/* */ <img height="1" width="1" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=1706078429670727&ev=PageView &noscript=1"/> /* */

GENCEN Virtual Colloquia Series featuring JMC Professors Louise Jezierski and Sejuti Das Gupta

Fri, November 5, 2021 1:30 PM at Online (Zoom)

“Making ends meet: Precarity and the informal economy in Greater Lansing during Covid-19”

REGISTER HERE

This project examines how women workers and employers have navigated the informal economic sector, especially in the industries of household and personal services, as well as work/family balance, in the Lansing-East Lansing metropolitan region  and assesses employment strategies before and during the  COVID-19 pandemic. The pandemic and economic crises in 2020 have impacted women specifically, with layoffs in service sector jobs and compounded childcare crises. Families engage in the labor market through social networks and “brokerage institutions” such as churches, schools, and neighborhoods, to find household service workers as well as work. The research design employs mixed methodologies and includes over 30 in-depth interviews along with archival data analysis to map and model the regional political economy and networks in the connections between formal and informal work in mid-Michigan economy. Our findings suggest that key brokerage institutions include schools, including daycare centers, public K-12 schools, and universities are vital to the Lansing-East Lansing regional economy, and when these closed down during the pandemic, key labor resources and household support systems broke down, requiring women to stay home with children. Eldercare and house-cleaning services also were diminished, especially in the informal sector service sector. The Lansing-East Lansing region is unevenly developed as certain jobs and household incomes were maintained through remote work, while in-person essential household care jobs were drastically cut. Consequential pandemic policy solutions did not fully reach these individual workers, as single person businesses were not eligible for Paycheck Protection Program. Almost every respondent lost income, client base, economic capacity, or services due to the pandemic. Some families found resilience in deeper family or friendship ties. Workers learned they needed to negotiate for better wages or opportunities, especially those that could leverage entrepreneurship. Brokerage institutions were the key to finding household help and jobs.