The Gig Economy

You wake up, go to work, put in your 8 hours and go home.  If that is the numbing grind you want to break out of, you might want to consider yourself lucky.   Millions of Americans have taken on a series of part-time jobs that add up to something like a living as they juggle their schedules.  But for an uncounted many, work comes one assignment at a time as they scramble constantly to find the next small job that will take them to the next mortgage payment or even the next meal.  These are the millions of workers in the Gig Economy.

How many?  It may be as much as a third of the workforce, but no one is really sure.  Uncertainty defines this trend from the daily routine right up to the future of the economy as a whole.  Managing any aspect of this emerging world is made much more difficult as a result.

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A Spirit, not an Event

The tenth anniversary of 9/11 was nearly impossible to avoid.  Coverage of remembrances dominated the news, special features dotted the cable teevee lineup, and star spangled displays opened a season of NFL football.  The most pressing moments for me, however, were the questions of my kids who were too young on that day to remember it.  The stories that washed over the nation have come to them as small sprays from a quieted tide that still runs a bit angry at times.

Like many news events, clarity came through their eyes.  It has to, after all, since much of this will define their generation.  There is a unity that will also never be forgotten.

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A Decade, or so

It’s been a decade since 9/11, with its terrible rumblings shaking the foundations of our free and open society. That is reason enough to pause, but there is another anniversary that is coming up as well. This is the third anniversary of the meltdown on Wall Street that has defined our economy ever since.  As the kids go back to school and the northern hemisphere starts to tilt toward the chill of fall, this is a reflective time.  Knowing how we got where we are may not be a great predictor of where we will be in the future, but the straight line between then and now is all we have as a guide

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Defined by Work

Today is Labor Day in the USofA and Canada.  You may be off at the State Fair or taking one last long summer day up at the cabin on the lake. Few people will read this in the middle of the last day of summer routine.

But that’s fine.  This might be better on the Tuesday after Labor Day.

Today we celebrate the workers of this continent and celebrate work itself.  We do this largely by loafing, by taking a day off to not work.  It’s not that everyone needs a break.  The idea is that we should all spend a day contemplating how much we are defined by what we do and how important the efforts are innovations of millions of people are to each other’s lives.

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Labor Creates All Weath

Labor Day is a celebration of American work. It sometimes seems like an anachronism, a holdover from a day long gone when people worked in factories and churned out widgets with mechanical precision.  That image often comes to people in dirty sepia tones like a faded old photograph of grandpa at his bench.  Yet those days were more than grime and hard work, they were times when the US was at the height of its power around the world.  No matter how you want to look at what we celebrate on Labor Day, scorn or longing, hard work went strong arm and arm with the power of this nation.

The accelerated decline of manufacturing in the last decade shows how our current unemployment problem has a lot to do with the simple fact that we stopped making stuff.  It’s not a big leap to see that our power and prestige has gone away with those jobs.

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