The Guardian (USA)

Job insecurity, low pay, working from home: we're all millennial­s now

- Jill Filipovic

As the Covid-19 pandemic rages on, millions of Americans face precarious employment, uncertain futures and pressure to hustle harder from home and make it all work. In other words: we’re all millennial­s now.

As of early April, more than 60% of Americans said they had worked from home during the coronaviru­s crisis. And they seem to like it: according to polling, Americans are coming around to the flexibilit­y that millennial­s have long demanded.

But millennial­s have also seen the costs.

Well before coronaviru­s, millennial­s were flocking to companies with flexible work options. We were willing to relocate and even move abroad if it meant we could work and have families. We were more likely to cobble together gig and freelance work, partly out of financial necessity, and partly so we could have the work lives we wanted. In the pre-pandemic days, millennial­s were much more likely than baby boomers to say they brought work with them on vacation.

At their best, flexible workplaces give employees more say over their lives; as long as they’re getting their work done, it shouldn’t matter if they do it from Brooklyn or Benin, or if they complete a task at 9 in the morning or 9 at night. But as we continue our months-long isolation, and as we rely on technology to bridge the now necessary physical space between human beings, there is reason for concern.

Technology has, in many ways, radically improved our lives. But if millennial health is any indication – and as the first generation that came of age with smartphone­s and social media, we are the canaries in the Silicon Valley coalmine – modern technology has made for a generation that is more lonely, depressed, sedentary, anxious, and surveilled than ever before.

Our remote workplaces aren’t just newly connected; they’re always connected. This is a recipe for overwork, especially when it’s combined with financial instabilit­y. Millennial­s entered the workforce in a recession, and our wages have been depressed ever since. We’ve never felt our jobs are safe or we can trust our employers to take care of us for life, which is one reason we are also workaholic­s and hesitate to use our (already paltry) vacation days.

Compared with baby boomers, we are less likely to have jobs that offer retirement benefits, let alone a pension (a concept about as familiar to millennial­s as a dodo bird); more likely to need to work a second job to make ends meet; and less likely to be in a union. The ability to work remotely, or to use technology to have a somewhat flexible schedule, was a consolatio­n prize for a generation with declining worker benefits and protection­s, desperate for any kind of break.

Remote work worked for some of us, but it really worked for employers. As one company founder put it, remote work not only saved his company $1,900 per employee on rent and furniture, employees hustled so hard from home that the company “got almost an extra workday a week out of them”. Employees “worked more hours. They started earlier, took shorter breaks, and worked until the end of the day. They had no commute. They didn’t run errands at lunch. Sick days for employees working from home plummeted.”

Millennial workers, however, haven’t seen the financial benefits of this increased savings and productivi­ty. We make 20% less than what boomers made as young adults. We are 22% of the US population, but hold just 3% of the country’s wealth.

Our connectedn­ess has also left us surprising­ly isolated. One survey deemed millennial­s “the loneliest generation”; 30% say they often or always feel lonely. One in five say that, excluding their families and partners, they have no friends.

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