Dirty Jobs Don't Have to be Lousy Jobsl
November 25, 2011
“Why Americans Won’t Do Dirty Jobs” is the presumptuous headline on a Bloomberg Businessweek cover. The subject is
As expected, the law has caused an exodus of undocumented workers from
As expected, the employers are complaining that Americans won’t do dirty jobs.
The politics of this are all mixed up. A modern liberal might say: “See? American business needs undocumented workers. Serves you xenophobes right.” An old-fashioned liberal might respond, “Serves you right for paying folks only $7.25 an hour to stand and cut catfish for 10 hours.”
Some conservatives would complain, “While businesses profit off illegal immigration, its social costs get dropped on us taxpayers.” Other conservatives would agree with modern liberals, but avoid the truth that their agenda is not diversity but cheap labor.
This is a complex matter, and to portray the
Worse, it has put certain jobs off-limits altogether to the native-born and established immigrants — virtually closing many fields and factories to a conventional workforce.
“Some employers have begun to reorganize work in ways that systematically exclude certain native-born workers, especially those under the age of 35,” according to a study at Northeastern University’s Center for Labor Market Studies (the authors are Andrew Sum, Paul Harrington and Ishwar Khatiwada). The pay and conditions often don’t meet basic labor standards. The jobs are frequently off the books, and the work paid in cash.
He went on: “We’re transitioning from a business model. Whether an employer in agriculture used migrant workers, or whether it’s another industry that used illegal immigrants, they had a business model, and that business model is going to have to change.”
Here’s an example of said business model: A Guatemalan field hand told Businessweek that migrants like him made about $60 for 11 hours of nonstop toil under the hot
As Surtees notes, Alabamians are happy to do brute work in sweltering steel mills because they are offered decent wages and benefits.
Where the
The
But go through the aisles of Walmart. The coffeemakers, sweatshirts and bicycles — all once part of mighty American industries — are also made in
A healthy
And “Why Americans Won’t Do Dirty Jobs” is a pretend answer to a phony question.
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