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An uncertain future interview with professor robert reich from the goldman school of public policy

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The EIU: In your view, how will labour markets evolve in the next 10-15 years?Professor Robert Reich: Jobs will become ever less secure.. It’s the direction in which all work is heading,

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The EIU: In your view, how will labour markets evolve in the next 10-15 years?

Professor Robert Reich: Jobs will become ever less secure Most people will not be able to predict

from one month to the next how much they’ll earn Their hours will be less predictable as well

What is the cause of this trend?

Companies are moving from a fixed-cost business model to a variable-cost model so that they can

be more nimble Employment is the biggest cost of all, so obviously a variable-cost job also means

less secure and less predictable employment

Is it a global phenomenon?

It’s the direction in which all work is heading, but the United States is in the lead Other nations

impose more regulations and constraints in order to make work more secure and predictable, and

some nations still have relatively strong labour unions that are also holding on to more secure and

predictable forms of work

How is this trend manifesting itself already today?

In all sorts of ways: more contract work, more freelancing, more temporary work, more

part-time work, more work based on billable hours, and less certain hours and pay even for people

considered to be full-time employees

S P O N S O R E D B Y :

An uncertAin future

As companies seek greater cost variability, jobs will

become less secure and companies more transient

In the face of rapid technological change and a globalised economy that allows

new entrants to disrupt markets at the drop of a hat, businesses increasingly

crave agility In many cases, companies will seek to achieve that agility by growing

the section of their workforce that consists of temporary, part-time or freelance

workers

This will have significant ramifications for workers’ lives As Robert Reich,

chancellor’s professor of public policy at the Goldman School of Public Policy at the

University of California, Berkeley, explains in this interview with The Economist

Intelligence Unit (EIU), the shift will place increased pressure on workers to

promote their professional profiles to win work, while reducing their ability to

borrow against future earnings

Meanwhile, the very nature of companies themselves will shift, from communities

with a shared identity to fluid associations of workers temporarily united behind

a brand This will radically reshape the way companies employ and deploy human

resources, and what it means to be a business

This interview is part of an investigation into the future of work by The

Economist Intelligence Unit, sponsored by Ricoh Europe For more, visit

http://bit.ly/eiufuturework

Professor Robert Reich

Goldman School of Public Policy, UC Berkeley

Photo: Perian Flaherty

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What leads you to believe that this is a long-term trend?

The structure of the economy is shifting radically Technologies are putting a premium on

nimbleness, the capacity to change direction very quickly Companies have no choice but

to be flexible and fast Technologies are also making it very efficient to hire large numbers

of people for a relatively short time (look at the Amazon Mechanical Turk for an extreme

example)

Will job insecurity affect all industries, or will some be left unscathed?

All industries will be affected eventually The last bastion of security will be tenured

professors like me, but we’re a dying breed

What are the implications for the economy, for society, and for individuals?

The net result is more personal and familial stress, more willingness on the part of working

people to take on whatever work comes along (for fear that it will not be there in the future),

longer and more irregular working hours, greater emphasis on promotion and

self-marketing, and—in macroeconomic terms—less willingness to take on lots of debt and instead

more emphasis on saving

As in so many other areas of the economy, people who have the most to offer in terms of their

education, talents and connections will do well Others, less so

And what will the impact be for businesses?

The very definition of a company will be up for grabs because it will be composed of so many

moveable and temporary parts Essentially, a company will consist of a key capital asset, such

as a valuable piece of intellectual property, coupled with a brand name All else, especially its

workers, won’t really be “its” workers at all Not even the core “talent” will stick around for

long At the level of the firm, HR departments will be less concerned about employee benefits

and more about temporary recruiting

Is this trend inevitable, or can we do something about it?

Obviously, we can do something about it If the public doesn’t like the degree of insecurity the

market is generating, it will push government to regulate the labour market and companies

to provide more stability and security But, of course, any such rigidity will come with a cost—

less nimbleness and efficiency Will the cost be worth it? At some point, almost certainly

The structure of the economy is shifting radically Companies have no choice but to

be flexible and fast.

Professor Robert Reich Goldman School of Public Policy, UC Berkeley

S P O N S O R E D B Y :

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