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The New Servant Class

Photo by Alev Takil on Unsplash

“Wealth work” is one of America’s fastest-growing industries.
That’s not entirely a good thing.
Aug 12, 2019
Derek Thompson, Staff writer at The Atlantic

In an age of persistently high inequality, work in high-cost metros catering to the whims of the wealthy—grooming them, stretching them, feeding them, driving them—has become one of the fastest-growing industries.

The MIT economist David Autor calls it “wealth work.”
Low-skill, low-pay, and disproportionately done by women, these jobs congregate near dense urban labor markets, multiplying in neighborhoods with soaring disposable income. Between 2010 and 2017, the number of manicurists and pedicurists doubled, while the number of fitness trainers and skincare specialists grew at least twice as fast as the overall labor force.

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