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Culture War Roundup for the week of October 17, 2022

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This is about layoffs in tech and what they underscore about modern economy.

https://blog.interviewing.io/how-much-have-2022-layoffs-affected-engineers-vs-other-departments-we-dug-into-the-data-to-find-out/

According to our data, almost half of HR people and recruiters got laid off, as compared to 10% of engineers and only 4% of salespeople.

This passage feels obvious. Of course companies will let go those employees first who contribute little to the bottom line. Of course companies will hold onto their critical resources--engineers and salespeople in this case--until the very worst moment.

But underneath this is a statement about how many bullshit jobs are there in our economy. Jobs that are merely simple busywork. Jobs that exist solely as a way to redistribute the fruits of capitalism from those who have found a way to way to produce for society and those who didn't. It's basically a giant social contract about providing for a rather large part of society that would not otherwise be able to sustain itself.

If anything, this speaks of how deep our humanism runs. Instead of sawing off the sickly branch, we embrace it with care, doing so in a way that doesn't over-infringe on the patient's dignity (Consider how powerful a mark of status it is to provide for the weak and poor--now this status-marker has been democratized).

Thus we learn something practical: don't take anything HR says or does too seriously. They play an unpopular, minor role in the fabric of a company, relegated to the equivalent of keeping the litter box clean: ensuring legal compliance, tackling on/off-boarding paperwork, and organizing company celebrations. That, and be wary of HR departments that seem to outgrow their function. A fat, active HR department is a sign that a company isn't allocating its funds efficiently. Or that it usurps power from more important departments, eg. the power to design and run the hiring process (they should only take care of the mechanical parts; the candidate qualification process should be in the hands of subject-matter experts). Either way, it's a bad sign.

I don't think HR or recruiter are a "bullshit job". But if you have people whose job is to recruit people, and you know you're not going to recruit any more people for a while - since you've just decided to actually fire 10% of them! - then it doesn't make sense for you to keep paying those people whose job is to recruit. That is not some judgement on the objective eternal worth of the recruiting as human endeavor, it's just a consequence of economic circumstance IMHO.

In my experience, HR pays very crucial role in the company, it allows it to run smoothly for one. Try to put sand instead of oil into the most ingenious and powerful engine, and it will destroy itself pretty quickly. But: in good times, the company can afford a fat HR department, to squeeze out any benefit and even add some just in case. In lean times, it will be cut for the company to survive. If lean times are too long, the same will happen as happens when you neglect to maintain your engine, change oil, etc. - it'll work for a while, and then it will start breaking very badly. In most companies, the hope is the lean times will improve before that time comes.