VaughanJB
Scrappy VIP
There are a couple questions that I spend a lot of time thinking about, and this is one. My work days are done, but having worked in tech for pretty much my whole working life, the one thing I know for sure is that the pace of change is quickening, and anything you can point to today, and in the past, is subject to change. In short, my life experience of working won't be the way young people day experience their working lives. There is simply too much change, skills are different, expectations are different.
The economy today is showing us this time and again. Sure, when thinking about the economy we listen to the numbers our governments publish and act as though it's the whole story, yet I know it's not. Many people didn't realize this until they suddenly found themselves unable to find a home, have food, and so on.
We now have a gig economy, and that can be a brutal experience. We have minimum wages that haven't kept up with inflation, so we have the working poor. We have the working poor before, of course, but it's far worse now. When you're working a full week and having to live in your car, something is broken.
So I ponder this question. Today I needed a taxi. I picked up my home phone and dialed the number. I got an automated voice when I used to get a person. Once the taxi was booked I had my ride and paid, plus a tip. I then got alerted that actually, picking up a phone and calling was old school, the small time taxi service I use has an app now for your Smartphone. I downloaded it and the app is like Uber. Not only no need for that person answering the phone, but no need for a call at all. The app shows where you are, and where taxis are around me, giving me the length of time before they get to my home. And so on.
Anyway - the reason I'm posting this is because I just watched a very good documentary on the topic and I wanted to share. It's on Youtube, and if you're interested it lasts a little under an hour. There is likely no good reason for anyone here to watch it, we're all retired of close to it. But it does give insight into what younger folk have to prepare for - a radically different work force.
The economy today is showing us this time and again. Sure, when thinking about the economy we listen to the numbers our governments publish and act as though it's the whole story, yet I know it's not. Many people didn't realize this until they suddenly found themselves unable to find a home, have food, and so on.
We now have a gig economy, and that can be a brutal experience. We have minimum wages that haven't kept up with inflation, so we have the working poor. We have the working poor before, of course, but it's far worse now. When you're working a full week and having to live in your car, something is broken.
So I ponder this question. Today I needed a taxi. I picked up my home phone and dialed the number. I got an automated voice when I used to get a person. Once the taxi was booked I had my ride and paid, plus a tip. I then got alerted that actually, picking up a phone and calling was old school, the small time taxi service I use has an app now for your Smartphone. I downloaded it and the app is like Uber. Not only no need for that person answering the phone, but no need for a call at all. The app shows where you are, and where taxis are around me, giving me the length of time before they get to my home. And so on.
Anyway - the reason I'm posting this is because I just watched a very good documentary on the topic and I wanted to share. It's on Youtube, and if you're interested it lasts a little under an hour. There is likely no good reason for anyone here to watch it, we're all retired of close to it. But it does give insight into what younger folk have to prepare for - a radically different work force.