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- <text id=93TT1302>
- <title>
- Mar. 29, 1993: Disposable Workers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 29, 1993 Yeltsin's Last Stand
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOCIETY, Page 42
- Disposable Workers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>America's growing reliance on temporary staffers is shattering
- a tradition in which loyalty was valued and workers were vital
- parts of the companies they served
- </p>
- <p>By JANICE CASTRO--With reporting by John F. Dickerson, Jane Van
- Tassel/New York and William McWhirter/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> The corporation that is now the largest private employer
- in America does not have any smokestacks or conveyor belts or
- trucks. There is no clanging of metal on metal, no rivets or
- plastic or steel. In one sense, it does not make anything. But
- then again, it is in the business of making almost everything.
- </p>
- <p> Manpower Inc., with 560,000 workers, is the world's
- largest temporary employment agency. Every morning, its people
- scatter into the offices and factories of America, seeking a
- day's work for a day's pay. As General Motors (367,000 workers),
- IBM (330,500) and other industrial giants struggle to survive
- by shrinking their payrolls, Manpower, based in Milwaukee,
- Wisconsin, is booming along with other purveyors of temporary
- workers, providing the hands and the brainpower that other
- companies are no longer willing to call their own.
- </p>
- <p> Even as its economy continues to recover, the U.S. is
- increasingly becoming a nation of part-timers and free-lancers,
- of temps and independent contractors. This "disposable" work
- force is the most important trend in business today, and it is
- fundamentally changing the relationship between Americans and
- their jobs. For companies large and small, the phenomenon
- provides a way to remain globally competitive while avoiding the
- vagaries of market cycles and the growing burdens imposed by
- employment rules, antidiscrimination laws, health-care costs and
- pension plans. But for workers, it can mean an end to the
- security and sense of significance that came from being a loyal
- employee. One by one, the tangible and intangible bonds that
- once defined work in America are giving way.
- </p>
- <p> Every day, 1.5 million temps are dispatched from agencies
- like Kelly Services and Manpower--nearly three times as many
- as 10 years ago. But they are only the most visible part of
- America's enormous new temporary work force. An additional 34
- million people start their day as other types of "contingent"
- workers. Some are part-timers with some benefits. Others work
- by the hour, the day or the duration of a project, receiving
- only a paycheck without benefits of any kind. The rules of their
- employment vary widely and so do the attempts to label them.
- They are called short-timers, per-diem workers, leased
- employees, extra workers, supplementals, contractors--or in
- IBM's ironic computer-generated parlance, "the peripherals."
- They are what you might expect: secretaries, security guards,
- salesclerks, assembly-line workers, analysts and CAD/CAM
- designers. But these days they are also what you'd never expect:
- doctors, high school principals, lawyers, bank officers, X-ray
- technicians, biochemists, engineers, managers--even chief
- executives.
- </p>
- <p> The number of people employed full time by FORTUNE 500
- companies has shrunk from 19% of the work force two decades ago
- to less than 10% today. Almost overnight, companies are shedding
- a system of mutual obligations and expectations built up since
- the Great Depression, a tradition of labor that said performance
- was rewarded, loyalty was valued and workers were a vital part
- of the enterprises they served. In this chilly new world of
- global competition, they are often viewed merely as expenses.
- Long-term commitments of all kinds are anathema to the modern
- corporation. For the growing ranks of contingent workers, that
- means no more pensions, health insurance or paid vacations. No
- more promises or promotions or costly training programs. No more
- lawsuits for wrongful termination or other such hassles for the
- boss. Says Secretary of Labor Robert Reich: "These workers are
- outside the traditional system of worker-management
- relationships. As the contingent work force grows--as many
- people find themselves working part time for many different
- employers--the social contract is beginning to fray."
- </p>
- <p> As the underpinnings of mutual commitment crumble,
- time-honored notions of fairness are cast aside for millions of
- workers. Working temp or part time often means being treated as
- a second-class citizen by both employers and permanent staff.
- Says Michelle Lane, a former temp in Los Angeles: "You're just
- a fixture, a borrowed thing that doesn't belong there." Being
- a short-timer also can mean doing hazardous work without
- essential training, or putting up with sexual and racial
- harassment. Placement officers report client requests for "blond
- bombshells" or people without accents. Says an agency counselor:
- "One client called and asked us not to send any black people,
- and we didn't. We do whatever the clients want, whether it's
- right or not."
- </p>
- <p> Workers have little choice but to cope with such treatment
- since most new job openings are the labor equivalent of
- uncommitted relationships. More than 90% of the 365,000 jobs
- created by U.S. companies last month were part-time positions
- taken by people who want to work full time. "The fill-ins are
- always desperate for full-time jobs," says one corporate
- personnel officer. "They always ask." Richard Belous, chief
- economist for the National Planning Association in Washington,
- has studied the proliferation of tenuous jobs. "If there was a
- national fear index," he says, "it would be directly related to
- the growth of contingent work."
- </p>
- <p> Already, one in every three U.S. workers has joined these
- shadow brigades carrying out America's business. Their ranks are
- growing so quickly that they are expected to outnumber permanent
- full-time workers by the end of this decade. Companies keep
- chipping away at costs, stripping away benefits or substituting
- contingent employees for full-time workers. This year alone,
- U.S. employers are expected to use such tactics to cut the
- nation's $2.6 billion payroll costs as much as $800 million. And
- there is no evidence to suggest that such corporate behavior
- will change with improvement in the economy.
- </p>
- <p> Once contingent workers appear in a company, they multiply
- rapidly, taking the places of permanent staff. Says Manpower
- chairman Mitchell Fromstein: "The U.S. is going from
- just-in-time manufacturing to just-in-time employment. The
- employer tells us, `I want them delivered exactly when I want
- them, as many as I need, and when I don't need them, I don't
- want them here.' " Fromstein has built his business by meeting
- these demands. "Can I get people to work under these
- circumstances? Yeah. We're the ATMs of the job market."
- </p>
- <p> In order to succeed in this new type of work, says Carvel
- Taylor, a Chicago industrial consultant, "you need to have an
- entrepreneurial spirit, definable skills and an ability to
- articulate and market them, but that is exactly what the bulk
- of the population holed up inside bureaucratic organizations
- doesn't have, and why they are scared to death." Already the
- temping phenomenon is producing two vastly different classes of
- untethered workers: the mercenary work force at the top of the
- skills ladder, who thrive; and the rest, many of whom, unable
- to attract fat contract fees, must struggle to survive.
- </p>
- <p> The flexible life of a consultant or contract worker does
- indeed work well for a relatively small class of people like
- doctors, engineers, accountants and financial planners, who can
- expect to do well by providing highly compensated services to
- a variety of employers. David Hill, 65, a former chief
- information systems officer for General Motors, has joined with
- 17 other onetime auto-industry executives (median salary before
- leaving their jobs: $300,000) to form a top-of-the-line
- international consulting group. "In the future," says Hill,
- "loyalty and devotion are going to be not to a Hughes or Boeing
- or even an industry, but to a particular profession or skill.
- It takes a high level of education to succeed in such a
- free-flowing environment. We are going to be moving from job to
- job in the same way that migrant workers used to move from crop
- to crop."
- </p>
- <p> Many professionals like the freedom of such a life. John
- Andrews, 42, a Los Angeles antitrust attorney, remembers working
- seven weeks without a day off as a young lawyer. He prefers
- temping at law firms. Says he: "There's no security anymore.
- Partnerships fold up overnight. Besides, I never had a rat-race
- mentality, and being a lawyer is the ultimate rat-race job. I
- like to travel. My car is paid for. I don't own a house. I'm not
- into mowing grass."
- </p>
- <p> But most American workers do better with the comfort and
- security of a stable job. Sheldon Joseph was a Chicago
- advertising executive until he was laid off in 1989. Now he
- temps for $10 an hour in a community job-training program. Says
- the 56-year-old Joseph: "I was used to working in the corporate
- environment and giving my total loyalty to the company. I feel
- like Rip van Winkle. You wake up and the world is all changed.
- The message from industry is, `We don't want your loyalty. We
- want your work.' What happened to the dream?"
- </p>
- <p> Employers defend their new labor practices as plain and
- simple survival tactics. American companies are evolving from
- huge, mass-production manufacturers that once dominated markets
- to a new species of hub-and-network enterprises built for
- flexibility in a brutally competitive world. The buzz phrase at
- many companies is "accordion management"--the ability to
- expand or contract one's work force virtually at will to suit
- business conditions.
- </p>
- <p> Boardroom discussions now focus on what are called "core
- competencies"--those operations at the heart of a business--and on how to shed the rest of the functions to subcontractors
- or nonstaff workers. Managers divide their employees into a
- permanent cadre of "core workers,'' which keeps on shrinking,
- and the contingent workers, who can be brought in at a moment's
- notice. Most large employers are not even certain at any given
- time how many of these helpers are working for them--nor do
- they usually care. Says a manager: "We don't count them. They're
- not here long enough to matter." Some analysts wonder whether
- America's celebrated rise in productivity per worker (2.8% last
- year) is all it seems to be, since so many of those invisible
- hands are not being counted. So profound is the change that the
- word core has evolved a new meaning, as in "she's core," meaning
- that she is important and distinctive because she is not part
- of the contingent work force.
- </p>
- <p> No institution is immune to the contingent solution.
- Imagine the surprise of a Los Angeles woman, seriously injured
- in an auto accident, when she recently asked a radiology
- technician at the hospital about a procedure. "Don't ask me,"
- he snapped. "I'm just a temp." In Appleton, Wisconsin, the Aid
- Association for Lutherans is using temps to keep track of $3.6
- million in relief funds for victims of Hurricane Andrew. The
- State of Maine uses temps as bailiffs and financial
- investigators. IBM, once the citadel of American job security,
- has traded 10% of its staff for "peripherals" so far. Says IBM
- administrative manager Lillian Davis, in words that would have
- been unimaginable from a FORTUNE 500 executive 20 years ago:
- "Now that we have stepped over that line, we have decided to use
- these people wherever we can."
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, managers these days can hire virtually any kind of
- temp they want. Need an extra lawyer or paralegal for a week or
- so? Try Lawsmiths in San Francisco or Project Professionals in
- Santa Monica, California. Need a loan officer? Bank Temps in
- Denver can help. Engineers? Sysdyne outside Minneapolis,
- Minnesota. CAD/CAM operators? You don't even need to buy the
- equipment: in Oakland, California, Western Temporary Services
- has its own CAD/CAM business, serving such clients as the U.S.
- Navy, the Air Force, Chevron, Exxon and United Technologies.
- Doctors and nurses? A firm called Interim in Fort Lauderdale,
- Florida, can provide them anywhere in the country. Need to rent
- a tough boss to clean up a bad situation? Call IMCOR, a
- Connecticut-based firm that boasts a roster of senior executives
- expert at turnarounds. Says IMCOR chairman John Thompson:
- "Services like ours are going to continue to flourish when
- businesses change so rapidly that it's in no one's interest to
- make commitments. Moving on to the next place where you're
- needed is going to be the way it is. We will all be
- free-lancers."
- </p>
- <p> Behind this profound change in the workplace are the
- impersonal market forces of the new global economy. Americans
- must now compete for jobs with the growing legions of skilled
- workers in developing economies from Asia to Eastern Europe.
- U.S. executives have taken to talking of global "market prices"
- for employees, as if they were investing in cattle futures. "We
- understand it's just business, but it's still awfully
- demeaning," says Deb Donaldson, a part-time retail sales clerk
- in Moline, Illinois. Manpower's Fromstein dismisses such
- complaints of exploitation, pointing out that his own profit
- margins are razor thin (1.3%). Says he: "We are not exploiting
- people. We are not setting the fees. The market is. We are
- matching people with demands. What would our workers be doing
- without us? Unemployment lines? Welfare? Suicide?"
- </p>
- <p> Employers are also responding to factors closer to home.
- They are embracing such cutbacks not simply to slash up to 40%
- of payroll costs, though that might be inspiration enough. They
- are also freeing themselves from inconvenient labor and
- equal-employment requirements. Says Ronald Cohen, a senior
- partner of Cohen & Co., a regional accounting firm based in
- Cleveland, Ohio: "You don't need to worry about the incredible
- compliance problems and potential litigation if you fire
- someone." Using disposable workers also means that companies
- rarely have to train them. Moreover, getting rid of such workers
- is easy when they don't measure up. Says Robert Uhlaner, senior
- vice president of Quantum Consulting in Berkeley, California:
- "You can try them out. The best thing about it is that you never
- have to face firing people--because you never really hire them
- in the first place."
- </p>
- <p> In the long run, however, this scramble to shed full-time
- staff may be as harmful to American industry as it is to the
- American work force--since a well-trained work force is the
- greatest asset of a nation's industries. Analysts, including
- Labor Secretary Reich, have pointed out that in a borderless
- world, capital and production are portable; thus, the key
- resources of companies as well as nations are the skills and
- ideas of its people. The reduction in corporate programs for
- training and developing employees--one of the long-term
- effects of the temping of America--leads to a disinvestment
- in the nation's human capital. By discouraging commitment and
- initiative, managers risk poisoning the well of their most
- important asset.
- </p>
- <p> President Clinton has called for more "good jobs at good
- pay" for workers. But even as he gears up his plan to retrain
- American workers, companies are abandoning their traditional
- role of nurturing new talent. Richard Belous argues that
- government training programs may have to help repair the damage.
- Schools must also do a better job.
- </p>
- <p> The best solution, however, may be to find ways to reduce
- some of the forces that are pushing companies to rely more
- heavily on disposable workers. Creating a system of universal
- health insurance might be a start: properly designed, it could
- reduce one of the costs of taking on full-time employees as well
- as make life easier for contingency workers. If employers are
- required to provide extensive benefits to workers, though, such
- a plan may backfire, triggering new job eliminations.
- </p>
- <p> There is no going back to old-fashioned lifetime
- employment. Companies need flexibility. Thus the long-term
- social costs of all the well-intentioned work-force rules that
- have accrued over the past few decades may have to be
- reconsidered.
- </p>
- <p> For now, most citizens will have to scramble to adapt to
- the new age of the disposable worker. Says Robert Schaen, a
- former comptroller of Chicago-based Ameritech who now runs his
- own children's publishing business: "The days of the mammoth
- corporations are coming to an end. People are going to have to
- create their own lives, their own careers and their own
- successes. Some people may go kicking and screaming into the new
- world, but there is only one message there: You're now in
- business for yourself."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-