Sunday, August 20, 2023

The Educated Precariat: Mandarin Spoilage

This post is a continuation of my series of posts on economic precarity.  As I mentioned in recent posts in this series, we have begun to delve the subject of the educated precariat - that is, those people in the early 21st century who have obtained either bachelors or more advanced graduate degrees from a college or university, yet who cannot find stable work in their chosen profession.  The most recent previous post in this series discussed the origins and evolution of the modern university as a European institution and its spread as a model of higher education throughout the world.  That post also discussed the late-stage signs of dysfunction which have begun to appear in the modern university system during the last 40 years, particularly in English-speaking countries such as the United States and Australia.

Today's post will consider the university system as a machine that produces components for use within the larger machinery of modern late-stage capitalism, and what is happening to those components because of the fact that there are more components being produced than there are slots into which to plug those components.  The "components" in this case are recent college graduates.  Historically, an American guy or gal who managed to earn a mortarboard perched on his or her head, an academic robe on his or her body, and a sheepskin in his or her hand could expect to pursue one of two possible vocational paths after graduation:
  • He or she could become a career scholar, otherwise known as an academic.  This academic career could be focused on teaching or on research, or on a mixture of both.
  • He or she could become a member of the professional class, the "managers, officials, and professionals" described by Gary Roth in his book The Educated Underclass.
The next three paragraphs will cite extensively from Gary Roth's book.  

The prospects for those college graduates pursuing either path were very bright from the late 1800's until around 1970.  This was true because the rapid expansion of the American economy and the growth of urban populations produced a need for professionals with the requisite training to serve the resulting societal needs.  The pre-existing system of private higher education was inadequate to produce these professionals, as noted by Roth: "Tuition-driven institutions have never been a viable model at any level of the income spectrum ..."  Thus the government (at both the Federal and State level) intervened to fund public universities that could fill the demand for degreed professionals and managers.  These universities became important research centers which boosted commercial development as they published their research findings, particularly in agricultural science.  These public universities also helped to rapidly expand education in law, medicine, and engineering.

Although the absolute number of degreed professionals thus steadily increased, the number of these professionals as a percentage of the total American population remained small until World War Two.  On the eve of the war, less than 5 percent had a four-year college or university degree.  However, the war drastically increased the need for degreed professionals, and the G.I. Bill of 1944 stimulated the supply of these professionals and the expansion of the American public university system.  This stimulation was amplified by other non veteran-related Federal and State funding for higher education.

The demand for the graduates of this expanded higher education system was fueled by the drastic expansion of the managerial class of the American business sector.  For instance, between 1950 and 1970, the number of American white-collar workers grew by 75 percent.  Many of these workers could be considered to be "private-sector mandarins" involved in management and the administration of big business bureaucracy.  The growth in the numbers of these private-sector mandarins was paralleled by the growth in public-sector mandarins as Federal and State governments expanded.  Indeed, the number of State and local government employees increased much more drastically than the number of Federal employees.  The demand for graduates was also fueled by the growth of the public university system itself, which saw the addition of 200,000 faculty positions between 1950 and 1970.  Thus in 1970, higher education had come to be seen as a guaranteed means of upward social mobility.  By 1970, 32.1 percent of all Americans between 18 and 24 years of age were enrolled in some sort of college.  

But 1970 was the beginning of a tangible slowdown in American fortunes, a tangible curbing of American power and prestige.  Some of the causes were obvious, including the rejection of American values by many nations of the Third World, and the loss of prestige of the American military in Vietnam.  One of the causes was hidden to most observers, namely, the peak in American conventional oil production which occurred in 1970 and the beginning of the outsourcing of American manufacturing to other countries with cheaper labor.  These changes wrought changes in the American economy which began to curtail the opportunities open to people holding college degrees.  Although the conventional wisdom held that a college education remained a key to upward mobility, reality began to look different.  A growing number of college graduates began to experience the phenomenon of underemployment, that is, working in jobs which require less education than the job-holder possesses, or, working in jobs which offer less than stable full-time employment even though the job-holder would like to be fully employed.  Let's close this post with a discussion of both types of underemployment.

First, although underemployment has gained recent attention as part of the phenomenon of precarity, there are sources who indicate that underemployment has existed for the last several decades.  For instance, a 1963 U.S. Government publication titled, Two Years After The College Degree states that "Two years post-graduation, 18 percent of the class of 1958 reported that a four-year degree was not necessary for the jobs they held." (Roth, Chapter 4.)  However, Gary Roth points out that those graduates were living in an environment in which there was a surplus of available job positions and a relative shortage of workers with college degrees.  

That has not been the case for at least the last two decades (and perhaps longer).  For instance, in the 2013 paper "Why Are Recent College Graduates Underemployed?" by Vedder, Denhart and Robe, Figure 10 shows the number of degree holders who occupy certain occupations which do not require a college degree, and shows how the percentage of these jobs occupied by degree-holders has increased between 1970 and 2010.  Note, for instance, the steep increase in the number of college-educated taxi drivers, salespersons, and retail clerks.  Also, in the 2014 New York Fed paper "Are Recent College Graduates Finding Good Jobs?" by Abel, Deitz, and Su, we can see that already by 1990, the underemployment rate for recent college graduates was over 40 percent.  Younger college graduates had underemployment rates that were nearly 50 percent.  Recent college graduates who were working part-time after graduation were also above 15 percent in 1990.  Those recent college graduates who occupied low-wage jobs was around 15 percent in 1990.  These numbers did not show any consistent long-term improvement from 1990 to 2014.

According to Vedder, Denhart and Robe, the number of Americans with a bachelors degree or higher was expected to grow by 31 percent between 2010 and 2020, whereas the number of actual jobs requiring such degrees was expected to grow by only 14.3 percent.  This would translate to 19 million additional Americans with bachelors degrees or higher compared to only 7 million additional jobs requiring such degrees.  This would also mean that the number of underemployed graduates would increase to 30 million.  

What's more, those who start their post-graduation careers underemployed are at great risk for remaining underemployed five and ten years after graduation, as noted in "The Permanent Detour: Underemployment’s Long-Term Effects on the Careers of College Grads," a 2018 paper by the Strada Institute for the Future of Work and Burning Glass International, Inc.  According to this paper, 43 percent of college graduates are now starting their post-graduate careers underemployed.  Of these, 29 percent will continue to be underemployed after five years and 23 percent will be underemployed after ten years.  The figures are worse for women: 47 percent will start out underemployed and 31 percent will be underemployed after five years.

Why is there such a mismatch between present-day numbers of college graduates and the present-day number of education-appropriate job positions for these graduates?  What coping mechanisms are the college educated precariat using to cope with underemployment?  And how are these coping mechanisms affecting those members of the precariat who do not have a college education?  We'll start tackling those questions in the next post in this series.

Wednesday, August 9, 2023

The Flight Of The Tarnished Superheroes

I've been following Cosmic Connie's blog Whirled Musings lately, and I came across a series of posts about a movie titled Sound of Freedom which was released by Angel Studios this summer.  Angel Studios is an arm of the American evangelical media industry, an industry about which I made a few comments in a recent post.  

The movie purports to document the efforts of Tim Ballard, a Mormon and former employee of the Department of Homeland Security who supposedly formed his own special private organization in order to rescue children from child-trafficking rings.  Both Ballard and the organization he founded are unabashed supporters of the Rethuglican (er, I mean, "Republican") Party and Donald Trump (who "protected" Mexican migrant children at the southern border by violently ripping them from the arms of their parents and throwing them into detention centers where some of them died).  The lead actor in Sound of Freedom is also a rabid Trump supporter and QAnon spokesperson.

The movie is an example of the longstanding strategy of the American right wing, in finding a group of people whom they can brand as monsters while claiming that the champions of the Right (and only they) can and will effectually deal with the monster they have identified.  Now I fully agree with those who say that the present operators of human trafficking rings (especially those which sexually exploit children) are monsters.  But for the Right to claim nowadays that its members are the pure and holy fighters of these monsters is laughable, especially when we see how the recent exposures of the sins of the Right (especially those of the evangelical/Protestant/religious members of the Right) have so severely damaged its credibility.  

This definitely applies to the makers and financial backers of the movie Sound of Freedom.  Let me summarize some of the points made in Connie's posts:
  1. Both Tim Ballard and the organization he founded are guilty of factual distortions in their presentation of the problem of child trafficking and of the efforts of their organization in fighting it.
  2. These factual distortions have actually made it harder for legitimate governmental organizations to fight child trafficking.
  3. Some of the financial backers of Sound of Freedom are themselves involved in child trafficking or have groomed underage minors for sex or have trafficked in illicit drugs.
  4. Some of these backers have also committed fraud against government programs.  Among these is Andrew McCubbins, the executive producer for Sound of Freedom, who pleaded guilty to Medicare fraud in the amount of at least $89 million (one source says $100 million) in September 2020, and who was indicted later in 2020 along with other defendants for defrauding the U.S. Government of an additional $4.5 billion in medical billing.  McCubbins has not yet been sentenced and has not yet gone to jail.
If you want all the details concerning these points, please read Connie's posts.  

I guess moviemaking is politics by other means.  (Didn't Clausewitz say that? ... Oh, ... he said it about something other than movies.  My bad!)  But here we are, not even out of the dog days of Summer 2023 and election year campaigning has already begun, courtesy of a movie made by the American religious Right.  As I have frequently already said, the American religious Right is interested in religion solely as a means for advancing white supremacy.  They themselves have no intention of obeying the New Testament.  This is obvious when we see how the white male defenders of "traditional morality" who come from the American Right keep getting caught engaging in pedophilia, fornication, adultery and homosexual behavior themselves.

And this is but one reason why I haven't been to church since March 2020.  Let me be clear about this.  I know that everyone has issues, and that anyone who wants to become a decent person will find himself struggling with his own besetting sins.  That is a tragic consequence of our fallen condition.  I also know that I can't point to others and say that I'm any better than them.  All I can say is that whatever our personal demons, we can band together to support each other in leaving those demons behind.  But when you willfully and deliberately use religion - especially the Bible and the name of Christ - as a political tool for promoting the supremacy of your own people and as a justification to enslave or trash or oppress me - simply because I am not a member of your tribe or skin color or ethnicity - then I say God damn you.  When you portray yourselves as perfect and the perfect upholders of God's holy Law in order to justify your continued oppression of people who haven't done anything to you, I say, to hell with you.  May God punish you not only for not leaving your personal demons behind but also for your hypocrisy in claiming that you and you only are the sole defenders (and thus the sole beneficiaries) of all that is good in the world.  God damn you to hell.