Are You Middle Class? Maybe Not For Long
by
David Calderwood
by David Calderwood
Recently
by David Calderwood: A
Demon in Need of Exorcism
Many people
write of the imminent destruction of the U.S. middle class (of which
I consider myself a member) but few have explained specifically
how this occurs. Understanding the mechanism seems important if
I hope to avoid the fate of most of my peers.
An insight
on this question came from an unexpected quarter.
A gentleman
by the name of Fernando Aguirre, who posts on Internet forums and
his blog as FerFAL, has
written voluminously about his experiences as an Argentine citizen
during and after the economic cataclysm that wracked his country
in 2001. I first found a long forum post, and then a Google search
of "FerFAL" revealed a larger web presence, including
a recently published book.
Mr. Aguierre
shares his thoughts on all sorts of related subjects, from food
storage to guns to politics (he appears to really like Rep. Ron
Paul). I personally found a great deal of value among what I’ve
seen so far.
One brief passage
struck me, however, because it related to the mechanism by which
middle-class people become poor during an economic meltdown. The
mechanism may be obvious, but it is important to see how theory
actually worked in the real world.
Mr. Aguierre
shares
(in "Part IV") how, while studying architecture following
the 2001 crisis, a social studies teacher illustrated Argentina’s
middle class’ slide into poverty. Quoting the teacher from memory,
Mr. Aguierre writes,
"[Those
in the] middle class suddenly discover that they are overqualified
for the jobs they can find and have to settle for anything they
can obtain, therefore unemployment sky rockets: too much to offer,
too little demand. You see they prepare, study for a job they
are not going to get. You kids, you are studying Architecture
because you simply wish to do so. Only 3 or 4 percent of you will
actually find a job related to architecture."
We all sat
there, letting it all sink in. After a few months, it all proved
to be true. Even the amount of students that dropped out of college
increased to at least 50%. They either [saw] no point in studying
something that would not make much of a difference in their future
salaries, had no money to keep themselves in college, or simply
had to drop college to work and support their families.
This reads
like a premonition.
The USA’s middle-class
includes lots of people whose careers rest on higher education and
specialized certification. While plumbers, electricians, factory
employees and truck drivers typically are among the middle-class,
most of those populating suburbia are accountants, middle managers,
sales people, financial consultants, teachers, nurses, writers,
etc. In other words, as manufacturing and now building activity
contract, more of the middle class is made up of the college-educated
in white-collar careers.
Factor in our
current economic pickle and it’s easy to see the most likely path
ahead.
With the economic
expansion built on mass optimism and debt rolling over, conditions
are now fertile for questioning the college degree system as jobs
for the college-educated evaporate en masse. The ability
of technology to replace white-collar jobs is widespread, and an
increasing need to cut costs is finally driving its use, just as
changing economic (and regulatory) conditions also drive
the replacement of manpower with robotics in the factory.
Across the
economy, the need to cut employment costs (not just payroll, but
payroll taxes and benefits) is resulting in mass layoffs
of sales people and white-collar office staff. When one considers
how much work can be replaced now by accounting software, electronic
sales presentations, flatter organizational structures, and "news
persons" filing reports for free on the Internet via blogs,
it is obvious that vast numbers of middle-class Americans teeter
on the precipice of unemployability, not just unemployment.
When the "unique"
skill sets that commanded $50,000 to $100,000 (or more) annual salaries
turn out to be in vast oversupply, the only course left is to compete
with those with neither a college degree nor technical education
for jobs that can’t support a middle-class lifestyle.
Hands-on service
occupations like nursing and medicine are also far from safe. At
the end of the day, it is productivity that pays for such work to
be done, and when vast numbers of people cannot find economically
productive work, economic reality will land on these occupations,
too.
When the economic
tide goes out, all boats sink into the mud.
Too many people
were goaded into illusory occupations by tax subsidies for higher
education, government (rather than market) demand, and other distortions
like the credit-without-prior-production of the central bank. Political
pandering and central planning replaced the natural balance of an
economy growing organically through the honest signals of
the price system.
As long as
there was enough optimism and ignorance to sustain the illusion,
the distortions only grew larger.
Though the
ignorance largely remains, there’s no more blind denial left to
sustain the burden of all that wasted
effort. If your job disappears, it may not come back.
This time it
really is different. The final stages of that blind denial included
fiscal imprudence that bordered on insanity. The mirage economy
can’t return until after the pendulum has swung its full travel
to the other side of the arc. That path leads through the valley
of a crushing economic depression, one that will radically and permanently
alter the lives of middle-class Americans who are almost universally
unaccustomed to hardship.
October 27, 2009
David
Calderwood [send him mail]
a businessman, artist, and author of the novel Revolutionary
Language, selected January 2000 Freedom Book of the Month
at Free-market.net.
Copyright
© 2009 by David C. Calderwood
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