The Do-It-Yourself Economy
By Ellen Goodman, Washington Post Writers Group
Posted on July 18, 2008, Printed on July 21, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/91872/
I finally drew the line at a dinner invitation. My husband wanted to try
a much-touted restaurant that presents you with a platter of raw foods
and a hot pot. The prospect of this adventure in dining didn't exactly
thrill me. If I want to cook my own food, I answered rather testily,
I'll eat at home.
Until then, I had drifted along with the do-it-yourself economy. I bused
my own lunch trays. I booked my own movie tickets. I checked myself in
at hotel kiosks. I even succumbed when an upscale seafood restaurant
expected me to swipe my credit card through a handheld computer as if I
were in a supermarket.
But maybe it was the election-year rants about the offshoring of
American jobs -- ranging from those of steelworkers to those of computer
programmers -- that finally got me. The outsourcing of work to other
countries has produced endless ire. But what about the outsourcing of
work to thee and me?
For every task shipped abroad by a corporation, isn't there another one
sloughed off onto that domestic loser, the consumer? For every job
that's going to a low-wage economy, isn't there another going into our
very own no-wage economy?
I'm not just talking about do-it-yourself gas pumping, which is by now
so routine that the memory of an actual person washing your windshield
has receded into the mists of AARP nostalgia. Back when gas cost $2 a
gallon, self-service was offered at a discount. Today, gas is more than
$4, and, in most parts of the country, full service -- a retronym if
there ever was one -- is available only at a premium.
What's happening on land is happening in the air. We are now expected to
book our own itinerary, print our boarding passes and do everything at
the airport except pat ourselves down for liquids.
In this self-service economy, we also serve (ourselves) by having
intimate and endless conversations with voice-recognition machines
simply to refill a prescription drug or check our bank balance. We are
expected to interact with "labor-saving technology" without realizing
that it's labor-transferring technology. The job has not been "saved";
it's been taken out of the paid sector, where employees have a nasty
habit of expecting salaries, and put into the unpaid sector, where
suckers 'r' us.
I am tempted to say that customer service has gone the way of the house
call, but that reminds me that even medicine has been outsourced to
patients who buy do-it-yourself kits to test and track everything from
HIV to blood pressure. The Internet ad for a do-it-yourself eye surgery
kit may be, I pray, a hoax. But in an era when every operation short of
brain surgery is done on an outpatient basis, nursing care has already
been outsourced to family members whose entire medical training consists
of TiVo-ing "Grey's Anatomy."
The axis of this evil isn't really globalization, it's privatization.
Consider all the major jobs that have now become part of our personal
portfolio. We've become our own computer geeks as help lines become
self-help lines. We've become our own pension planners and financial
analysts managing our 401(k)s. We are even expected to be health care
analysts, determining which star in the galaxy of drug prescription
plans covers the ever-changing cast of pills in our medicine cabinet.
All of this is framed in the language of free choice. As opposed to,
say, free time.
An MIT economist assures me cheerily that many Americans are willing to
accept less service for lower cost. In a society built on the value of
self-reliance, I am told, we may even feel virtuous when we put together
our own bookcase or install our own hard drive.
But I have yet to find an economist who has figured out the human cost
of "lower cost" or tallied up the transfer of labor from companies to
customers. I've yet to find a consumer who has added, subtracted or
multiplied the amount of time we are now spending on the second shift of
life management.
Remember back when women were asking "Can We Have It All?" The answer
turned out to be that we could have it all only if we could do it all
... and all by ourselves. Now men and women have won equal opportunity
in the do-it-all-by-yourself world. We have officially become our own
nonprofit centers.
Welcome to the self-service economy where we are never without work to
be done. Let's celebrate by dining out together. Bring your carrot
peeler.
Ellen Goodman's e-mail address is ellengoodman(at)globe.com.
(c) 2008, Washington Post Writers Group 
Ellen Goodman is a member of the Washington Post Writers Group. 

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