麻豆果冻传媒

In Short

What We Know (and Don’t) about Part-Time Work

What We Know (And Don't) 麻豆果冻传媒 Part-Time Work_image.jpeg

Show me the data: that鈥檚 often the first
thing decision-makers say when it comes to public policy on labor and
employment. And in many ways, it鈥檚 the raison
d鈥檈tre for the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the first federal
agency devoted to statistical analysis. It was founded in 1884 with the charge of
recording and sharing facts about who was working, where, and under what
conditions.

If headlines are any indication, some of the
biggest question marks among policymakers about today鈥檚 data 鈥 who鈥檚 working,
when, and how鈥攅merge from the issue of part-time work. Elizabeth Warren and
other lawmakers this week
a new 鈥淪chedules That Work Act,鈥 highlighting an ongoing conversation about the
ways in which flexible scheduling has proven to be a double-edged sword for
part-time workers in low-wage jobs鈥攅specially in retail鈥攚ho face unpredictable
schedules that employers can change at a moment鈥檚 notice. Earlier this summer,
a California labor commission鈥檚 ruling that an Uber driver was an employee, not
a contractor, also
controversy and debate about how government should create policy and regulate
labor practices to address part-time work as the continues to .

What headline news stories often overlook,
however, is the sheer diversity and scope of the concerns involved when
debating policy avenues to help part-time workers鈥攚hich brings us back to data.
鈥淚f you don鈥檛 have good data, you make what is technically known as lousy
decisions,鈥 quipped the Honorable Erica Groshen, Commissioner of Labor
Statistics for the BLS, at a recent event at 麻豆果冻传媒, where she presented
the latest federal numbers on part-time workers and talked with 麻豆果冻传媒 Senior
Fellow David Gray, Senior Policy Analyst Mary Alice McCarthy, Managing Director and Co-Founder Byron Auguste, and , Director of and author, with Jared Meyer, of the recent
book .

As Groshen broke it down, part-time work in
America by the numbers looks vastly different depending on whether you鈥檙e working
part-time by choice or not. Overall, part-time workers鈥 share of the workforce
surged to 20 percent during the recession and is falling slowly, back down to
18.6 percent in June. Involuntary part-time work specifically鈥攚hich includes
employees whose jobs would normally be full-time but lack enough hours to go
around and those who were unable to find a full-time position at all鈥斺渞ose a lot during the Great Recession,鈥
reported Groshen, 鈥渁nd it remains high,鈥 particularly for women and for young
Americans. The median wage for that involuntary part-time work last year was
$9.78, compared to $14.98 for full-time workers.

The over-representation of young people among
the ranks of underpaid involuntary part-time workers wasn鈥檛 a surprise to
Furchtgott-Roth, who wrote Disinherited
to 鈥渢alk about how government policy鈥濃攐n things like student debt, healthcare,
and regulation of labor practices鈥攊s biased in favor of older people.鈥 She
suggested that government policies, in addition to favoring older generations,
also incentivize employers to keep their employees working part-time and singled
out recent proposals to mandate overtime pay or benefits like paid leave to
caution that 鈥渨e need to really be careful about laws that push employers in
one direction.鈥 In the meantime, as she indicated, 鈥渢ogether with the 10
percent of 20-24 year olds that are unemployed and the 40 percent who think
they are underemployed, about half of them find that the training is not paying
off. So the question is: what to do about that? I think one answer of course is
growing the economy. We need faster economic growth, so that these employers
will say to these PT workers 鈥業 need you to work full-time.鈥欌

Furchgott-Roth
pointed as well to burdensome licensing and certification requirements as a
hindrance for young people seeking to break into new professions. Auguste
concurred and argued that while the issue of occupational licensing is usually
handled at the state and local level, addressing it should be a national
conversation because the problem 鈥渉as grown like a weed all around the country鈥
and it鈥檚 an 鈥渁rea of policy where we could make a lot of progress on a
bipartisan basis.鈥 The requirements have gone too far, he said, and 鈥渋迟鈥檚
certainly exacerbating this insider/outsider dynamic where people who are
already working in a field are essentially pulling up the ladder behind them.鈥

For McCarthy, who works on 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚
Higher Education Initiative, the biggest challenge arises from the fact that
the 6.5 million Americans who are involuntarily working part-time have
鈥渞adically different needs鈥 than many, if not most, of the 26 million who
comprise the part-time workforce overall.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e not part-time workers as much as they鈥檙e part-time unemployed,鈥
McCarthy explained, 鈥渟o when we think about what sorts of policies are
appropriate for that 6.5 million, they look a lot more like the policies we
direct to unemployed people鈥 through the public workforce system. 鈥淭his is a
population really in serious distress鈥 and in life, she emphasized, 鈥渂ut the problem
is鈥hey鈥檙e kind of invisible.鈥

Auguste is also grappling with how disconnects
in the system render groups of people鈥攊n this case, workers with skills to
succeed in IT (which currently account for 12 percent of open jobs)鈥攊nvisible,
even when employers are looking for them. His team at Opportunity@Work is trying
to re-wire the labor market to enable employers and prospective employees to
make better connections with one another.

Although
workplace flexibility remains a contentious issue, especially for the 6.5
million Americans working part-time not by
choice, Auguste expressed reservations about a one-size-fits-all approach to
policies that govern how employers and employees use technology. We should
鈥渞egulate as we may need to some of the more extreme disruptions in the lives
of part-time workers, [but] you wouldn鈥檛 want to simultaneously outlaw or stop
the growth of systems that actually put more actual, genuine flexibility and
choice and potential to optimize their earning power in the hands of those
飞辞谤办别谤蝉.鈥

Ultimately, the discussion circled back around
to data. In his comments, Gray identified a mismatch in the impression among the
public and in the media that we鈥檙e in the midst of an explosion in voluntary part-time work, and Groshen鈥檚
data, which suggests otherwise. 鈥淲e have hypotheses,鈥 she noted, 鈥渂ut we don鈥檛
have the evidence yet.鈥 Alluding to the tight budgets constraining federal
agencies like BLS in their efforts to gather further information about
part-time workers, she continued, 鈥渨e would love to be able to go after these
questions and we hope everybody鈥檚 elected officials will decide that鈥檚 a
worthwhile thing to do.鈥 For Auguste, the 鈥渧alue of better data鈥 is evident and
鈥渋迟
is so inexpensive relative to the policy mistakes that you make without it. So
I think anyone, across the ideological spectrum, who really is trying to make
the system function better should be supportive of this kind of request.鈥澛

More 麻豆果冻传媒 the Authors

jane-greenway-carr_person_image.jpeg
Jane Greenway Carr

Editorial Fellow

What We Know (and Don’t) about Part-Time Work