By Robert
Reich
Some
big law firms are also getting into the act. Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
is offering 22 paid weeks off for both male and female
attorneys.
Even
Wall Street is taking baby steps in the direction of family-friendly work. Goldman Sachs just doubled paid parental leave to four weeks.
All
this should be welcome news. Millennials now constitute the largest segment of
the American work force. Many are just forming families, so the new
family-friendly policies seem ideally timed.
But
before we celebrate the dawn of a new era, keep two basic truths in mind.
First,
these new policies apply only to a tiny group considered “talent” – highly
educated and in high demand.
“Netflix’s
continued success hinges on us competing for and keeping the most talented
individuals in their field,” writes Tawni
Cranz, Netflix’s chief talent officer.
That
Neflix has a “chief talent officer” tells you a lot.
Netflix’s
new policy doesn’t apply to all Netflix employees, by the way. Those in
Netflix’s DVD division aren’t covered. They’re not “talent.”
They’re
like the vast majority of American workers – considered easily replaceable.
Employers
treat replaceable workers as costs to be cut, not as assets to be developed.
Replaceable
workers almost never get paid family leave, they get a few paid sick days, and
barely any vacation time.
If
such replaceables are eligible for 12 weeks of family leave it’s only because
the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 (which I am proud to have implemented
when labor secretary under Bill Clinton) requires it.
But
Family and Medical leave time doesn’t come with pay – which is why only 40
percent of eligible workers can afford to use it. And it doesn’t cover
companies or franchisees with fewer than 50 employees.
Almost
all other advanced nations provide three or four months paid leave – to fathers
as well as mothers. Plus paid sick leave, generous vacation time, and limits on
how many work hours employers can demand.
The
second thing to know about the new family-friendly work policies is that
relatively few talented millennials are taking advantage of them.
They
can’t take the time.
One
of my former Berkeley students who’s now at a tech firm across the Bay told me
he’s working fifteen-hour days.
Another,
who’s at a Washington law firm, said she’s on call 24-7. Emails often arrive
past midnight, followed by text messages asking why the emails haven’t been
answered.
These
young men won’t take paternity leave and these young women won’t even get
pregnant – because it looks bad.
Forget
work-life balance. It’s work-as-life.
A
recent New York Times story about Amazon reports that when young workers hit
the wall from the unrelenting pace, they’re told to climb it.
Why
do the talented millennials work so hard?
Partly
because being promoted – getting more equity, running a division, making
partner – promises such vast rewards. Vaster rewards than any generation before
them has ever been offered.
Also,
you’re either on the fast track or you’re on a dead-end road.
“I’ve
got to show total dedication,” one of my former students explained. “It’s all
or nothing.”
Which
is why millennial men – who research shows have more egalitarian attitudes about
family and gender roles than their predecessors – are nonetheless failing to live up to their values once they
hit the treadmills.
It’s
also why women on such high-powered career tracks are delaying or ultimately
giving up on being mothers.
Or
they’re giving up on the fast track.
After
the collapse of 2000, the share of women working in high tech dropped sharply.
And although tech recovered, female participation is still 6 percent lower than in 1998.
If
they’re lucky, women on the fast track can afford to buy their way to
motherhood. Marissa Mayer, appointed Yahoo’s CEO while six months pregnant, was
back at her desk two weeks later.
It’s
possible for such women to have it all – to “lean in” as Sheryl Sandberg puts
it – only because they have enough resources for 24-hour childcare, car service
for the kids and nannies, and all the extra help needed.
I’m
delighted Netflix and other high-powered firms are offering family-friendly
work.
But
I take most of it with a grain of silicon. So should you.
ROBERT B. REICH, Chancellor’s Professor of
Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at
the Blum Center for Developing Economies, was Secretary of Labor in the Clinton
administration. Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet
secretaries of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including
the best sellers “Aftershock, “The Work of Nations," and"Beyond
Outrage." He is also a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine
and chairman of Common Cause. His film, INEQUALITY FOR ALL is available on
Netflix, iTunes, Amazon. His new book, "SAVING CAPITALISM: For the Many,
Not the Few" is out 9/29.