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Gen X may be the first to need a universal basic income after late-career job loss
The Hill ^ | 10/05/25 12:00 PM ET | by Annette Nierobisz and Dana Sawchuk, opinion contributors

Posted on 10/05/2025 11:03:22 PM PDT by RandFan

Some estimates suggest that half of all white-collar jobs will disappear as artificial intelligence advances. How will older white-collar workers displaced in the AI revolution fare?

Our recent book, “American Idle: Late-Career Job Loss in a Neoliberal Era,” summarizes interviews we conducted with 62 baby boomers who lost their white-collar jobs during another unemployment crisis: the 2008 Great Recession and its sluggish recovery. Statistics show that workers over age 50 experienced the highest rates of long-term joblessness. Their layoffs also coincided with a precarious stage of the life course: “too young to retire but too old to start all over,” as one of our interviewees put it. Gen Xers today face the same quandary.

There were, however, vastly different financial outcomes after these post-2008 layoffs. At one end of the spectrum were those boomers who experienced “hard falls.” Because long-term unemployment and back-to-back job losses were common within this group, some turned to accessing food pantries, applying for welfare benefits, or losing a home to a short sale or foreclosure. Job losses at the other end of the spectrum were “soft landings,” and individuals were more or less financially unscathed.

Several factors facilitated soft landings. For instance, because these interviewees experienced years of job stability, their extended length of service translated into generous severance packages. Several also departed with defined benefits pension plans in hand. A guaranteed income stream for the remainder of their lives allowed for an unplanned early retirement for some. Family members, such as employed spouses or wealthy parents, were another source of financial support.

Evidence suggests that compared to the boomers we studied, a larger proportion of Gen X are susceptible to hard falls than their predecessors. This demands a structural solution and a universal basic income might be the answer.

First, baby boomers entered the labor force when white-collar workers were rewarded with job security and financial stability. In contrast, today’s office workers are encouraged to always be on the lookout for new opportunities. Frequent job changes, however, translate into a much smaller severance package when length of service factors into the equation. And whereas many of our soft landers had pensions, Gen X entered the labor force just as these secure retirement plans were being replaced with 401(k)s.

Workers are expected to contribute a portion of their salary into these defined contribution plans. But because savings are personally invested, financial illiteracy and market volatility increase the level of risk. At the same time, low wage workers typically lack employer-supported retirement plans, and even if they do have access, they are less likely to participate due to financial hardship.

Not to mention the collective net worth of Gen X is about half that of boomers. Because this generation also carries the highest rates of debt, the ability to retire comfortably will be jeopardized. With lower rates of home ownership than boomers at the same age, many Gen Xers will miss out on the long-term gains that can be derived from owning property.

Finally, a growing share of older adults now live alone. In addition to lacking the financial support of an employed spouse, people who live alone tend to earn less than individuals who are married. This predisposes one-person Gen X households to a financial disadvantage that may turn a layoff into a hard fall.

There is always the possibility that AI-induced job losses don’t materialize, given the current failure of artificial intelligence to increase worker productivity. Still, advancements are inevitable and with almost 900,000 private sector employees having already lost their jobs and another 300,000 federal government employees out of work by the end of 2025, white-collar workers are under threat from many sides.

Older workers are encouraged to protect their finances in this unstable environment but as our research shows, it’s impossible to prepare for a bout of unemployment extended indefinitely by age discrimination in the hiring process.

Targeted education and training programs would empower unemployed Gen Xers to access fields in which job growth is predicted to increase. We must also consider developing a universal basic income program to address long-term joblessness among those older workers who are too young to collect Social Security. Such experiments in other countries have been successful in increasing both well-being and employment rates.

Here at home, several U.S. cities and counties, in both red and blue states, have already experimented with limited basic income programs. For white-collar Gen Xers seeking new employment, this could mean the difference between a soft landing with minimal financial strife, and a hard fall that stresses both personal households and other shrinking social safety nets.

Annette Nierobisz is professor of sociology at Carleton College in Northfield, Minn. Dana Sawchuk is professor and chair of sociology at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario. They are the authors of “American Idle: Late Career Job Loss in a Neoliberal Era” (Rutgers University Press, 2025).


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Conspiracy
KEYWORDS: annettenierobisz; danasawchuk; debt; deficit; fakenews; inflation; socialism; thehill; theshill
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To: FLT-bird

It’s a miracle that we haven’t devolved into Communism because of globalism and global labor arbitrage. We still have a chance to pull up out of our night mare: A chance we probably don’t deserve.


61 posted on 10/06/2025 5:58:56 AM PDT by central_va ( I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: napscoordinator

!00% agree. Basic Taxes. Not basic income.


62 posted on 10/06/2025 6:23:36 AM PDT by Pete Dovgan
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To: central_va
AI should be called either "Another Indian" or "EE" -- the Ensh!ttification of Everything.

AI is pushed because management and executives tend to have IQs in the low teens.

It's fantastic and making a pastiche of "the average" of things -- cat pictures, DeepFakes, summarizing text.

But in specialized or highly detail-dependent fields, that gives rise to hallucinations.

And when liability attaches to getting it wrong --.

The other issue is the astronomical investements in infrastructure (> $400 billion in the last 18 months with only $40 billion in revenue).

To say nothing of ongoing costs for electricity and cooling -- let alone upgraded chip sets.

AI is the Tulip Bulb Mania of the 2020s.

63 posted on 10/06/2025 6:27:48 AM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: Cronos
Self-selection bias. Show the the actual # of units sold.

And then show me recurring sales.

64 posted on 10/06/2025 6:29:15 AM PDT by grey_whiskers (The opinions are solely those of the author and are subject to change without notice.)
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To: RandFan

There used to be a word for this….let me think for a second….

Oh yes…it was called a company funded pension. The company would set aside money every pay period that would be paid out to you when you were done working.

But that was in the olden days. I don’t think the youngsters even know what they were called. //sarcasm


65 posted on 10/06/2025 6:44:53 AM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: RandFan

I “need” $10,000,000.00.

Because.

Why haven’t you given it to me yet?

Waaaaahhhhhhh!!!!!


66 posted on 10/06/2025 6:45:24 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (PLAUSIBLY ANTI-SEMITIC POSTS: Hardspunned 90% Nitzy 88% Right_In_Virginia 84% Liz 50% Mac_Truck 32%)
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To: rexthecat

I used to conduct surveys for my company.

One step in the process was to do an in-depth interview with about 30 customers. It was statistically proven that in those interviews you could determine about 95% of customer “needs.”

A lot of companies would stop there, because it was cheaper and, “You knew what you needed to know.”

That was a mistake. You needed to cull out the “needs” and do about six more steps (usually fairly expensive steps) to figure out which of those “needs” were really, really important to the customers. This part was where the “hard work” needed to be done.

It sounds like this is what happened in this survey.


67 posted on 10/06/2025 6:48:19 AM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: RandFan

Baloney.

This is to scare people into an unnecessary and evil welfare state.


68 posted on 10/06/2025 6:50:57 AM PDT by TheThirdRuffian (Orange is the new brown)
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To: Cronos
We thought the same about home vacuuming - and then the roomba. I don't own one, but it seems like everyone has. I now see roombas for cutting grass - and ordinary people are buying it. The prices for these are falling.

My in-laws have one. :)

Sure, but do we take into account all the hidden costs? So we have an army of robots doing all this work for us....for what? For us to sit around unoccupied, unconnected with the labor that it takes to sustain our lives. Bored. Purposeless. Too used to having *other things* work for us. And much more inactive than we used to be. And all the health damage that THAT does.

All for what? To "free up our time." And free it up for what? So we can surf the internet. Best case, we learn cool new things. Most often, we amuse ourselves with political scandals or cat videos. Worst case, we indulge the most sordid aspects of our hedonism.

If we're honest with ourselves, which of these three comes easiest?

It is man's lot to work in order to live. Take that away--whether by riches, or technology, or whatever--and there is only misery.

69 posted on 10/06/2025 8:25:08 AM PDT by Claud
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To: RandFan

Yep.

Happened to my neighbor at age 50. She was an accountant at a large studio - forced to train her H-1b visa holder as a condition of receiving a severance package.

One of many reasons why this job stealing program needs to be eliminated, especially if jobs become scares.


70 posted on 10/06/2025 8:50:06 AM PDT by Bon of Babble (You Say You Want a Revolution?)
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To: rexthecat

Learn a trade, use your hands. AI can’t unclog a toilet, or do precise carpentry.


71 posted on 10/06/2025 9:22:32 AM PDT by kaktuskid
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To: RandFan

CRY ME A RIVER-——

I HAVE DONE A HANDFUL OF DIFFERENT JOBS-—SINCE 1957
ACCOUNTING
GROCERY CHECKER
TIRE SHOP—DISMOUNT & MOUNT TIRES-BALANCING THEM, ALSO
MACHINE SHOP-—PORTING/POLISHING CYLINDER HEADS FOR PERFORMANCE
SELLING AUTO PARTS & SPEED EQUIPMENT
CUTTING PIECES OF STRIP METAL FOR AIR DISTRIBUTION GRILLS
MORE

DID WHAT EVER I COULD FIND WHEN ACCOUNTING JOBS WERE “TRANSITIONING” TO COMPUTERS


72 posted on 10/06/2025 11:29:51 AM PDT by ridesthemiles (not giving up on TRUMP---EVER)
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