Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Amanda Soskin's avatar

Your two opening stories illustrate an income crisis. They also illustrate something your framework doesn't touch upon which I think incredibly apparent. Both people lost a temporal order alongside a salary.

The USAID official went from a job that organized her entire calendar to a void. She's doing the right thing, retraining as a teacher, but the crossing between one institutional schedule and the next is unmanaged. The retraining program has fixed hours. The benefit system has appointment windows. Whatever gig work keeps the mortgage current competes for the same time. Each institution treats its own scheduling demand as reasonable. None coordinates with the others.

The semiconductor engineer has it worse. Uber is signal-time work. He doesn't have a schedule. He has availability windows shaped by algorithms. His medical procedure requires a business-hours commitment he can't reliably make or fund. His job search requires sustained cognitive time the app fragments into drive-and-respond cycles. He never exits the temporal chaos.

Every intervention you propose, from retraining programs to wage insurance to a publicly funded care economy, requires the displaced person to synchronize with institutions that assume a stable calendar. The messy middle is an income crisis and a coordination crisis simultaneously, and the second constrains how effectively policy can address the first.

https://neighborhoodfundamentals.substack.com/p/the-hidden-clock-of-the-industrial

Nick Manteris's avatar

The messy middle isn't arriving. For nurses, teachers, tradespeople and service workers, it's been here for decades.

A nurse in 1980 could afford a house, raise kids on one income and save for retirement. That same nurse today needs more training, works the same hours and earns less in purchasing power. Housing went from three years of income to seven. The hours needed to pay for healthcare nearly quintupled. Nobody named it the messy middle because the people living it didn't write policy memos.

What AI does is extend that squeeze upward. The knowledge workers who were shielded by the skill premium now face the same cost pressures everyone else has been navigating for decades. Except they're arriving with student debt and spending built around salaries that may not exist in five years.

Where they land matters as much as the displacement. A 60% pay cut is survivable if housing costs three years of income. It's catastrophic if housing costs seven.

48 more comments...

No posts

Ready for more?