My oldest
born is a high school junior, taking
his first steps into the
hypercompetitive and bewildering world
of undergraduate college applications
and future careers. So, I was drawn to
a recent headline in
Fortune proclaiming, “Bosses Are
Firing Gen Z Grads Just Months After
Hiring Them—Here’s What They Say Needs
to Change.” The story covers a
new study about
hiring trends among employers and
rather than examine what employers
need to do to attract and retain new
graduates—generous salaries, good
benefits, work-life balance,
creativity, and job security—it was a
diatribe against new graduates.
Not only
do employers accuse
young people of a “lack of motivation
or initiative,” they complain that
they are “late to work and meetings
often, not wearing office-appropriate
clothing, and using language
appropriate for the workspace.”
Nowhere in
the story is it mentioned that the
class of 2024 entered as freshmen the
year the world shut down. The COVID-19
pandemic and its resultant
lockdowns impacted young
people disproportionately. At a time
in their lives when social interaction
was just as important as academic
work, if not more, they were forced to
isolate, albeit for good reason. But
their mental health suffered and we as
a society made no systemic effort to
address it. Instead, they were left to
their own devices, to care for their
mental health, and to sort out their
attitudes toward work and careers.
Also,
nowhere in the story is there an
acknowledgment of the fact that young
people’s futures have been sacrificed
on the altar of corporate oil profits.
As the world burns and floods and
faces storms and
as catastrophic climate
forecasts erase
Gen Z’s future, society demands they
sport good attitudes and behave as
though nothing is wrong and no mass
intervention is needed to rectify the
situation. Instead, Gen Z has to face
climate devastation as individuals.
What the
Fortune story covering
the study of newly graduated
employees does mention
is how schools are trying to prepare
kids for the corporate grind, citing
one high school in London that “is
trialing a 12-hour school day to
prepare pupils for adult life.” This
is shared with no sense of irony about
the fact that workdays in a civilized
society ought to be no more than 8
hours long.
Employers
are apparently looking
for workers who have “a positive
attitude and more initiative.” If that
sounds out of touch, there’s more. A
career adviser told Fortune that young
hires would do well to “[b]uild a
reputation for dependability by
maintaining a positive attitude,
meeting deadlines, and volunteering
for projects, even those outside your
immediate responsibilities.” In other
words, if you want to keep your job,
take on more work than you were hired
to do.
Long hours
and extra work are part of the ethos
of a dying corporate culture where
workers sacrificed their lives and
well-being for their bosses, and—a few
decades ago—might have been rewarded
with enough to live on. That
capitalist contract is defunct.
A separate
September 2024 study of Gen
Z salary satisfaction showed that 87
percent of those surveyed felt they
were underpaid. A Pew study from May
2020 concluded that
today’s youth “are on track to be the
most well-educated generation yet.”
This naturally leads to high
expectations of employers. But nearly
half of those surveyed in September
earn only between $30,000 and $60,000
a year, which in today’s economy is
not enough to live on. If young
workers lack a positive attitude, they
have good reason.
Pew also
found that “Members of Gen Z are more
racially and ethnically diverse than
any previous generation.” In the past
year especially, young Americans have
watched an unfolding genocide in Gaza
aimed at people who look a lot like
them. That genocide, funded by their
parents’ tax dollars and their college
endowments, has played out in
horrifying detail on their Instagram
and TikTok accounts, inuring them from
the political punditry downplaying
Israel’s culpability. Their college
campus protests and encampments
haven’t worked to stop U.S. funding to
Israel.
It’s no
wonder that Gen Z is breaking from
older generations by being disproportionately and
unapologetically pro-Palestinian. It’s
also no wonder that they are jaded
about their own future in a nation
whose government actively cheers on
the extermination of their Palestinian
peers.
Gen Z is
left to deal with massive systemic
failures—climate change, pandemics,
and genocide—as individuals. Why are
we shocked then that they are
prioritizing their own physical and
mental health? No one else is doing
so.
A February
2024 Stanford
Report article
on Gen Z workers interrogated the
employment values and expectations of
young people and concluded that they
“question everything and everyone—from
their peers, parents, or people at
work,” and “[t]hey are also not afraid
to challenge why things are done the
way they are.” They prefer
collaboration and consensus over
hierarchy and, most importantly, they
value mental health and work-life
balance.
Gen Z
workers grew up seeing their parents
bring work home, work after hours,
work overtime without compensation,
and make themselves available to
answer phone calls and emails at all
hours. In return, they watched older
generations suffer mass layoffs,
failed union drives, and stagnating
salaries. If they reject the idea of
one’s work life ruling one’s home
life, it seems that young workers have
a lot to teach their older peers and
employers rather than the other way
around.
In spite of
myself, I often urge my 17-year-old to
focus on getting good grades so that
he can get into a good college and
land a good job that pays well enough
to live on. But such logic assumes we
live in a merit-based economy where
hard work pays off. Those of us who
are 40 and older know firsthand how
much of a lie this is. I can tell my
snarky teen barely humors me when I
urge him to prioritize his grades. And
I can imagine him doing the same to a
future boss who might urge him to have
a “positive attitude” at work.
Rutgers
University public relations professor
Mark Beal, author of Decoding
Gen Z, told Fortune,
“Gen Xers, boomers, even older
millennials, they live to work. Work
is driving them. It’s energizing
them.” Meanwhile, “Gen Z works to
live.” They prioritize their mental
health over Wall Street’s financial
health.
Are they on
to something? Instead of excoriating
young people for prioritizing their
well-being overwork, we would do well
to learn from them. Gen Z is shifting
our collective ethos to normalize
asking what bosses owe workers instead
of the other way around.
This
commentary was produced by Economy
for All, a project
of the Independent Media Institute
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