3
0

Men Without Work


 invite response                
2017 Mar 31, 5:07pm   3,419 views  8 comments

by Indiana Jones   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

By John Mauldin

http://www.mauldineconomics.com/frontlinethoughts/men-without-work

"I have been promising a review of Nicholas Eberstadt’s very important book, Men Without Work: America’s Invisible Crisis....The “invisible crisis” that the author is writing about is at the very center of our economic and political turmoil.

...At its heart, the book is about the fact that there are some 10 million American men of prime working age (25 to 54) who have simply dropped out of the workforce, and the great majority of them have not only dropped out of the workforce, they have also dropped out from any commitments or responsibilities to society. It is not just the labor force they are not participating in; they are not participating in the normal ebb and flow of community life.

This is not a recent phenomenon. I used the following graph last week, but it is important to illustrate the point. Male participation in the civilian labor force has been steadily dropping for 60 years, through boom and bust years, periods of inflation and deflation, Republican and Democratic administrations and congressional control; the trend seems to be relentless – except that it has been accelerating since 2009.

The collapse of work for America’s men is arguably a crisis for our nation – but it is a largely invisible crisis. It is almost never discussed in the public square. Somehow, we as a nation have managed to ignore this problem for decades, even as it has steadily worsened. There is perhaps no other instance in the modern American experience of a social change of such consequence receiving so little consideration by concerned citizens, intellectuals, business leaders, and policymakers….

But the progressive detachment of so many adult American men from the reality and routines of regular paid labor poses a threat to our nation’s future prosperity. It can only result in lower living standards, greater economic disparities, and slower economic growth than we might otherwise expect. And the troubles posed by this male flight from work are by no means solely economic. It is also a social crisis – and, I shall argue, a moral crisis. The growing incapability of grown men to function as breadwinners cannot help but undermine the American family. It casts those who nature designed to be strong into the role of dependents – on their wives or girlfriends, on their aging parents, or on government welfare. Among those who should be most capable of shouldering the burdens of civic responsibilities, it instead encourages sloth, idleness, and vices perhaps more insidious. Whether we choose to recognize it or not, this feature of the American condition – the new “men without work” normal – is inimical to the American tradition of self-reliance…

Note that elsewhere in the book Eberstadt adopts a somewhat softer stance in talking about the circumstances that are bringing about the reduction in labor participation, especially with regard to the some 20 million former felons who have been relegated to second-class workforce status.

Here, then, is the underlying contradiction of economic life in America’s second Gilded Age: A period of what might at best be described as indifferent economic growth has somehow produced markedly more wealth for its wealth-holders and markedly less work for its workers. This paradox may help explain a number of otherwise perplexing features of our time, such as the steep drop in popular satisfaction with the direction of the country, the increasing attraction of extremist voices in electoral politics, and why overwhelming majorities continue to tell public opinion pollsters, year after year, that our ever-richer America is still stuck in a recession….

Comments 1 - 8 of 8        Search these comments

1   Dan8267   2017 Mar 31, 5:41pm  

Indiana Jones says

Men Without Work

Worst Australian pop band ever!

2   Indiana Jones   2017 Mar 31, 9:59pm  

Dan8267 says

Indiana Jones says

Men Without Work

Worst Australian pop band ever!

It's Men At Work.

3   Shaman   2017 Mar 31, 10:15pm  

Indiana Jones says

Dan8267 says

Indiana Jones says

Men Without Work

Worst Australian pop band ever!

It's Men At Work.

No, they are alright and their song is pretty catchy!

4   Indiana Jones   2017 Mar 31, 10:43pm  

"It is also a social crisis – and, I shall argue, a moral crisis. The growing incapability of grown men to function as breadwinners cannot help but undermine the American family. It casts those who nature designed to be strong into the role of dependents – on their wives or girlfriends, on their aging parents, or on government welfare."

For anyone who cares, I believe this is a huge factor on why men are falling into this "Red Pill" phenomenon and unfortunately blaming feminism and women. We all hear the stats on men's incomes being flat since 1973. Why is this?

Beyond an economic issues, I think this is a social issues that is not the fault of either women or men. But why this is happening is perplexing. Here are some theories:

1) the conspiracy theory: men are being stripped of their power, freedom, & ability to support themselves and their family and this is deliberate sabotage to further dis-empower American men and the human race and a step towards further enslavement. (Take down the men and then taking down the women will be easy).

2) the idealistic theory: this is a step toward a more egalitarian society, where all races, genders, ages, shapes, sizes, etc. are considered equal and there is no such thing as rich/poor. So this is a difficult phase but it is part of a transition to a better society.

3) the extra mixed-up theory: both men and women are being stripped of their gender identities, and transgenderism and androgyny will soon be the norm. This will lead to the end of the family unit as we know it.

5   carrieon   2017 Apr 1, 3:48am  

DUH? International trade deals shifted all the work to 3rd world countries where labor is cheaper and not subject to US regulations.

6   zzyzzx   2017 Apr 1, 5:42am  

It's all Obama's fault!!!
Trump will fix this.
Even liberals know that this is true.

7   Dan8267   2017 Apr 1, 11:57am  

Indiana Jones says

It's Men At Work.

No, they are the good Australian pop band. Men Without Work is a cheap cover band.

8   Indiana Jones   2017 Apr 1, 12:26pm  

carrieon says

DUH? International trade deals shifted all the work to 3rd world countries where labor is cheaper and not subject to US regulations.

Come on, that is just too simple of an explanation and makes too much sense.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste