The Great Resignation Shows What Empowered Workers Really Look Like
Unions or minimum wage laws aren't required for workers to shift the balance of power.

Some politicians insist that workers are so beleaguered governments should push them into labor unions and mandate a national $15 per hour minimum wage. But then economic and cultural conditions largely fueled by reactions to COVID-19 spurred an enormous shift in the relative clout of employees and their bosses. In a "Great Resignation" people are quitting jobs in huge numbers in search of better pay, improved conditions, and respectful treatment. Forget the myth of the oppressed worker; while that's true in some circumstances, we now have a reminder that power is relative to the conditions of the moment, and that people collecting paychecks can have as much leverage as those paying them.
In January, 4.3 million Americans quit their jobs, according to the monthly Job Openings and Labor Turnover Summary (JOLTS) from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's down a hair from the previous month, but well above levels considered normal before the pandemic and its associated dislocations disrupted people's lives.
"Quits fell to 4.3 million in January, coming off of record highs in Nov.," noted Daniel Zhao, senior economist for Glassdoor's Economic Research Team. "The Great Resignation is still in full swing even if quits are moderating somewhat. Quits are still up 23 percent above pre-pandemic levels."
Importantly, job openings remain at a near-record 11.3 million, up substantially from the 7 million openings in January 2020, just before COVID-19 rained on the world's parade. That means job seekers encounter a lot more demand for their services and can pick and choose accordingly.
"Demand for labor is historically high and workers are quitting their jobs at historic rates to take advantage of that demand," comments Nick Bunker, economic research director for North America at the Indeed Hiring Lab. "At the same time, employers continue to have a hard time filling open positions."
What taking advantage of that demand means varies from person to person, but there are definite commonalities. "Low pay, a lack of opportunities for advancement and feeling disrespected at work are the top reasons why Americans quit their jobs last year," Pew Research reported of survey results. "Those who quit and are now employed elsewhere are more likely than not to say their current job has better pay, more opportunities for advancement and more work-life balance and flexibility."
To put it bluntly, employers who grew accustomed to treating staff poorly when they had the upper hand are now reaping the results as those workers flock to jobs offering happier conditions and higher pay. People with desirable skills and good work histories are in great demand and able to negotiate much better terms of employment.
Of course, power can be abused by whoever has it. Barely a week passes without my teenage son's phone ringing with a request for him to take another shift at the supermarket where he works. The problem, more often than not, is that somebody just didn't show up, often never to be seen again. "'Ghosting,' or disappearing suddenly and without explanation, is becoming more common in the workplace," according to Blind, a business network which surveyed members. "One out of fifty professionals admitted to quitting a job without telling their manager or company's human resources."
But, more commonly (as Pew noted) workers use their leverage to improve their situations. What they demand includes higher pay, greater respect, and the ability to work from wherever they please.
"Employers are struggling to retain talent—and now are offering more money for workers as a strong incentive," according to Kelly Anne Smith of Forbes.
"Demand for remote work has been rising for years," observes professional services firm Deloitte. "But the global pandemic turned it from request to requirement almost overnight."
Healthy demand for labor has also created opportunities for people who were previously left out of the job market. After years of being priced out of work opportunities by high minimum wage laws, low-skilled and relatively inexperienced teens have been made employable again, as evidenced by my son's busy schedule.
"The unemployment rate for teenagers (ages 16 to 19) was 9.6 percent in July 2021, following rates of 9.9 percent in June and 9.6 percent in May," the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported last summer. "The last time the unemployment rate for teenagers was lower than 9.6 percent was in November 1953, when it was 8.6 percent."
Greater leverage for workers, as well as disenchantment with preexisting jobs, also inspired people to strike out on their own. "The pandemic has unleashed a historic burst in entrepreneurship and self-employment. Hundreds of thousands of Americans are striking out on their own as consultants, retailers and small-business owners," The Wall Street Journal observed in November. That may represent a long-term cultural shift, with a recent Junior Achievement USA survey finding that "3 in 5 American teens (60%) would be more interested in starting their own business than having a traditional job."
Everything is relative to existing conditions, of course. There's no telling what impact continuing inflation (now 7.9 percent) or Russia's invasion of Ukraine will have on the economy and, consequently, on workers' leverage. Nothing stays the same forever, and the market will again morph creating new opportunities and eliminating old ones.
But that sort of dynamism is an inevitable part of life, accelerated by personal, cultural, and governmental reactions to COVID-19, the chaos of the world, and whatever developments are to come. It's a necessary reminder of the foolishness of politicians' insistence on top-down policies that use law to impose costs and work arrangements that treat the economy and people's relationships as if they're fixed in amber. The Biden administration's insistence that every job be a union job threatens to eliminate flexibility that workers might favor. Teens regained access to the labor market only because demand for labor and rising pay rendered mandated minimum wages irrelevant; they really don't need to be priced out once again.
Workers won't always have the upper hand. But a free economy gives everybody the best chance to take advantage of situations as they arise and to seek arrangements that work for them. The Great Resignation is just an example of people using the leverage created by changing circumstances to make better lives for themselves.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Unions or minimum wage laws aren't required for workers to shift the balance of power.
You do realize that the point isn't to shift the balance of power to the workers, right?
No, but th voters don't know that, and the voters are the ones electing these twerps. Which is why we need to keep explaining that unions and minimum wage laws aren't doing what they saw on the package.
[JOIN NOW] I really make A LOT OF MONEY ($200-$300/hour) online from my laptop. Last month I received almost $50,000. this line work is simple and straightforward. qcr You don’t need to go to the office, it’s online work from home. You become independent after joining this position. I really appreciate my friend.
....
Who pointed it out to me SITE….., http://moneystar33.blogspot.com/
I see this issue most acutely in retail, particularly the 'ghosting' aspect. To me, ghosting behavior is an indicator that the person is unreliable AF. To be fair though, many retailers routinely step all over their employees in terms of pay, scheduling, retirement benefits, sick time, vacation time and especially 401K plan fees. I've worked P/T in retail, and have experienced all of those things. I get that retail is entry level work, but taking advantage of employees to their detriment is not right, and that happened a lot in the aftermath of the Great Financial Crisis 2007-10.
In an environment where jobs are plentiful, people will not put up with that bullshit. I am encouraged by the Big Box retailers raising their starting wages. The paucity of labor forces them to be more respectful of their associates. It also forces retailers to be more efficient, instead of fat and happy. Fat and Happy is how Detroit (The Big Three Automakers) declined into insignificance.
Its interesting how many businesses are not going under...that ## might ## suggest excess profits.
However, I see this as more Unionista thinking. Unions attack employers using economic pressure. Its not Free Market but a mixture of that and Marxism.
It really boils down to skilked v. unskilled.
NO ONE needs Starbucks, or 5 restaurants in a city block and these seem to be the focus.
And a hearty " Fuck Joe Biden" to start the day!
.. excess profits.
No such thing.
"Excess profits" assumes there is a correct level of profits, presumably set by the likes of Elizabeth Warren. But these profits aren't heaps of cash under a mattress, they get plowed back into R&D and business expansion. And to the dividends of widowers living on their spouses' pensions.
Fat and Happy is how Detroit (The Big Three Automakers) declined into insignificance.
Uh, Obama bailed out the Big 3 to win the election. We just passed an EV bill excepting Tesla. GM, Stellantis, and Ford all still vie with Toyota for the top 3 automaker in any given month/year. Is that your idea of insignificance?
Ford (most unionized) is towards the bottom vying against Toyota (nearly entirely non-union). GM and Ford pay almost $10/hr. more in average wages than Toyota. Sounds like you've got quite a narrative going.
...and Obiden got paid back 20% from GM.
.
What a deal !
Just a heads up on the coming wage and price controls.
I started my career in 1970. The biggest effect of wage controls is that with inflation running 10% to 14%, and raises limited to 4% or 5%, you have to change jobs every couple of years to stay even with the game. I had to quit several jobs I really enjoyed, just to make enough money for rent and groceries.
I suspect a lot of 'quits' in the recent past were to get to a job with mask and vaccine mandates that matched the employees preferences. That will go down a bit, but I really wonder how many quit one job to get another of the same type because new hires can get more money than existing employees?
President Biden should authorize producing Whip Inflation Now (WIN) buttons and sending them to every household in America!
Coming? You been off planet?
Yup. In a tight labor market, labor can demand more.
But....
Why is there a tight labor market?
Remember the government paying people bonuses to stay home?
Maybe that is something of an intervention in this "free labor market"....
There wasnt a tight market before the Fauci Freak Show told workers they would die of the Coof if they went to work.
Speak of Freaks and one shows up.
Fortunately the Mute function has saved data it would have cost to load another moronic Troll comment.
Dave, you're commenting on yourself. Was this intended for someone else?
look below...Jessee Azs checked in...
No, I havent gone " full Biden" yet.
Never go full Biden.
What're you talking about, more than 81,000,000 people went full-biden!
will never believe this as long as I live.
It is your right to believe any crazy thing you want to. Just don't expect reality to change just because you don't like it..
Full Biden is only 2 fingers, although it might seem like a lot at the time.
Still 2 million less jobs than jan 2019.
'Ghosting,' or disappearing suddenly and without explanation, is becoming more common in the workplace
Obviously the solution is to make 'ghosting' a hate crime.
Ghosts are ususlly portrayed as white so thats ray- ciss...somehow.
Of course black ghosts might be invisible...
Can Ghosters be killed with Ghost guns?
don't cross the streams.
Jerry, you really looking at a pandemic and a string of subsidies as some sort of beneficial empowerment of workers?!
If TooSilly isn't drinking heavily to black out the shame of this article right now, there is no hope left for him as a human being.
Great resignation occurred because of a windfall of government money being spent. What the actual fuck is this article.
Yeah, left me mystified as well. Who is this writer and where did he put Tuccille?
Maybe his goal was to imply that employment is a two way street, with each "side" of the mutual arrangement sometimes having the advantage and sometimes having the disadvantage...
But as a "we don't need government intervention in the labor market" article, it sure tries hard to ignore the vast swathes of government incentives people had to stay home without a personal cost to them.
As an article in support of universal basic income (which it never mentions) it's a resounding success! But I don't see that as a good thing...
I was wondering what happened to the formerly reasonable and smart people in recent years. I concluded they must have been idiots all along.
Exactly what I was thinking. Between gold plated unemployment, stimulus check after stimulus check, not having to pay your rent/mortgage (which predictably weren't moratoriums as government programs to back pay moratorium debts are springing up like ragweeds), not having to pay your student loans etc... the average American got thousands if not tens of thousands of free money. The average amount of savings per American has gone up during the last 2 years, something ass backwards from most recession. I guess a good thing that came out of those ridiculous policies is that workers are in a better position to look for a better job, demand better pay or venture out on their own.
Of course that also is why we have CPI at damn near 8% and real annual inflation at well over 10%, shortages of absolutely everything, 7 trillion dollars of additional federal debt (which amounts to over $20k of debt per American, probably more than the average American got in freebies) and the already anemic 21st century American work ethic dropping even further as high quality and service is increasingly a thing of the past.
Maybe the government should educate people how not to live paycheck to paycheck
>>Maybe the government should educate
only never.
This is some of the most imbicilic new age twaddle I've ever read from TooSilly, is what this crap is.
Holy myopic memory holing, Batman!
Exactly right.
This is all a Welfare scam. It pretends to be unemployment or PPP but regardless of the color of the Horse, its still from Troy.
And its all to hide the magnitude of the economic incompetence and disaster from 2009 to present.
And this occured spontaneously? No preceding events that could have incited this, like, oh... Something like a huge surge of free money and orders to stay home from the government? Would that have an impact?
Do you think disposable income people didn't work for and doctors' orders to not go in to work might have played just a teeeensy role?
Fuck, TooSilly, can you get any worse? This is absolutely pathetic.
This is a " other than that Mrs . Lincoln" piece.
Ignore the elephant in the room...which gets to be difficult when it ' deuces' on the floor.
The Great Resignation Shows What
Empowered WorkersHistorically Unprecedented Transfer Payments Really Look LikeWhat he should have written.
I'm wondering if he meant exactly what he said, and this is what the empowered worker is to leftists - serfs with disposable income.
I think you may be on to something here! They would dress it up in more respectable language ... throw in some acronyms like UBI and get their totally independent and even-handed minions in 'journalism' to repeatedly reinforce this great new 'New Normal'
You’re not setting empowerment, you’re seeing the result of several government policies: massive government handouts, importation of cheap labor, importation of goods made by slave labor, a failing education system.
In a "Great Resignation" people are quitting jobs in huge numbers in search of better pay, improved conditions, and respectful treatment.
Are we studiously avoiding the subject of vaccine mandates, mask mandates and other specifics here? Are we also carefully avoiding the vast numbers of people fired because they refused to get an experimental vaccine that... for the vast majority of people "protected" them from a disease that had a damn near 100% survivability? Are we also carefully avoiding the fact that vast numbers of people who were laid off weren't so much empowered as they were subsidized by COVID relief money and we're probably going to be feeling the downsides of this for years to come?
I don't know what the vast numbers of these people who "quit" their jobs are doing for money. Perhaps they're trying their hand at being an EDM musician, or throwing their hat into the Tik Toker/Youtuber ring. I suspect a lot of these people are going to be back in the traditional labor pool within the next 24 months when whatever it is they thought they were going to do inevitably doesn't work out.
This will be the case. Maybe it will start tomorrow when THE SCIENCE says we can go without a mask!*
Technically tonight because it starts at 11:59. Science.
I believe THE SCIENCE has had it's feet cemented in a wash basin and dropped into the Atlantic.
"BIDEN REVOKES RUSSIA TRADE STATUS"
Dredgereport.
The ARTICLE it links to says CONGRESS does that, not Bidet.
Lying thru headlines now.
"Demand for remote work has been rising for years," observes professional services firm Deloitte. "But the global pandemic turned it from request to requirement almost overnight."
One of the most technologically advanced internet companies in the world isn't having it.
Google tells employees in Bay Area and other U.S. locations to return to offices in April
We don't need unions, we just need a consciousness-raising global catastrophe! Anything other than workers getting it in their pretty little heads that they are entitled to the freedom to unionize in a free society.
It must be terribly difficult for libertarians to pretend to be about individual freedom and have to talk about reasons we have to limit it for the boss's profit.
Which slaveholder do you labor for, again?
The boss also has the right to fire useless or unruly workers when they don't show up for work in a free society. Again progressives some how believe their rights are more important than other peoples rights.
Good article! But I think there's one other difficult-to-measure factor at play here -- and it's NOT the free market.
During the pandemic, millions and millions of working Americans became familiar with government welfare in various forms. Discovering this "something for nothing" tax free benefit matrix -- including not having to pay rent -- is a powerful drug that causes many people to work less hard, work not at all, or work off the books.
Government subsidies are easy to get, with fraud seldom discovered, let alone prosecuted. Logically speaking, taking welfare benefits is the most time-effective way to get money.
While formal education took a huge hit during the COVID disaster, many working folks received this informal "how to get welfare" knowledge. Those of us not at the government trough will be paying for this.
Moreover, since federal welfare is usually put in the national credit card, -- expanding the money supply -- we'll ALL be paying for it in the form of inflation. That's already happening.
Cut government spending and taxes and even more good jobs will be created, with even higher take-home pay.
OK, let me get this straight.
This is a libertarian website. I'm pretty sure it's a left-libertarian website like OBL says, but lets pretend...
Reason CONSTANTLY promotes open borders, unfettered free immigration, which basically is a massive drain on wages. Unskilled labor keeps the formerly entry level jobs as lifetime minimum wage jobs and keeps the wages of hard and dirty jobs (harvesting, roofing, meat packing, etc) heavily depressed.
Meanwhile, formerly middle class jobs have been heavily depressed in wages from H1B programs, where Microsoft or whoever would whine "There's nobody qualified" for a job they claim needs a certain degree and import someone from a country they desperately don't want to return to at a wage that never rises. Meanwhile, to compete on credentials, Americans have to pay out the ass for their own training (college cost rises at 3x inflation, and has my whole life).
This is all supported by Reason.
Yet, here, a government subsidized dole giving people money for not working is empowerment.
You think empowerment is good? Great. Stop advocating for foreign labor. It devalues the work in many jobs from lettuce pickers or fast food all the way up to tech jobs.
If Microsoft can't find someone with a very specific skill set, the early tech era method was to TRAIN THEM. Somewhere around Clinton/Bush eras it became normal to whine for more H1Bs and import someone who would work for 70 cents on the dollar and never complain because they don't want to get shipped back to Bangalore.
All of this massively distorts markets and shifts power away from both workers and anyone hoping to compete against either big companies capable of importing H1Bers or companies willing to pay under the table.
If a contractor can't find local labor, he can pay more. The old "Americans don't want to work" adage is basically an employer saying that they don't want to make the job attractive to the local labor pool. An that's not just wages, it's also the perceived value of the profession. Framing used to be a middle class wage job, fencing contractors could pay the bills, labor was what kids did until they learned to be an Electrician. You'd learn a trade, move up if you wanted, make more while understanding the jobs as a laborer. In the early 00s boom they just picked up workers in the parking lot at the home despot around here, paid under the table, and kept the extra. That was the end of a lot of these career paths for less educated people.
Reason is basically all for manipulating the markets. Give away my tax dollars after forcing people to close their businesses and that's a good thing. Stop allowing cheap labor from low-cost-center countries to distort the market and that's a bad thing.
tl:dr -- Fucking OBL isn't a parody. He understands Reason perfectly.
^ well put
Who is OBL? I see that and I read Osama bin Laden because I lost a bunch of friends on 9/11. But early that isn't who you guys are referencing.
OBL = Open Borders Liberaltarian “
The combined durations where workers have had ANY KIND of real bargaining power is a mere blip Of the last 40 years.
Corporate wage suppression by union destruction and offshoring jobs has been so thorough that most Americans can no longer afford education (reason companies push skilled-immigration visas). Thats if they can even afford to raise a family - more cannot evidenced by declining birth rates.
Unorganized employees will always be disadvantaged with unified corporations which is why corps want to keep it this way by fighting unions.