https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/17/opinion/why-dont-all-jobs-matter.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-left-region®ion=opinion-c-col-left-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-left-region
President Trump is still promising to bring back coal jobs. But the underlying reasons for coal employment’s decline — automation, falling electricity demand, cheap natural gas, technological progress in wind and solar — won’t go away.
Meanwhile, last week the Treasury Department officially (and correctly) declined to name China as a currency manipulator, making nonsense of everything Mr. Trump has said about reviving manufacturing.
So will the Trump administration ever do anything substantive to bring back mining and manufacturing jobs? Probably not.
But
let me ask a different question: Why does public discussion of job loss
focus so intensely on mining and manufacturing, while virtually
ignoring the big declines in some service sectors?
Over the weekend The Times Magazine published a photographic essay
on the decline of traditional retailers in the face of internet
competition. The pictures, contrasting “zombie malls” largely emptied of
tenants with giant warehouses holding inventory for online sellers,
were striking. The economic reality is pretty striking too.
Consider
what has happened to department stores. Even as Mr. Trump was boasting
about saving a few hundred jobs in manufacturing here and there, Macy’s
announced plans to close 68 stores and lay off 10,000 workers. Sears, another iconic institution, has expressed “substantial doubt” about its ability to stay in business.
Overall, department stores employ
a third fewer people now than they did in 2001. That’s half a million
traditional jobs gone — about eighteen times as many jobs as were lost
in coal mining over the same period.
And
retailing isn’t the only service industry that has been hit hard by
changing technology. Another prime example is newspaper publishing,
where employment has declined by 270,000, almost two-thirds of the work
force, since 2000.
So why aren’t promises to save service jobs as much a staple of
political posturing as promises to save mining and manufacturing jobs?
One
answer might be that mines and factories sometimes act as anchors of
local economies, so that their closing can devastate a community in a
way shutting a retail outlet won’t. And there’s something to that
argument.
But
it’s not the whole truth. Closing a factory is just one way to
undermine a local community. Competition from superstores and shopping
malls also devastated many small-city downtowns; now many small-town
malls are failing too. And we shouldn’t minimize the extent to which the
long decline of small newspapers has eroded the sense of local
identity.
A
different, less creditable reason mining and manufacturing have become
political footballs, while services haven’t, involves the need for
villains. Demagogues can tell coal miners that liberals took away their
jobs with environmental regulations. They can tell industrial workers
that their jobs were taken away by nasty foreigners. And they can
promise to bring the jobs back by making America polluted again, by
getting tough on trade, and so on. These are false promises, but they
play well with some audiences.
By
contrast, it’s really hard to blame either liberals or foreigners for,
say, the decline of Sears. (The chain’s asset-stripping, Ayn Rand-loving
owner is another story, but one that probably doesn’t resonate in the
heartland.)
Finally,
it’s hard to escape the sense that manufacturing and especially mining
get special consideration because, as Slate’s Jamelle Bouie points out,
their workers are a lot more likely to be male and significantly whiter than the work force as a whole.
Anyway,
whatever the reasons that political narratives tend to privilege some
jobs and some industries over others, it’s a tendency we should fight.
Laid-off retail workers and local reporters are just as much victims of
economic change as laid-off coal miners.
But,
you ask, what can we do to stop service-sector job cuts? Not much — but
that’s also true for mining and manufacturing, as working-class Trump
voters will soon learn. In an ever-changing economy, jobs are always
being lost: 75,000 Americans are fired or laid off every working day. And sometimes whole sectors go away as tastes or technology change.
While
we can’t stop job losses from happening, however, we can limit the
human damage when they do happen. We can guarantee health care and
adequate retirement income for all. We can provide aid to the newly
unemployed. And we can act to keep the overall economy strong — which
means doing things like investing in infrastructure and education, not
cutting taxes on rich people and hoping the benefits trickle down.
I
don’t want to sound unsympathetic to miners and industrial workers.
Yes, their jobs matter. But all jobs matter. And while we can’t ensure
that any particular job endures, we can and should ensure that a decent
life endures even when a job doesn’t.
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