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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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93
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03299935.000
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<text>
<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>