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- May 2007People who worry about the increasing gap between rich and poor
- generally look back on the mid twentieth century as a golden age.
- In those days we had a large number of high-paying union manufacturing
- jobs that boosted the median income. I wouldn't quite call the
- high-paying union job a myth, but I think people who dwell on it
- are reading too much into it.Oddly enough, it was working with startups that made me realize
- where the high-paying union job came from. In a rapidly growing
- market, you don't worry too much about efficiency. It's more
- important to grow fast. If there's some mundane problem getting
- in your way, and there's a simple solution that's somewhat expensive,
- just take it and get on with more important things. EBay didn't
- win by paying less for servers than their competitors.Difficult though it may be to imagine now, manufacturing was a
- growth industry in the mid twentieth century. This was an era when
- small firms making everything from cars to candy were getting
- consolidated into a new kind of corporation with national reach and
- huge economies of scale. You had to grow fast or die. Workers
- were for these companies what servers are for an Internet startup.
- A reliable supply was more important than low cost.If you looked in the head of a 1950s auto executive, the attitude
- must have been: sure, give 'em whatever they ask for, so long as
- the new model isn't delayed.In other words, those workers were not paid what their work was
- worth. Circumstances being what they were, companies would have
- been stupid to insist on paying them so little.If you want a less controversial example of this phenomenon, ask
- anyone who worked as a consultant building web sites during the
- Internet Bubble. In the late nineties you could get paid huge sums
- of money for building the most trivial things. And yet does anyone
- who was there have any expectation those days will ever return? I
- doubt it. Surely everyone realizes that was just a temporary
- aberration.The era of labor unions seems to have been the same kind of aberration,
- just spread
- over a longer period, and mixed together with a lot of ideology
- that prevents people from viewing it with as cold an eye as they
- would something like consulting during the Bubble.Basically, unions were just Razorfish.People who think the labor movement was the creation of heroic union
- organizers have a problem to explain: why are unions shrinking now?
- The best they can do is fall back on the default explanation of
- people living in fallen civilizations. Our ancestors were giants.
- The workers of the early twentieth century must have had a moral
- courage that's lacking today.In fact there's a simpler explanation. The early twentieth century
- was just a fast-growing startup overpaying for infrastructure. And
- we in the present are not a fallen people, who have abandoned
- whatever mysterious high-minded principles produced the high-paying
- union job. We simply live in a time when the fast-growing companies
- overspend on different things.
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