Despite their years of experience and depth of
knowledge, many mid-career architects, laid off in the 2008 recession, found it
almost impossible to find work in the field often because of higher salary
expectations and lower computer skills than younger staff. Does the profession
have a responsibility to its members in such a situation?
In the American economy, employment
for middle-aged workers has lagged behind that of both younger people and
retirees willing to work for less. That downward pressure on salaries reflects the
fact that wages in the U.S. have not kept up with increasing productivity. Between
1947 and 1979, worker productivity rose 119% and average compensation kept
pace, growing 100%, but after 1980 productivity increased 80%, while compensation
went up only 7%.
Many explanations exist
for that stagnation of wages since 1980: off-shoring American jobs, increasing
global competition, and public policies that have mostly benefited the top
fifth wage earners. And we have seen the same in the architectural profession.
U.S. firms have opened offices overseas and increasingly competed for work
globally. And, as a result, the partners of firms that have succeeded in the
global marketplace have done relatively well financially, even as many of their
mid-career, formerly employed colleagues have not.
History has shown that older
people caught in a technological or economic transition, trained in a previous
era without new skills, often face higher unemployment. That happened with in
the 19th century industrial revolution and it appears to have
happened again with the digital revolution and the global economy enabled by
it. But while that may be how economics works, ethics does not work that way.
The latter shows us why we have a responsibility to help others in a situation
like this, even if we have no legal obligation or financial incentive to do so.
The ethical reason to help
others is simple: we help others in need because we, too, will be in need of
help someday. That reciprocity may not be apparent to those prospering – or
simply trying to survive right now – in a rapidly changing economy. And we see
how this has played itself out politically. People barely holding on to some
semblance of the life they once had have resisted increased taxes to help
others who have not, leading to the paradox that with rising economic
inequality has come a parallel rise in political polarization at least in the
U.S.
That ethics of the jungle,
in which people become more vicious when fighting over the last scraps, may
serve the interests of disingenuous politicians, who use fear to keep people
complacent in the face of inequalities that might otherwise lead to revolution
in the streets. The politics of fear did stop people in North African countries
from rebelling, revealing the limitations of such a strategy. But do
professions have an obligation to their members that transcends such a
situation? Are there things professionals can do to help their colleagues
caught in this economic transition?
Mentoring out-of-work
peers and helping them network with other professionals and prospective
employers may be among the most useful actions. Providing training
opportunities for little or no cost to bring up skill levels required to
compete for jobs can also go a long way toward giving hope to those left behind
in a changing economy. But most helpful of all would be to give the unemployed
work, even if only part-time. The top fifth wage earners have greatly benefited
from globalism and those profits need to translate into more jobs. The fate of
elites in North Africa shows what can await us if we don’t.
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