Jill Andresky Fraser

White Collar Sweatshop

The Deterioration of Work and Its Rewards in Corporate America

A searing indictment of corporate management in the roaring ’90s which has shattered the future of the white-collar worker.

If you look at the stock market, or at the corporate bottom line, it seems the best of times. But look into the lives of average middle managers, and we are living in the worst of times. Media attention has focused either on the horrors of massive layoffs or on episodic explosions of corporate violence. But for those millions of Americans who have neither been laid off nor "gone postal," life at the office has become a corporate nightmare: seven-day-a-week work loads; reduced salaries, pensions, or benefits; virtual enslavement to technology; and a pervasive fear about job security. What has happened to the American dream?

With facts, figures, and trenchant case histories, Jill Fraser chronicles this catastrophic sea change in industry after industry: telecommunications, the media, banking, information technology, Wall Street. Her book is essential reading for anyone concerned with the future of the American economy . . . or worried about his or her own job.

White Collar Sweatshop book jacket

Also available in paperback



Jill Andresky Fraser is an editor at Inc. and Bloomberg Personal Finance. She has covered business for the New York Times, New York Observer, and Forbes. She lives in New York City.
2001 / Cloth / ISBN 0-393-04829-2 / 352 pages / 6" x 9" / Sociology
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