LongTimeListener
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2009
- Messages
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You're thinking of internships as you knew them decades ago. That isn't what they are now.
Now there's a whole "intern economy" that is keeping the unemployment rate high as companies have turned formerly paying jobs into unpaid internships. This has the main effect of cutting payroll but the added effect of favoring the rich, who can subsidize their children's career opportunities in a way that poor and middle-class people can't. As but one small example, Sheryl Sandberg's LeanIn Foundation posted a want ad for an unpaid intern last year. This is the foundation dedicated to telling women to throw themselves into their work and to be more assertive about pay and other equality issues. And it's run by a billionaire. The internship, though, was clearly meant for a white society girl in Manhattan who needed a resume enhancer and something to do during the week.
There are examples of this all over the place. ProPublica supposedly has a network of reporters looking at the whole thing and is preparing a big series on how the practice has changed the workforce. It should be good reading.
ETA: It looks like it's part of an ongoing series, and a lot of it has already been posted. OK, I have some reading to do. (We all should. It's a very interesting and alarming turn for the workforce.)
http://www.propublica.org/series/internships
Now there's a whole "intern economy" that is keeping the unemployment rate high as companies have turned formerly paying jobs into unpaid internships. This has the main effect of cutting payroll but the added effect of favoring the rich, who can subsidize their children's career opportunities in a way that poor and middle-class people can't. As but one small example, Sheryl Sandberg's LeanIn Foundation posted a want ad for an unpaid intern last year. This is the foundation dedicated to telling women to throw themselves into their work and to be more assertive about pay and other equality issues. And it's run by a billionaire. The internship, though, was clearly meant for a white society girl in Manhattan who needed a resume enhancer and something to do during the week.
There are examples of this all over the place. ProPublica supposedly has a network of reporters looking at the whole thing and is preparing a big series on how the practice has changed the workforce. It should be good reading.
ETA: It looks like it's part of an ongoing series, and a lot of it has already been posted. OK, I have some reading to do. (We all should. It's a very interesting and alarming turn for the workforce.)
http://www.propublica.org/series/internships