There's a good reason restaurants are struggling to find workers
Laura Clawson, Daily
Kos Labor
RI Dept. of Labor and Training |
There’s a reason for all of this, and, despite what you may have been told, it’s not that no one wants to work anymore.
The leisure and hospitality industry remains 500,000 workers short of where it was before the pandemic, The Washington Post’s Abha Bhattarai and Maggie Penman report, and 2 million short of what it needs, but for the most part, those people are working. Just not in restaurants and bars.
Many
former restaurant workers found other jobs when they were laid off early in the
pandemic—and ended up deciding to stick with their new lines of work. Related,
there are now 1.4 million more people working in professional and business
services, a category that includes a range of office jobs, and it’s not the
only industry that’s seen increases.
“There’s
this reshuffling going on that is explaining why lots of industries can’t find
workers,” economist Betsey Stevenson told the Post. “Their
workers have left to go somewhere else.”
And
in a lot of cases, the somewhere else was better enough that people didn’t want
to go back to the unreliable pay, difficult customers, and awkward hours of the
restaurant industry. Around 2.5 million people did leave the labor force during
the pandemic, which has killed more than a million people in the U.S. and
prompted many others to retire early. That opened up a wave of good jobs.
“When
older workers—who were in relatively high-paying jobs at the top of the
ladder—retired, everyone else was able to climb up a step, from a worse job to
a better one,” Stony Brook University economist David Wiczer said.
Wiczer
is a co-author of a National Bureau of Economic
Research paper finding “patterns that suggest that workers
are moving up an occupational job ladder away from low paying, customer facing
and low skilled occupations towards higher paid, higher skilled occupations.
Consequently, the decline in employment in low-paying, low-skilled occupations
seems to reflect that workers previously employed in these sectors are now
finding better jobs, not by a decline in demand for workers.”
“This
has been a good evolution—it has raised wages and changed the structure of the
labor market in a deep, profound way,” AFL-CIO chief economist
William Spriggs told the Post. “Workers who were trapped in
low-wage jobs were able to escape by switching to higher-paying industries.”
It’s
hard on restaurant owners, but when they blame workers for not wanting to work,
you always have to add that workers don't want those specific jobs, and
understand that the complainers are telling on themselves and, to a great
extent, their entire industry.