lpetrich
Contributor
Too Many Jobs Feel Meaningless Because They Are – Bloomberg View – Medium
Then noting David Graeber's work on "bullshit jobs".As earnings season is upon us, it’s worth asking: Does business create value these days the way it once did?
One sign it doesn’t is a significant decline in the formation rate of U.S. firms over the past few decades. Economists Peter Orszag and Jason Furman have argued that investment and innovation have taken a back seat to profits derived from economic rents. Political factors also increasingly appear to play a major role in driving corporate profits, as new regulations help incumbent firms, another strike against economic efficiency.
What’s going on? Surprisingly, one of the more convincing explanations comes from an anthropologist who has looked beyond narrow economic reasoning to examine the actual social or psychological functions served by many of the jobs in today’s service and knowledge economy.
Some sizable fraction of people polled in the UK and Holland seemed to agree with this position.Of course, the idea that business might be wasteful isn’t new. ...
Of course, the financial crisis rather crushed the notion that modern markets are models of economic efficiency and value creation. ...
But even outside of finance, a lot of today’s business seems to aim less to produce economic value than to grab a bigger share of existing wealth. ...
Graeber’s unique contribution is to tie these changes to human history, and to explain why, anthropologically, they may not be all that surprising. In an essay five years ago, he made the seemingly bizarre assertion that perhaps as many as 30 percent of all jobs actually contribute nothing of use to society.
Then some examples of corporate makework that seem more like empire building and power struggles than anything valuable. But the trouble is that's where the money tends to be.Perhaps even more surprising is the nature of these “bullshit” jobs, as Graeber calls them. They aren’t in teaching, cleaning, garbage collecting or firefighting, but seem mostly to be in the professional services sector. ... human resources, public relations, lobbying or telemarketing, or in finance and banking, consulting, management and corporate law.
Many like to laugh at the absurd inefficiencies of the Soviet Union, where so many people only pretended to do useful work, yet this may be significantly true in Western economies as well (only in the West they actually get paid for it).