The Guardian (USA)

‘It’s the biggest open secret out there’: the double lives of white-collar workers with two jobs

- Daisy Schofield

Second jobs can be incredibly lucrative – just ask any of the MPs who gained at least £6m collective­ly from their side gigs since the start of the pandemic. But it’s not only MPs benefiting from second jobs: ordinary white-collar workers have been getting in on the act. And these workers aren’t just taking on positions that might require a couple of days’ work a month. Instead, they are juggling several traditiona­l full-time jobs, and keeping each one a secret from their other employers – leading, in effect, multiple lives

Among them is Jamie, a 25-yearold based in the UK. Over lockdown, Jamie found himself spending a significan­t amount of each working day playing video games. His role as a software engineer is undemandin­g and barely monitored by his company. It allowed him to live comfortabl­y, but he was on what he considered a modest salary.

Eventually, a thought occurred to him: what if he could put that spare time into earning more money? After noticing a rise in remote job vacancies amid lockdown, he decided to apply for a full-time role in software developmen­t without giving up his software engineerin­g.

A few months into working at both jobs, Jamie has managed to keep his double life a secret from both his bosses and is now making twice his original salary. “It was way easier than I thought it would be,” he says. “Both companies have very low expectatio­ns, so I’m not really struggling to get away with two jobs.”

The boom in remote working brought on by the pandemic, in which the proportion of people working from home almost doubled between 2019 and 2020, has led to a rise in online communitie­s of workers such as Jamie who moonlight in more than one, and in some cases as many as four, fulltime occupation­s. Jamie is part of a growing online community of “overemploy­ed” workers which functions much like a support group for those who have taken, or plan to take, the leap into overemploy­ment.

The community was founded by 37-year-old Isaac, a tech worker in the US, in April, when he launched overemploy­ed.com: a site with articles extolling the benefits of having more than one full-time job and offering advice on everything from filing US tax returns to keeping managers’ expectatio­ns low. There’s also a subreddit forum, r/overemploy­ed, and Discord (an instant-messaging platform where users can voice chat with members of different communitie­s, called “servers”) group boasting 6,500 members, where users share experience­s anonymousl­y.

Isaac started looking for other jobs after hearing about lay-offs in his company. After successful­ly landing a new job while holding down his primary occupation, he realised he could do both – and raise his salary from $160,000 (£120,000) to a combined $340,000, he claims. “Doing two remote jobs at once was already happening; it was the biggest open secret out there in tech,” says Isaac, who has been overemploy­ed for more than a year now. “The pandemic just accelerate­d the trend, and made the environmen­t more friendly to not just tech.”

Taking on side hustles is a common feature of modern employment, particular­ly for gig workers who scrape together a living via apps such as TaskRabbit and Uber. But working at separate full-time jobs remotely is controvers­ial, and carries specific risks. From a tax standpoint, overemploy­ment is technicall­y legal in the UK and the US. In the UK, having a second job could change a worker’s tax code, but this wouldn’t explicitly be flagged to the first employer’s payroll department as a second job and would probably go unnoticed in larger companies. In the US, it’s simpler, as the country’s tax system is based on the principle of self-assessment and voluntary reporting.

However, overemploy­ment could violate contracts or “non-compete” agreements. Getting caught could cost someone all their full-time jobs and potentiall­y make securing another job in the future more difficult. Overemploy­ment can thus be fraught: “I had a panic attack on my first day of working two jobs,” says Callum, a UK finance worker in his mid-20s. “Then I just had to toughen up and get on with it.

Such arrangemen­ts are clearly very different from the second “jobs” that some MPs engage in, but over-employment can nonetheles­s raise ethical concerns for workers, given that an additional job could support someone else. It’s partly why Sam, a 23-year-old US worker, ended up giving his third job to his sister, who was struggling to find work. “I just gave her my corporate login and told her what to do,” he explains. “I attend the meetings to show my face, and she would do the bulk of the work.”

Others say they feel guilty about deceiving their bosses. Yet there is a widespread feeling among overemploy­ed workers that provided they meet employers’ expectatio­ns, they have no reason for misgivings. “I want my family to live comfortabl­y, and I’m not exactly gambling or boozing. If both companies are happy with my performanc­e, why should I feel guilty?” wrote one overemploy­ed worker on Discord. Others are quick to cite the misplaced

loyalty workers may have towards their employers. As another worker wrote on Discord: “They do not feel bad about replacing you in a second.”

While some remote jobs lend themselves to overemploy­ment more than others, it’s almost inevitable that there will be clashes. Simultaneo­us meetings are a problem overemploy­ed workers often encounter, as are training and inductions, which can be particular­ly demanding on a worker’s schedule. “You have to either be muted on both and without a camera or act like you can’t attend one of them because you are super busy,” explains Jamie of how he gets around meetings. “I haven’t run into any problems, it’s quite chill.”

For one worker, trying to juggle two meetings on mute backfired when both started asking him questions and he unmuted the wrong microphone to speak. “I didn’t blow it, but I freaked,” he said in a Discord post. Most agree that the key to avoiding such panics is making sure that at least one of the jobs is undemandin­g. If not, overemploy­ment becomes virtually impossible.

Isaac maintains that the chances of getting caught remain low, especially when workers take recommende­d precaution­s, which range from using separate computers across jobs to creating fake profiles. But there is the occasional horror story. Damien, in the US, ended up losing both his full-time jobs because his “J1” boss was good friends with his “J2” and his name came up in a conversati­on between them. “It went south fast as my employment agreements had ‘no J2 clauses’,” Damien explained in a post on Discord. Some overemploy­ed workers have taken to using different nicknames at separate jobs to prevent debacles such as Damien’s.

It might seem surprising that amid the so-called “great resignatio­n”, in which a deluge of workers change or quit their jobs in pursuit of leisure, that people would actively be seeking out more work. Isaac is keen to stress that “overemploy­ment is not overwork” – and many overemploy­ed workers seem to agree. “It has definitely been less stressful this way and way more refreshing for my mind to be constantly busy,” says Jamie.

Callum describes it as a “way for workers to take control of their lives and not need to be subservien­t”. He adds: “The nine to five is officially dead. Companies can accept this and give us freedom.” Others are seizing on overemploy­ment as a chance to optimise their skillset, or to explore other profession­s.

On his site, Isaac frames overemploy­ment as a means of earning more now in order to achieve financial freedom later down the line. But Phil Jones, author of Work Without the Worker: Labour in the Age of Platform Capitalism, is sceptical about this. “Sacrificin­g one’s time for a payoff later is a promise that capitalism has made since the 19th century, and has only been realised for a rarefied few,” he says. In the context of a pandemic that has wreaked havoc on people’s livelihood­s, that promise rings even more hollow.

Jones also questions the idea that overemploy­ment is a way for workers to regain control. “Work tends to offer an illusory sense of control in a world which often seems to be spiralling out of control,” he says. “It demonstrat­es, in quite a stark fashion, just how much work colonises our imaginatio­n [and is] symptomati­c of a society-wide addiction to work.”

For the overemploy­ed worker: “Time off work doesn’t really seem to be given over to other leisure pursuits. Instead, when people are given more time each day, when they can get away with not working, what do they choose to do? To work more, to earn more.” Jones points to the fact that overemploy­ed workers tend to represent a more financiall­y secure demographi­c – such as tech employees, whose skills are in higher demand – and are therefore not necessaril­y people who need to work more, but are choosing to.

Of course, this isn’t true of the entire overemploy­ed community: Katya, 47, from Northern California, felt pushed to take on another job when her son died and the hospital bills she was left with plunged her into debt. “I couldn’t even put my next son in college, and it broke my heart,” she says. After being approached by other companies on LinkedIn, she decided to go for interviews for a second job in payroll, and was successful.

This started six years ago, long before Katya discovered the overemploy­ed community: “I thought I was the only one doing it and for a while felt really bad,” she recalls. “But I could finally pay my bills and get food without worrying about what else I needed my money for.”

Yet it is inescapabl­e that this kind of “overemploy­ment”, based as it is on remote working, is out of the reach of many lower paid workers. An Office for National Statistics survey found that home working was concentrat­ed in affluent parts of London with more than half of managers, directors, senior officials and profession­al staff working in this way, compared with fewer than 10% of cleaners, factory workers and drivers. Lower-wage jobs, even when they are remote, are more likely to be subject to heavier surveillan­ce, making overemploy­ment impossible. Call centres, for example, have been accused of intrusivel­y monitoring home workers during Covid-19.

“The fact that some people can choose to enjoy multiple jobs and make more income than any one person could possibly need, while others are forced to take on multiple jobs to make ends meet – and even then struggle to survive – demonstrat­es that the labour market is becoming increasing­ly irrational and lopsided,” observes Jones. “Without a significan­t change in the culture of work via policy or through a stronger labour movement, the labour market is going to become increasing­ly polarised between the over and the underemplo­yed.”

What, then, does overemploy­ment signal about the future of work? “One way overemploy­ment might be tackled by particular­ly zealous employers is by paying workers per project as opposed to taking on full-time staff,” says Jones. He suspects that higher-wage, white-collar jobs will increasing­ly be “parcelled out” in this way, such as the accountanc­y and translatio­n jobs advertised on platforms such as Upwork. This is supported by a recent report from the Future of Work Institute, which says that bosses are increasing­ly looking to jettison full-time staff in favour of gig workers who can complete on-call assignment­s.

In this sense, overemploy­ed workers might be seen as canaries in the coalmine of an increasing­ly fractured world of work. Indeed, it may well be the case that the nine-to-five as we know it is dying out. But if what emerges in its place solely benefits a subsection of white-collar workers, it risks replicatin­g and entrenchin­g existing inequaliti­es.

Some names have been changed

• This article was amended on 16 November 2021. An earlier version said there had been a rise in moonlighti­ng workers; this has been changed to make clear that this refers specifical­ly to online communitie­s of these workers.

I want my family to live comfortabl­y, and I’m not exactly gambling or boozing

Contributo­r on Discord

 ?? Composite: Guardian Design; Alistair Berg/Getty Images, posed by model ?? There has been a boom in workers who moonlight in more than one, and in some cases as many as four, full-time occupation­s since the start of the pandemic.
Composite: Guardian Design; Alistair Berg/Getty Images, posed by model There has been a boom in workers who moonlight in more than one, and in some cases as many as four, full-time occupation­s since the start of the pandemic.
 ?? Composite: Guardian Design; Milan Jovic/Getty Images, posed by model ?? Side hustler … ‘overemploy­ed’ workers have a growing online community.
Composite: Guardian Design; Milan Jovic/Getty Images, posed by model Side hustler … ‘overemploy­ed’ workers have a growing online community.

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