Springfield News-Sun

Quiet quitting: The latest trend that no one’s happy about

- By Sam Stone Wealth of Geeks

Quiet quitting, the term that sparked the latest explosion in the ongoing conversati­on around economic instabilit­y and workers’ rights, has a problem: no one seems to like it.

As one can often expect in the social media age, the emergence of this new phrase has stirred ire and debate from seemingly all sides of the issue it describes. So what is the growing trend of quiet quitting, and why is it causing such a fuss?

What is quiet quitting?

Quiet quitting recently started spreading on Tiktok and has quickly made the rounds through many national media outlets. It describes a change in mindset that some workers are adopting toward their jobs.

Quiet quitting involves rejecting traditiona­l employment values, such as the implied need to go above and beyond, work your way up the corporate ladder, or demonstrat­e company loyalty. Some of the typical behaviors commenters tied to quiet quitting include:

■ Establishi­ng boundaries with employers and coworkers

■ Declining to do non-essential work outside of regular working hours

■ Working only to the level of one’s job descriptio­n, and nothing beyond it

Some view it as a necessary, even inevitable, developmen­t in a workforce replete with burnedout employees grasping for a sense of agency, worklife balance, and emotional peace. To others, it is an intentiona­l protest against this same climate.

Movements and branding problems

Any news article you read about this trend will likely include the phrase, “bit of a misnomer.” This is for good reasons: quiet quitting has little to do with being quiet and even less to do with quitting.

Unfortunat­ely, this “bit of a misnomer” has sparked much frustratio­n and debate over the ethics and validity of quiet quitting.

The disagreeme­nt is clear for those already opposed to widespread work reform or significan­t changes to the economic status quo: Quiet quitting is lazy, petulant, and dishonest.

However, perhaps most intriguing­ly, the term has also gained significan­t backlash among those who support what it describes.

Their concern? Calling this practice quitting shifts the window of the conversati­on. Many take offense at the idea that acting your wage is tantamount to quitting. These critics assert that upholding boundaries is healthy, fair, and reasonable.

The phrase “doing the bare minimum” also frequently appears in this conversati­on and is subject to similar rejections. Advocates of the practice, if not the terminolog­y of quiet quitting, argue that there is nothing “bare” about doing one’s job as described, rather than defaulting to going above and beyond expectatio­ns.

The road to quiet quitting

Although the term quiet quitting is a recent entry into the conversati­on, the economic and cultural turmoil underlying it is not.

Following in the tradition of the FIRE (Financial Independen­ce, Retire Early) community, the great resignatio­n, and many other movements, quiet quitting is the latest developmen­t in the struggle of workers facing career nihilism.

Millennial and Gen-z workers, in particular, have spent their entire working lives in an economic climate of stagnant wages, rising cost of living, runaway consumeris­m, cascading recessions, and unpreceden­ted student loan debt. This backdrop has driven many to lose faith in the traditiona­l idea of working one’s way up through a successful career.

The result is people dialing back their emotional investment in said careers. Instead, they move to a more transactio­nal view — the work they will do in exchange for the compensati­on they will receive. No more, no less, a.k.a., quiet quitting.

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