employment will have to change dramatically, and that will drive inflation higher--or savage
corporate profits--take your pick. Few see this now but they'll be forced to
recognize it soon enough. If you doubt this, check back in 2025.
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