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Jobs returning but good ones not so much

2011-03-10 09:34:03

Wed Mar 9, 12:10 pm ET

When it comes to jobs, it's not just quantity that matters--it's also quality.

It's great news that the economy is finally producing jobs again--even if it'll

take another few years of this kind of growth to get us back to where we were

before the Great Recession. But that also means it's now time to ask what kind

of jobs are being created. And on that front, things are a lot less

encouraging.

Several recent studies suggest that the new jobs pay less and offer fewer work

hours than the ones they have replaced. Let's look at the numbers:

Lower-wage industries -- things like retail and food preparation -- accounted

for 23 percent of the jobs lost during the recession, but 49 percent of the

jobs gained over the last year, a recent study (pdf) by the National Employment

Law Program found. Higher-wage industries, by contrast, accounted for 40

percent of the jobs lost, but just 14 percent of the jobs gained. In other

words, low paying jobs are increasing as a percentage of total jobs, while

high-paying jobs are on the decline.

Meanwhile, the percentage of those working who have part-time jobs and want

full-time ones surged in mid-February to 19.6 percent -- almost as high as it

was a year ago before the recovery began, according to Gallup numbers. That

suggests, of course, that a large number of the new jobs created over the last

year are part-time.

And a recent Wall Street Journal analysis found that even though productivity

rose 5.2 percent from mid 2009 to the end of 2010, wages increased by just 0.3

percent. That means only 6 percent of productivity gains were shared with

workers. In past recoveries, that figure has averaged 58 percent. This time

around, far more of the gains went to shareholders, in the form of profits,

which are at record levels.

There are no easy answers for how to fix the problem. Some argue that workers

need more clout in their relationship with employers, something that would

require a renaissance of private-sector labor unions, which have been on the

decline for the last half-century. But that prospect looks unlikely: Indeed

efforts are underway in several states to make public-sector unions as weak as

their private-sector counterparts.

Still, as the economy continues to add jobs in the coming months, it's worth

keeping the issue of quality in mind. An economy with a glut of low-paying and

part-time jobs isn't an economy that's working for most Americans.

(John Francis, who owns the McDonald's in Sidney, Montana.: Ellen Wznick/AP)