I’m from asia and I’m relatively young (22) and it’s literally fucking impossible to get a job. I’ve been trying everything and I don’t understand why it’s extremely difficult to land a no-skill minimum-wage job. It’s fucking ridiculous and it’s tiring me out I’m in a terrible financial situation right now. I live with my mother and we’re struggling to scrape by now, I live off noodles and pasta (I’ve lost about 5kg just this month) so anyway to make some money would be great. So Bros, I ask you, how do I get a job, or better yet, how do I make money as a broke, skillness loser such as myself? Because I am flat-ass BROKE

  • Tachanka [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    3 months ago

    I’ve been trying everything and I don’t understand why it’s extremely difficult to land a no-skill minimum-wage job.

    unemployment is built into capitalism. if all able-bodied adults were employed, it would be hard to fire people and instantly replace them. Capitalists need there to be a permanent body of unemployed people who are so desperate that they will accept below-subsistence wages. That way, when a work force tries to unionize or strike, the capitalist can simply contrive a reason to fire everyone one by one, and replace them gradually with desperate unemployed people. This is called the “reserve army of labor.” The capitalist class frequently deny that they want there to be unemployment, since that would contradict their claim that they are “job creators” (rather than job gatekeepers) but sometimes they’ll admit it if they think wages are getting too high.

    For example, real estate CEO Tim Gurner openly advocated for a reserve army of labour during an onstage appearance at the Australian Financial Review’s Property Summit:

    I think the problem that we’ve had is that people have decided they really didn’t want to work so much anymore through COVID, and that has had a massive issue on productivity. . . . They have been paid a lot to do not too much, and we need to see that change. We need to see unemployment rise. Unemployment needs to jump 40-50 percent, in my view. We need to see pain in the economy. We need to remind people that they work for the employer, not the other way around. There’s been a systematic change where employees feel the employer is extremely lucky to have them, as opposed to the other way around. So it’s a dynamic that has to change. We’ve got to kill that attitude, and that has to come through hurt in the economy.

    The Economist published a thinkpiece on November 24th, 2022, titled “Why American unemployment needs to rise,” openly advocating for an increase in the size of the reserve army of labour:

    As the tightest corner of the ultra-taut American labour market, Minnesota bears watching. Its unemployment rate has started to tick up, rising from 1.8% in June to 2.1% last month. It might seem perverse to call that good news, but one lesson from the past year is that excessively low unemployment really does hurt: it constrains and corrodes the services offered by hospitals, schools, restaurants and more. In Northfield there is at least one tiny hint that relief might be at hand. After a difficult dry spell, the HideAway, a downtown café, received four job applications over the past two weeks. From those it hired two sorely needed baristas. “We just got lucky,” reckons Joan Spaulding, its owner.

    The Wall Street Journal published a thinkpiece on July 31, 2022, titled “Lower Inflation Likely Requires Higher Unemployment; How High Is the Question,” also openly advocating for an increase in the size of the reserve army of labour.

    In order to lower inflation] we need two years of 7.5% unemployment, or five years of 6% unemployment, or…one year of 10% unemployment

    CNN published a thinkpiece on September 2, 2022, titled “Yes, the unemployment rate rose. Here’s why that’s good news.” In that piece, United States Secretary of labour Marty Walsh was quoted as saying:

    increasing the supply of available workers is positive for the economy, even if it does increase the official jobless rate

    CBS published an article on September 30, 2022, titled “Buckle up, America: The Fed plans to sharply boost unemployment.” In that piece, it is suggested that wage increases cause inflation, because wage increases cause the bourgeoisie to hike prices. In short, it is suggested that the prices of commodities are determined or regulated by wages.

    Here’s the idea behind why boosting the nation’s unemployment could cool inflation. With an additional million or two people out of work, the newly unemployed and their families would sharply cut back on spending, while for most people who are still working, wage growth would flatline. When companies assume their labour costs are unlikely to rise, the theory goes, they will stop hiking prices. That, in turn, slows inflation.

    The bourgeoisie justify all this with the idea that wages determine prices. This was firmly argued against by Marx in Chapter 5 of Value, Price and Profit (1865):

    The dogma that “wages determine the price of commodities,” expressed in its most abstract terms, comes to this, that “value is determined by value,” and this tautology means that, in fact, we know nothing at all about value. Accepting this premise, all reasoning about the general laws of political economy turns into mere twaddle. It was, therefore, the great merit of Ricardo that in his work on the principles of political economy, published in 1817, he fundamentally destroyed the old popular, and worn-out fallacy that “wages determine prices,” a fallacy which Adam Smith and his French predecessors had spurned in the really scientific parts of their researches, but which they reproduced in their more exoterical and vulgarizing chapters.

    Source: https://wiki.leftypol.org/wiki/Reserve_army_of_labour particularly the section titled “bourgeois apologetics”