Make-work job
A make-work job is a job that is created and maintained at a cost not offset by the job’s fulfilment. Usually having little or no immediate financial benefit such roles can be said to exist for other economic or social-political reasons, for example simply to provide work-experience or maintain a ceremonial function.
Make-work jobs are similar to workfare, but are publicly offered on the job market and have otherwise normal employment requirements. Workfare jobs, in contrast, may be handed out to a randomly selected applicant or have special requirements such as continuing to search for a non-workfare job.
Analysis
Some consider make-work jobs to be harmful when they provide very little practical experience or training for future careers.[1]
As a part of the
Examples
Make-work jobs have been introduced during periods of high unemployment to provide as substitutes for regular jobs. In many European countries, social welfare systems provide cash transfers to those who are unable to secure employment. These programs often require the recipient to undertake job training, internships, or job rotations. Make-work jobs can have the benefit of giving workers the chance of meeting new people and learning how to work with others. Such jobs can also instill necessary workplace skills and values such as the importance of punctuality and responsibility.
Many of the skills learned while doing make-work jobs help workers when applying for and doing regular jobs.[4] Several make-work jobs that were created in Denmark in 2014 were gardening, cleaning up of beaches and sidewalks, reading to the elderly or disabled, washing toys at day care, working with local bike programs, and counting cars.[5]
Attendants employed at full-serve gasoline stations in New Jersey wherein drivers are not permitted to pump their own gas are often cited as examples of make-work jobs.[6]
In popular culture
- In the novel To Kill a Mockingbird, Bob Ewell loses his New Deal make-work job, and blames Atticus Finch.
See also
References
- ISBN 9780898380620, p. 196
- ISBN 0802837182.
- ISBN 0-380-52548-8.
- ^ "Arbejdsløse skal fjerne hundelorte". 2013-12-22.
- ^ "Nyttejob-wilke_adw.eps". 18 January 2014.
- ^ "Oregon, New Jersey consider the unthinkable: Letting people pump their own gas". 4 March 2022.
Further reading
- Graeber, David (August 2013). On the Phenomenon of Bullshit Jobs
- On "bullshit jobs": Understanding seemingly meaningless work (August 2013), The Economist
- Massey, Alana. The Cult of Work (July 2015), Hazlitt