When Did White-Collar Work Start to Look So Bleak?
Posted by littlexsparkee 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by JohnFen 1 day ago
Comment by rwmj 1 day ago
What are the chances of that happening today for anyone not in the C-suite?
I never had a private office until I started working from home. My pension comes out of my salary and all the risk of markets falling etc falls on my shoulders.
Comment by Schiendelman 1 day ago
Comment by rwmj 4 hours ago
And in case you're thinking this all sounds very inefficient, the same company still exists today.
Comment by Schiendelman 1 hour ago
Comment by mycall 1 day ago
Comment by anitil 1 day ago
Comment by JohnFen 22 hours ago
I had a great job at a company that later switched to an open office layout. I found it so intolerable that I quit a couple of months afterwards. There's exactly zero chance that I'd accept a position where hot-desking was a thing. I can't imagine any job being worth that.
Comment by Veserv 17 hours ago
Comment by littlexsparkee 1 day ago
Comment by ChiperSoft 1 day ago
Comment by sph 16 hours ago
Comment by lubujackson 1 day ago
Comment by bag_boy 1 day ago
Comment by aaulia 1 day ago
Comment by rayiner 15 hours ago
Comment by cratermoon 1 day ago
Comment by jleyank 1 day ago
Computers blew away the pink-collar job fields which took away much of the non-tech employment. Hard to assemble a 2 tech family with children due to the lack of remote work and the lack of affordable housing where the job-islands are. And a house then was way, way smaller and less featureful than what people want today an and toys were also way cheaper and simpler.
Comment by littlexsparkee 1 day ago
Comment by defrost 1 day ago
Superannuation schemes in Australia, Singapore, etc.
Mind you these kinds of schemes provide pensions for all workers across all industries and aren't limited to the tech business.
Comment by HeyLaughingBoy 1 day ago
There aren't many, but they are out there.
Comment by cratermoon 1 day ago
Comment by littlexsparkee 1 day ago
Comment by dlcarrier 1 day ago
Twenty five years ago, if you had a 40" TV, a 200 horsepower car, and a convection oven (now usually called an air fryer) you were well off, but those are all baseline now. Fifty years ago, if you had a 1,200 square foot home with two bathrooms, and a two-car garage, you were doing very well, but the median newly-built housing unit is now over 2,000 square feet. One hundred years ago, if you had a refrigerator or even a radio, you were super rich, and even having electricity in your household made you better off than almost half of the country.
You can work as a grunt and get what your parents only dreampt of as children, and be socioeconomically well below average. An organization cannot operate with most of its members in top-level positions. If successful, it can pretend to, but most of the upper-level positions will be meaningless, and its liable to be outdone by a competing organization that isn't top heavy. After periods of sustained economic growth, we play along as though there's similar socioeconomic growth, but that's definitionally impossible, and the upper socioeconomic rungs will redefine themselves.
The only option is to not base your happiness on high socioeconomic status. Half the population isn't even average, let noticeably above that, so even though it's a worthwhile goal, if doing otherwise makes you unhappy, chances are you will be unhappy, with no innovation or policy able to make it probable that you will do otherwise.
Here's an excellent book on the topic: https://musaalgharbi.com/we-have-never-been-woke-available-n...
Comment by armchairhacker 1 day ago
But I think another reason why society looks so bleak today is because specific areas have regressed since their peak around 2000-2026. Even if median QOL is highest (which I doubt), Consider these common complaints:
- The best housing / median income (even accounting for size) was awhile ago
- Many types of food like meat have increased more than median income for some time
- Specific brands have lowered quality, e.g. Pyrex, Komoot
- The social scene in most places was much better. And online, we have more people and media than ever, but also more spam, propaganda, and gatekeeping
- More private offices and cubicles in the past, more WFH right after 2020
- More perks and higher salary compared to median for tech workers until around 2022
- Cheaper RAM and memory sometime around 2022-2025
- The best LLM (Mythos/Fable) was available a few days ago
Humans are biased to weigh disadvantages disproportionately more than advantages: even if someone was less happy in the past, when they weigh the advantages and disadvantages of that time vs today, they believe they were happier. So even if today wasn’t especially bleak, people may always wish for the past.
But that doesn’t mean we can’t keep addressing today’s pressing issues, even though the fixes will inevitably create more issues. Because without change, things would slowly objectively get worse.
Comment by smithoc 22 hours ago
It would be more accurate to say the baby boomers could "work as a grunt and get what their children only dreampt of"
Single-income households, lifelong employment at the same company, people buying houses at 23 and having kids at 25, pensions, affordable health insurance, inexpensive college, people working their way up from the mail room to the C-suite. All taken for granted as typical, middle-America norms a few decades ago, but utterly unrecognizable to Millenials and Gen-Z.
Yes, people today have big TVs and air fryers. And they can use them to self-medicate briefly against the anxiety of rent that takes 40% of their post-tax income, student loans they'll be paying for the next decade and the knowledge that the whims of executives they've never met could make them lose their job tomorrow and be faced with a loss of healthcare and housing in short order.
Most people would happily downgrade their TV and drive a lower horsepower car in exchange for stable employment, no debts, no retirement worries and a spouse who doesn't have to work a corporate job.
Comment by Schiendelman 1 day ago
Alain de Botton's book "Status Anxiety" is excellent about this topic, too.
Comment by xg15 17 hours ago
In a way, that's the core tenet of the left: We cannot all be billionaires, so the state should acknowledge that and provide a robust safety net, so that even for the average or below-average part of the population, life stays bearable.
In contrast, the right's ideology seems to be more "winner takes it all", and if we can bring forth a single Steve Jobs or Elon Musk or Donald Trump, then the rest doesn't matter.
Which is really only palatable if everyone believes they will belong to the winning elite some day.
Comment by tocs3 1 day ago
Comment by oscarcooper257 1 day ago