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Dirty Work
What are the jobs Americans won't do?

By Daniel Gross

Posted Friday, Jan. 12, 2007, at 6:36 AM ET

The United States is a nation of hard workers. Compared with many
other developed countries, the U.S. boasts high rates of labor-force
participation and productivity and has a very low unemployment rate.
Americans work longer hours than Europeans—1,804 hours per worker for
the United States in 2005, compared to 1,434 in Germany and 1,535 in
France, according to the OECD.

Yet it's increasingly common to hear politicians, CEOs, and
immigration activists impugn American workers as a bunch of shiftless
layabouts who regard many good jobs as beneath their dignity. That,
they say, is why employers have to turn to immigrants — some of them
legal, many of them illegal. To hear CEOs tell it, they'd much rather
hire English-speaking, tax-paying U.S. citizens, people who won't
disrupt operations by getting rounded up in Homeland Security sweeps.
But they just can't find any Americans willing to do their jobs. As
President Bush himself said last March, the United States needs a
temporary guest-worker program that would "match willing foreign
workers with willing American employers to fill jobs that Americans
will not do."

What are these jobs that Americans will not do? Do they exist? Or are
they a figment of the business community's imagination? It turns out
that their claims are largely true — there are plenty of jobs
Americans avoid. Let's take a tour of them. Americans shun pretty much
any unskilled labor that requires them to get their hands dirty:
landscaping, entry-level construction, picking fruits and vegetables
(Reuters reports that "up to 70 percent of U.S. farm workers are
estimated to be undocumented, totaling about 500,000 people"),
cleaning hotel rooms, busing tables, and prep cooking in urban
restaurants.

But the refusal to do jobs is moving up the value chain. American
workers appear to be less interested in some kinds of factory jobs.
The Washington Post, for example, recently reported that Georgia's
carpet factories are increasingly dominated by Mexican immigrant
workers.

Americans, it seems, are also less willing to take stressful jobs that
require lots of training and long hours, and that require them to work
in unpleasant environments. For example, the American Association of
Colleges of Nursing is warning of a nursing shortage. This survey from
the American Hospital Association says there are 118,000 nursing
vacancies in the United States. Meanwhile, a 2003 report by the
Council on Graduate Medical Education suggested there could be a
shortage of anywhere from 65,000 to 150,000 doctors in 2020. (Given
the time it takes to educate and train a physician, it's not too soon
to worry.)

Spending your days tethered to a computer is also work that many
Americans avoid. The Information Technology Association of America
notes that 77 percent of companies it polled said there was a shortage
of qualified IT talent in the United States. The solution: Import more
geeks. The ITAA (and pretty much every technology company) supports
boosting the number of H-1B visas above the current limit of 65,000
per fiscal year.

The more one looks, the more shortages of willing workers appear.
Bryan Bender of the Boston Globe last month reported that the Pentagon
is "considering expanding the number of noncitizens in the ranks —
including disputed proposals to open recruiting stations overseas and
putting more immigrants on a faster track to U.S. citizenship if they
volunteer." Today, about 2 percent of the soldiers protecting America
— about 30,000 — aren't technically Americans. On Tuesday, the Wall
Street Journal reported on a dire shortage of professors of
accounting, finance, and management that may cause some schools to
curtail course offerings. "AACSB International, the accrediting
organization for business schools, estimates a shortage of 1,000
Ph.D.s in the U.S. this year that will grow to 2,400 by 2012."
(Apparently, American citizens with Ph.D.s in accounting, finance, and
management can get high-paying, satisfying jobs in the private sector.
Who knew?)

For the industries involved, and for their customers — everyone from
meat-eaters to hospital patients — these shortages are a real
challenge. But when employers have difficulty filling jobs at the
wages they wish to pay, and as a result seek foreign-born workers,
they shouldn't blame it on a fundamental unwillingness of Americans to
work in those industries or professions. After all, in many of these
fields — construction, nursing, the military, teaching, accounting —
Americans still fill most positions. Immigrants tend to predominate
only in the least attractive work imaginable — manual, back-breaking,
seasonal, benefitless, farm labor.

Americans haven't grown too wealthy and snooty for the kind of work
that gets your hands dirty, or for nursing, or for computer
programming. Rather, the people who have the skills to enter those
fields also have opportunities and skills to enter other fields. And
so they have to decide whether the rewards — monetary and
psychological — of the opportunity before them are worth it. It's not
so much that Americans aren't willing to pick fruit and become
computer programmers. Rather, they aren't willing to do those jobs for
the prevailing wages and benefits. The Army may need foreign nationals
to help fill its ranks, but the private security firms that pay
six-figure salaries to ex-military types for security work don't.
People without much in the way of skills or education probably prefer
to take entry-level jobs at Wal-Mart rather than work at a
meat-packing plant, even though it might pay a little less — it's less
dangerous and disgusting.

The failure here isn't in the work ethic of Americans. Rather, it lies
with the CEOs, business owners, university and hospital
administrators, and government officials — and ultimately, with all of
us who benefit from cheap labor — to offer the wages and benefits
necessary to attract sufficient numbers of legal workers. There's a
reason they call the labor market a market.

Daniel Gross (www.danielgross.net) writes Slate's "Moneybox" column.
You can e-mail him at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2157483/

Copyright 2006 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC

--
Jim Devine / "Young people who pretend to be wise to the ways of the
world are mostly just cynics. Cynicism masquerades as wisdom, but it
is the farthest thing from it, because cynics don't learn anything.
Because cynicism is a self-imposed blindness, a rejection of the world
because we are afraid it will hurt us or disappoint us." -- Stephen
Colbert.

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