A key paragraph in the NYTimes article is the following:

  After all, the office environment is more automated and digitized than ever. 
Bosses can handle their own calendars, travel arrangements and files through 
their own computers and ubiquitous BlackBerrys. In many offices, voice mail 
systems and doorbells - not receptionists - greet callers and visitors. 

Yup! True.  When I first became a bit of a wheel in the public service of 
Canada, there were several jobs that mini-bosses like me didn't do -- our own 
typing for example.  To send a memo to someone, you called a steno from the 
typing pool and dictated the message to her while she took it down in 
shorthand.  She'd go back and type up a draft, bring it to you and you'd then 
revise it and she'd take it back to do a final version.  After it was as good 
as you could get, you signed it and sent it on to whoever.  But to do that you 
had to call a messenger to take it to the guy you were sending it to.

I was part of a revolution, one of the first guys in my department to have a 
computer on my desk and type my own mail.  A little bit later everyone was 
doing it and the steno pool with all those pretty young girls and all those 
obliging messengers were a thing of the past.  I regret their passing.  They 
were kind, polite and very helpful.

I have a cell phone but I don't have a blackberry, which makes me feel very old 
fashioned, almost Victorian.  Like the stenos from the pool and the messengers, 
my time too has passed.

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Arthur Cordell 
  To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
  Sent: Thursday, May 13, 2010 10:14 PM
  Subject: [Futurework] Many of the jobs lost during the recession are 
notcoming back


  Honesty hits the NY Times.

  =============================

   

  May 12, 2010   NY Times

  In Job Market Shift, Some Workers Are Left Behind
  By CATHERINE RAMPELL
  JACKSONVILLE, Fla. - Many of the jobs lost during the recession are not 
coming back. 

  Period. 

  For the last two years, the weak economy has provided an opportunity for 
employers to do what they would have done anyway: dismiss millions of people - 
like file clerks, ticket agents and autoworkers - who were displaced by 
technological advances and international trade. 

  The phasing out of these positions might have been accomplished through less 
painful means like attrition, buyouts or more incremental layoffs. But because 
of the recession, winter came early. 

  The tough environment has been especially disorienting for older and more 
experienced workers like Cynthia Norton, 52, an unemployed administrative 
assistant in Jacksonville. 

  "I know I'm good at this," says Ms. Norton. "So how the hell did I end up 
here?" 

  Administrative work has always been Ms. Norton's "calling," she says, ever 
since she started work as an assistant for her aunt at 16, back when the 
uniform was a light blue polyester suit and a neckerchief. In the ensuing 
decades she has filed, typed and answered phones for just about every breed of 
business, from a law firm to a strip club. As a secretary at the RAND 
Corporation, she once even had the honor of escorting Henry Kissinger around 
the building. 

  But since she was laid off from an insurance company two years ago, no one 
seems to need her well-honed office know-how. 

  Ms. Norton is one of 1.7 million Americans who were employed in clerical and 
administrative positions when the recession began, but were no longer working 
in that occupation by the end of last year. There have also been outsize job 
losses in other occupation categories that seem unlikely to be revived during 
the economic recovery. The number of printing machine operators, for example, 
was nearly halved from the fourth quarter of 2007 to the fourth quarter of 
2009. The number of people employed as travel agents fell by 40 percent. 

  This "creative destruction" in the job market can benefit the economy. 

  Pruning relatively less-efficient employees like clerks and travel agents, 
whose work can be done more cheaply by computers or workers abroad, makes 
American businesses more efficient. Year over year, productivity growth was at 
its highest level in over 50 years last quarter, pushing corporate profits to 
record highs and helping the economy grow. 

  But a huge group of people are being left out of the party. 

  Millions of workers who have already been unemployed for months, if not 
years, will most likely remain that way even as the overall job market 
continues to improve, economists say. The occupations they worked in, and the 
skills they currently possess, are never coming back in style. And the demand 
for new types of skills moves a lot more quickly than workers - especially 
older and less mobile workers - are able to retrain and gain those skills. 

  There is no easy policy solution for helping the people left behind. The 
usual unemployment measures - like jobless benefits and food stamps - can serve 
as temporary palliatives, but they cannot make workers' skills relevant again. 

  Ms. Norton has sent out hundreds of résumés without luck. Twice, the openings 
she interviewed for were eliminated by employers who decided, upon further 
reflection, that redistributing administrative tasks among existing employees 
made more sense than replacing the outgoing secretary. 

  One employer decided this shortly after Ms. Norton had already started 
showing up for work. 

  Ms. Norton is reluctant to believe that her three decades of experience and 
her typing talents, up to 120 words a minute, are now obsolete. So she looks 
for other explanations. 

  Employers, she thinks, fear she will be disloyal and jump ship for a 
higher-paying job as soon as one comes along. 

  Sometimes she blames the bad economy in Jacksonville. Sometimes she sees age 
discrimination. Sometimes she thinks the problem is that she has not been able 
to afford a haircut in a while. Or perhaps the paper her résumé is printed on 
is not nice enough. 

  The problem cannot be that the occupation she has devoted her life to has 
been largely computerized, she says. 

  "You can't replace the human thought process," she says. "I can anticipate 
people's needs. Usually, I give them what they want before they even know they 
need it. There will never be a machine that can do that." 

  And that is true, up to a point: human judgment still counts for something. 
That means some of the filing jobs, just like some of the manufacturing jobs, 
that were cut during the recession will return. But a lot of them probably will 
not. 

  Offices, not just in Jacksonville but all over the country, have found that 
life without a secretary or filing clerk - which they may have begun somewhat 
reluctantly when economic pressures demanded it - is actually pretty 
manageable. 

  After all, the office environment is more automated and digitized than ever. 
Bosses can handle their own calendars, travel arrangements and files through 
their own computers and ubiquitous BlackBerrys. In many offices, voice mail 
systems and doorbells - not receptionists - greet callers and visitors. 

  And so, even when orders pick up, many of the newly de-clerked and 
un-secretaried may not recall their laid-off assistants. At the very least, any 
assistants they do hire will probably be younger people with different skills. 

  Economists have seen this type of structural change, which happens over the 
long term but is accelerated by a downturn, many times before. 

  "This always happens in recessions," says John Schmitt, a senior economist 
with the Center for Economic and Policy Research. "Employers see them as an 
opportunity to clean house and then get ready for the next big move in the 
labor market. Or in the product market as well." 

  Economists like Erica Groshen at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York have 
argued that bigger structural job losses help explain why the last two economic 
recoveries were jobless - that is, why job expansion lagged far behind overall 
growth. 

  But there is reason to think restructuring may take a bigger toll this time 
around. The percentage of unemployed workers who were permanently let go has 
hovered at a record high of over 50 percent for several months. 

  Additionally, the unemployment numbers show a notable split in the labor 
pool, with most unemployed workers finding jobs after a relatively short period 
of time, but a sizable chunk of the labor force unable to find new work even 
after months or years of searching. This group - comprising generally older 
workers - has pulled up the average length of time that a current worker has 
been unemployed to a record high of 33 weeks as of April. The percentage of 
unemployed people who have been looking for jobs for more than six months is at 
45.9 percent, the highest in at least six decades. 

  And so the question is what kinds of policy responses can help workers like 
Ms. Norton who are falling further and further behind in the economic recovery, 
and are at risk of falling out of the middle class. 

  Ms. Norton has spent most of the last two years working part time at Wal-Mart 
as a cashier, bringing home about a third of what she had earned as an 
administrative assistant. Besides the hit to her pocketbook, she grew 
frustrated that the work has not tapped her full potential. 

  "A monkey could do what I do," she says of her work as a cashier. "Actually, 
a monkey would get bored." 

  Ms. Norton says she cannot find any government programs to help her 
strengthen the "thin bootstraps" she intends to pull herself up by. Because of 
the Wal-Mart job, she has been ineligible for unemployment benefits, and she 
says she made too much money to qualify for food stamps or Medicaid last year. 

  "If you're not a minority, or not handicapped, or not a young parent, or not 
a veteran, or not in some other certain category, your hope of finding help and 
any hope of finding work out there is basically nil," Ms. Norton says. "I know. 
I've looked." 

  Of course, just as there is a structural decline in some industries, others 
enjoy structural growth (the "creative" part of "creative destruction"). The 
key is to prepare the group of workers left behind for the growing industry. 

  "You can bring the jobs back for some of these people, but they won't be in 
the same place," says Thomas Anton Kochan, a professor of management at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 

  The White House has publicly challenged the idea that structural unemployment 
is a big problem, with Christina D. Romer, the Council of Economic Advisers 
chairwoman, instead emphasizing that stronger economic growth is what's needed. 
Still, the administration has allocated dollars for retraining in both the 2009 
stimulus package and other legislation, largely for clean technology jobs. 

  Ms. Norton, for her part, may be reluctant to acknowledge that many of her 
traditional administrative assistant skills are obsolete, but she has tried to 
retrain - or as she puts it, adapt her existing skills - to a new career in the 
expanding health care industry. 

  Even that has proved difficult. 

  She attended an eight-month course last year, on a $17,000 student loan, to 
obtain certification as a medical assistant. She was trained to do front-office 
work, like billing, as well as back-office work, like giving injections and 
drawing blood. 

  The school that trained her, though, neglected to inform her that local 
employers require at least a year's worth of experience - generally done 
through volunteering at a clinic - before hiring someone for a paid job in the 
field. 

  She says she cannot afford to spend a year volunteering, especially with her 
student loan coming due soon. She has one prospect for part-time administrative 
work in Los Angeles - where she once had her own administrative support and 
secretarial services business, SilverKeys - but she does not have the money to 
relocate. 

  "If I had $3,000 in my pocket right now, I would pack up my S.U.V., grab my 
dog and go straight back," she says. "That's my only answer." 

  With so few local job prospects and most of her possessions of value already 
liquidated she has considered selling her blood to help pay for the move. But 
she says she cannot find a market for that, either; blood collection agencies, 
she said, told her they do not buy her blood type. 

  "Sometimes I think I'd be better off in jail," she says, only half joking. 
"I'd have three meals a day and structure in my life. I'd be able to go to 
school. I'd have more opportunities if I were an inmate than I do here trying 
to be a contributing member of society." 

   



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