Robert Reich: American Workers Are on Strike Over 'Low-Wage S*** Jobs'

Authored by newsweek.com and submitted by southpawFA
image for Robert Reich: American Workers Are on Strike Over 'Low-Wage S*** Jobs'

American workers are engaged in "the equivalent of a general strike," former Labor Secretary Robert Reich has argued, following unexpectedly low U.S. employment figures.

Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) numbers released on Friday showed that U.S. employment increased 194,000 in September—about 300,000 shy of estimates.

Despite record level job openings and 7.7 million out of work, many employers still report difficulty filling positions.

Some have described the issues as a labor shortage. "But that's not what's really going on," Reich, who served as labor secretary from 1993 to 1997 during the Bill Clinton administration, wrote on progressive website Common Dreams on Sunday.

Read more Labor Secretary Marty Walsh Perplexed by Worker Shortage Labor Secretary Marty Walsh Perplexed by Worker Shortage

"In reality, there's a living wage shortage, a hazard pay shortage, a childcare shortage, a paid sick leave shortage, and a health care shortage – and American workers are demanding an end to all these shortages. Or they won't return to work."

Among other aggravating factors, BLS' report highlighted parents struggling to return to the workplace as a result of high childcare fees.

Reich added that since the COVID-19 pandemic, some workers retired, found other income or "simply don't want to return to backbreaking, low-wage s*** jobs."

In September, the unemployment rate slid to 4.8 percent, the lowest rate since the start of the pandemic; however, one factor that contributed to the drop was that 183,000 people weren't counted as jobless because they did not look for work.

The labor force participation rate dropped to 61.6 percent in September, below the 63 percent experienced pre-pandemic.

"In other words," Reich wrote, "many American workers are now engaged in the equivalent of a general strike."

Experts have struggled to explain why so many have dropped out of the labor force despite a surge in job creation.

Asked for his own assessment on Friday, current Labor Secretary Marty Walsh said more analysis would need to be done before conclusions were drawn.

"I think that one of the biggest reasons, and again no one's tested this or checked it, is work-life balance," he told Axios on HBO.

"We're living in a pandemic, obviously the 194,000 this month is not the best number but we saw 317,000 in the private sector. So we're seeing good growth in the private sector."

Generally speaking, vacant government roles appear to have been harder to fill than those in the private sector. In September, a 123,000 fall in government jobs was offset by a 317,000 increase in private sector jobs, down on a 332,000 rise in August.

The U.S. Department of Labor has been contacted for comment.

Catshit-Dogfart on October 11st, 2021 at 19:25 UTC »

My cousin recently quit his minimum wage job because he figured out it was only paying for daycare and his expenses for going to work.

Now he's a stay at home dad, his wife has always made more than him and her job pays the bills. He was just working to pay for working.

The family is rather in an uproar about it, but I totally agree with his reasoning. Not getting medical insurance or paying into retirement anymore, but he's actually raising his frickin son.

CritikillNick on October 11st, 2021 at 18:46 UTC »

My local Starbucks had a sign on the door saying “closing at 2 due to no staff” and I kinda just thought “good, maybe the people who get interviewed will push for higher wages and benefits and point to the fact that the store can’t even open without more employees”

thatsingledadlife on October 11st, 2021 at 18:20 UTC »

It's not a labor shortage, it's a shitty job surplus.