Dear Readers:
Dozens of readers have asked about the Hostess bankruptcy and what I think the effects of automation (robots) will be on the future job market for their kids.
I fondly remember Hostess, the maker of Twinkies. Our high school had an annual Twinkie eating contest, and Sam, a well-liked runt, weighing 120 pounds with wet pennies in his pockets, always won. I've been eating those snack cakes since the summer of 1947, and they're still umm-umm good. But a couple of years ago, Hostess was forced to declare bankruptcy, and 18,500 employees-bakers, tasters, wrappers, creamers, mixers, etc.-lost their jobs. An intransigent union, rising wages and benefits, and inefficient work rules prevented Hostess from selling products profitably. When management couldn't come to an agreement over wages, health care costs, pensions and work rules, Hostess declared bankruptcy.
Mixing batter, boxing cupcakes on an assembly line or moving Twinkies with a forklift for shipping to Wal-Mart isn't worth $18 to $57 an hour. So private equity shook the bull by the horns, shuttered inefficient factories, installed automatic production facilities and improved the company's distribution systems. Today-with 6 percent of the previous workforce, nonunion work rules and automation-Hostess is producing those sweet things at a fraction of the cost and making a swell profit.
Economist Joseph Schumpeter, who coined the term "creative destruction," should be read by everybody. Many old jobs that paid solid wages are gone, and a "hiring down" process is being imitated in cities around the country. It wasn't long ago when tens of thousands of union autoworkers were getting huge pensions and earning $87 an hour. In the 1950s, '60s and '70s, AT&T, Monsanto, DuPont, Procter & Gamble and U.S. Steel employed tens of thousands of secretaries. Like sheep, they flocked to their desks at 8:30 a.m., lunched between 12:00 and 12:30, and at 5:00 gathered their purses and herded home. They were the middle class, with a house with a picket fence, a recent-model car, a retirement plan and schools with PTAs. They were replaced by robots.
So among the most worrisome challenges facing today's disappearing middle class is: What happens when the robots come for our jobs? Most lower-income professions-such as housekeepers, landscapers, baggage handlers, day care workers and custodians-are not appealing to robots. But most middle-class jobs-such as those in financial services, software engineering, sales, architecture, teaching, banking and trucking-are. The advances in technology are increasing faster than our ability to adjust. And in the process, our educational system continues to grow dumber and bigger, definitely not better, while graduating record numbers of empty heads that don't fit.
Ironically, robot power may be happening in India, Malaysia, Myanmar and Bangladesh. Higher U.S. wage demands forced Wal-Mart, Target, Stein Mart, Sears, etc., to demand lower prices from their suppliers. Soon robotic sewing machines made by Johnson Controls will automate this process, putting millions of Asian hands out of business. Higher wage demands, without increasing worker productivity, have forced Walgreens and CVS to reduce store employment. There are longer lines at cash registers because it's cheaper to run one register than two and customers are malleable. Note that the wait time to talk to someone at Visa, your cable company, your bank or a General Motors dealership has doubled, but: "Your calls are important to us." Having fewer employees increases income. Even catalog sales companies have cut back on their phone service and place customers on hold to reduce selling costs. Lowe's and Home Depot have digital checkouts, as do some restaurant chains. And have you noticed that many businesses are hiring stupids because they work for less?
By default, most of today's graduates have become members of the "lost generation." College degrees, especially those silly online degrees, aren't worth a franc or freckle. We are witnessing the dumbing down of America. Upper-middle-class students without wealthy parents and huge IQs and who can't excel in STEM courses are becoming the new lower middle class. Jobs that pay living wages are history for the next several decades. So today's kids should join the armed services to earn maturity and learn skills that have commercial value.
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Please address your financial questions to Malcolm Berko, P.O. Box 8303, Largo, FL 33775, or email him at mjberko@yahoo.com. To find out more about Malcolm Berko and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.
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Published: Tue, Jun 30, 2015