(this comes from
Barbara Ehrenreich's book, 'Nickel and Dimed')
Nickel and
Dimed was a journalistic experiment. Barbara Ehrenreich decided to try to see what working low-wage jobs was like by doing it herself. She ended up working in a restaurant, retail (WalMart), in a nursing home, and for a housecleaning service, all over about a 6-month period. And writing about all the other things that accompany low-wage work, like stress, budget crises, housing insecurity, etc. She would be the first to say this wasn't the same as being among the ranks of the working poor--she could go to the doctor if she needed to, hire a lawyer, didn't have any children, and many other 'luxuries.' But it was an effort to convey the experiences that millions of Americans endure for the better part of their working lives.
First, some statistics:
How can we learn
about the circumstances of the poor? Especially women, single mothers?
-
-
Read
the literature and do secondary data analysis (that is, try to learn
from the research of others and build some sort of synthesis).
-
Ask
them through surveys, interviews.
-
Do
participant observation. Do what they do. This is what Ehrenreich
set out to do, in a limited way.
But why bother?
Why not just report on this stuff? Take the average wage, try to figure
a budget, do it from the comfort of her office?
Here are some
relevant statistics from her book and the Bureau of Labor Statistics:
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Wage
needed to afford a one-bedroom apartment (in 2004): $8.89
-
Odds
of typical welfare recipient landing such a job: 97 to 1
-
Percent
of workforce making less than $8.00/hr (1998): 30%
-
According
to BLS: about 15% of below-poverty individuals are 'working poor'
(this doesn't include their children)
-
Working
poor:
-
are
twice as likely to be high school dropouts (why?)
-
are more likely working in the service sector (at least 1/3
of working poor)
-
are predominantly doing domestic work (especially women)
She had rules
as she went about trying to mimic the plight of the working poor:
-
spend
a month at each position she got, see if she could afford the second
month's rent; if she ran out of money, project was over;
-
locations-stay
away from places with lots of immigrants (why? Out of place? What
does this say about poor, dirty work?)
-
kinds
of jobs?
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Housekeeping
-
Waitressing
-
Retail
-
no
falling back on her human capital (assuming low level of job skills,
even though she had a PhD in biology and has written several award-winning
books)-either in interview process or in applying for work;
-
would
take highest-paying job offered and do her best to hold it;
-
take
cheapest accommodations she could find (accounting for safety, privacy);
homelessness was not an option
-
Describing
herself to employers:
-
divorced
homemaker re-entering the workforce after many years
-
3
years of college
-
She
would have a car (rent-a-wreck at the least, paid for on her credit
card), which set her apart from many co-workers
-
She
would NOT go hungry (among other things this is not good for the
writing process);
-
She
wore her usual clothes, talked about her real children, marital
status, etc.
-
Could
anyone tell? Maybe, but no one mentioned she was 'faking' it-the
thing they probably noticed was her inexperience. When she would
'come out' at the end of the month, it wasn't a big deal. The
main question she got was 'does this mean you're gonna miss
work next week?' As she said though, you can't 'fake' being
a waitress, or you get fired because you're not keeping up.
Obviously there
were some key differences between her experience and those in genuine
need:
-
She
could leave at any time--might this affect one's aspirations, goals
in life?
-
There
was no desperation (for instance, of having to scrounge money to
eat, feed children, find an apartment or be on the streets). It's
always more difficult to find work, seem to be an appealing job
candidate, when one is desperate.
-
She
didn't try to juggle welfare, too. This might have been interesting,
and is what single mothers on welfare must do--work
if they want the assistance.
-
She
did this during a relative economic boom, which ended near the end
of 1999.
Issues faced by working poor
Housing hassles
-
Child care
-
Quality
can be a problem, especially if one requires state certification
-
Availability
is often a problem as well
-
Location
(how does this limit the job search?)
-
Absenteeism
because of sick children
Non-living wage:
working two jobs (Erhrenreich did a bit of this; for some it is necessary). There are many more, obviously--this is what became most apparent to her in a short time (e.g., medical crises, financial crises, other unforeseens ....).
The job:
Some questions:
- What is the problem these people face?
- What can workers do, if anything, about it? What leverage do most low-wage workers have?
- Why wasn't Ehrenreich suspected as different? Why didn't people seem
to care?
- What about the welfare philosophy of building human capital?
- Why don't people protest if the conditions seem unfair or unjust?
- What does low-wage work to do the spirit?
- It's often said that it's easier to find a job if you have one-is this
always the case (or a class-based assumption)?
- What about the assumption that the poor are lazy and unmotivated?
- Barbara Ehrenreich. 2002. Nickel and Dimed: On Not Getting by in America. NY: Holt.
- Lawrence Meade. 1993. New Politics of Poverty: The Non-Working Poor in America. NY: Basic Books.
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