I spent some time this morning involved in another
debate at Ethics Alarms, once again arguing that it might be wrong to tell people
who are struggling to find employment that their problems can only be the
result of their being stupid, or lazy, or just plain not knowing how to look
for a job. Yet precisely those kinds of
accusations continue to fly freely in the commentary of people who have no idea
what the conditions on the ground are like for young people today. People like Jack Marshall have no qualms
about casting aspersions on the character of bright, earnest, committed,
hardworking people, because as far as the accusers are concerned, if you’d done
things right you would have gotten what you wanted.
It’s not as though such people – generally middle-aged
and middle class – start out with the conviction that their younger and poorer
targets are good for nothing, and then construct the meritocratic myth as an
explanation for why. Quite the opposite;
they believe so firmly in the perfection of the system through which kids
acquire training and education and employment prospects that it only allows one
explanation for most people’s failure.
That’s the very problem with their view.
If you are to convince them that an unemployed law school graduate is
unemployed by no fault of his own, you must first compel them to abandon their
entire way of perceiving American society.
People who are currently in their forties or
fifties and have attained middle class status came up through a much different
reality than what is faced by young adults in the twenty-first century. So it is with every generation. The trends, experiences, and rules of one can’t
be expected to apply to the next. That
doesn’t stop anybody from judging the present as if they were interpreting the
past.
Yet obviously there are some things about the
circumstances surrounding today’s graduates that are wildly different from the
situation that was faced by graduates twenty or thirty years ago. For one thing, there’s a goddamn lot more of
them. For another, they’re carrying a
staggeringly higher average debt load.
Obviously, the current global economic crisis is of issue, as well. Add to that that between then and now, the
overall structure of the economy has been transformed, with the death of
manufacturing industries, the consolidation of corporate ownership into fewer
and fewer hands, and so forth.
Whether the United States has ever possessed a
true meritocracy is up for debate, but even if it has, amidst all those changes
it can’t rationally be asserted that the same merits today gain the same
outcomes that they would have a generation or two prior. In fact, most people seem to acknowledge
this. There’s little doubt that the
Bachelor’s degree has been devalued by its ubiquity, and it seems like this is
common knowledge. Yet that doesn’t stop
the accusations of laziness and stupidity from being thrown at unemployed
graduates either.
I’ve tended to think that such accusations are
just insulting and oblivious to the reality faced by many people like myself
today. But having given the perspective
of people like Jack Marshall more thought today, I think it quite possible that
negative attitudes towards struggling graduates are much more than that. They may actually be indicative of a significant
part of the reason why all the nation’s unemployed lawyers face so much
hardship in the modern job market.
It’s worth considering with what kind of people I
and other bright, yet invisible job seekers are applying. Who is in charge of corporate human resources
today if not middle-aged, middle class individuals who came up through life in
a time when college degrees were rare and valuable, and the world prosperous
for people who held them? I dare say
that most of these people have perspectives like that of Jack Marshall. I’m sure that most of them believe that today’s
America is a perfect meritocracy, because that’s what it was when they were
kids, and as far as their concerned that ‘s all that it ever was or ever could
be.
That perspective can’t be undermined by anything,
no matter how many over-educated applicants come slinking to their offices in
pursuit of entry level jobs outside of their chosen fields. Based on all the anecdotal evidence I’ve come
across, certainly including depressingly much of my own, these people are
almost universally turned away. I had
long supposed that the reasons for this are that employers expect such people
to want too much money, not take an interest in the job, and leave as soon as
something better comes along.
I still see it that way, but with new and potentially
meaningful nuance. Low-level employers
are probably right when they assume that NYU grads, or engineers, or lawyers
who apply with them aren’t pursuing what they want. If American society is a meritocracy, then
intelligent, talented, qualified individuals who pursue what they want get what
they want. Individuals who believe this
and are in a position to hire an overqualified applicant won’t accept that the
application is the result of them being genuinely short on options. Instead, they will assume that something must
be wrong.
I shudder to think how many people have been shut
out from gainful employment because of the reasoning that says, “With this
person’s background, either he’s too unmotivated to apply for a job in his
field, or his despicable character prevents him from being a good employee
anywhere.” It’s not a malicious
sentiment. Quite the contrary, it’s
perfectly altruistic; it emphasizes that if the person is good he will find his
way to the better job that suits him, and need never waste his time on
something that he doesn’t want to do, is overqualified for, and will not make
enough money doing.
On some level, I’ve always recognized that about
my situation. I’ve gotten the sense that
many of the people who slip my resume soundlessly into the trash imagine that I’ll
be fine, that I didn’t need their job, that the right alternative will be just
around the corner if I’m willing to look for it. It simply isn’t the case. There are times when bright men and women
have to settle for less. There are times
when talents have to be misplaced just to get oneself out of an awful
situation. You can’t recognize that if
you believe that America is, always has been, and always will be a pure
meritocracy. And yet you have to recognize
it if you’re in a position to help people by hiring them into just such a
situation.
Young people’s fates are held now by people who
cannot recognize that which they must recognize in order to handle those fates
properly. In this way, faith in
meritocracy undermines meritocracy.
2 comments:
Well said. And your comment over on the ethics blog is exquisitely put.
I completely disagree. This is not my experience nor is it that of peers also in the recent graduate job market. I feel this is just assigning blame unfairly as well as coming to a very simplistic conclusion what is going on.
Grow up.
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