I don't have much to say about Chapter 5. It was mostly about the 80's, yuppies, and materialism.
Chapter 6 is her concluding analysis. There are several points that I like:
1) The "New Class" was not actually the cause of hedonism, but the place where people argued over it. One argument that people often make is that the comfortable people in word-driven occupations have the intellect, savings, and support network to afford a bit of foolishness, so they can dismiss traditional values in ways that others dare not. This argument is often abused, and she has no sympathy for its abusers (nor do I), but I think it's one of those things that we should not just dismiss either. Of course, I'd be more sympathetic to its proponents if they weren't standing behind a twice-divorced sexual assaulter.
2) She notes that economic inequality was growing in 1989, and 30 years of experience have seen no reversal of that trend. She also notes the ways in which that trend has increased inequality within the "New Class" or the people in word-driven jobs. It only got worse since then. Information is cheap now, which has destroyed business models that supported writers and creators of various sorts. In that sense, competition really is more fierce, and so cheap information and abundant competition can sometimes lead to a bifurcation rather than equalization of outcomes.
But bifurcated outcomes, while certainly possible in the real world, are not always the outcome of competition. Econ 101 isn't everything, but it isn't nothing either. There's rent-seeking to be found out there, if any journalists can be paid to seek for it. De Tocqueville noted that competitive societies tend to become equal, and so I'm far from convinced that we're seeing fair competition.
I think we're definitely seeing a lot of competition in the more precarious segments of the upper-middle class, the segments that really do have to compete and spend considerable time "paying dues." I've noted before that competition is a tough subject because too much of it makes people indistinguishable rather than bringing out variety, but too little leads to corruption and a choking of opportunity. I think we're seeing a split-level game, with those who have many advantages making everything of them (because, hey, who wouldn't?) while those with fewer (not the same as no) advantages really do compete viciously.
One irony is that the "New Class" now has to proclaim its commitment to bringing in more competition, i.e. expanding equity and opportunity, in order to show that they are virtuous enough to win the competition. It's a strange thing. A laudable thing in many ways, but a strange thing.
3) Ehrenreich ends by calling for a moral reform, a move away from consumerism. In principle I agree, and I hope everyone uses their smart phone to like and share this blog post. Of course, I think we've gotten one, but it isn't the one she called for. She called for a revival of class consciousness in a country where most people want to think of themselves (accurately or otherwise) as middle-class. Instead we've gotten identity-consciousness. Let me tell you, there's nothing that a middle-class scholarship kid loves more than hearing an Ivy League legacy admit explain that our shared lack of melanin and estrogen makes us equally privileged. (True story.)
4) She also calls for a revival of "professionalism" in an era where the knowledge-driven professionals of the "New Class" are now getting squeezed. She makes the fascinating and compelling point that knowledge workers (many but not all of whom are in some segment of the broad "middle class", albeit usually the upper segment) actually like their work. They do things that they find fascinating. The rich might like their work but they tend to like their leisure more. The poor might like some of what they do at work, but often they get treated badly and their jobs take a toll. That is another sense in which the rich and poor resemble each other more than the middle class. I need to think about that.
She sees professionalism as a cure for consumerism, treating the right kind of work as a satisfying thing in its own right rather than a means for more consumption. I think this would be a nice thing, but I don't know how to change a society.
5) Of course, in the end she calls for an abolition of even the privileges of the "professional middle class" knowledge workers and professionals. I think we're seeing more of that, but without the societal flattening that she hoped would accompany it.
That's all for this book. I will eventually blog another book, but not sure when.
Friday, December 13, 2019
Ehrenreich, conclusions
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment