Why we should stop pretending full-time jobs are stable


Everyone is becoming a contractor, even with “full-time” titles. The modern employment system offers the worst of both worlds: the instability of contracting without the flexibility or compensation. It may be time to stop pretending and redesign employment for the reality that everyone is temporary.
Full-time employment has become a performance. Employees receive titles, benefits packages and annual reviews that suggest permanence. Companies speak of career development, long-term vision and organisational belonging. Both sides maintain the fiction of stable employment whilst operating under very different assumptions.
The reality is simpler and more uncomfortable: nearly everyone is now a contractor, regardless of what their employment paperwork says.
You are hired for skills the company needs today. When those skills become redundant, when financial pressures intensify, or when priorities shift, you are exited. The relationship is transactional and temporary. Performance matters less than ongoing utility. The decision to end employment often has little to do with contribution and everything to do with circumstances beyond individual control.
This is not traditional employment. It is contracting dressed in the language of permanence—a permanent contractor.
Actual contractors understand their position clearly. They command higher market rates because they bear the risk of temporary work. They maintain flexibility to serve multiple clients. They invest in portable skills rather than organisation-specific knowledge.
Traditional employees once operated under a different bargain. They accepted lower immediate compensation in exchange for stability. They invested in organisational knowledge because tenure was expected. Life decisions—home loans, families, long-term commitments—were built around predictable employment.
The permanent contractor gets neither deal.
Full-time employment increasingly carries the risks of contracting—without the compensation or flexibility.
Employees today work exclusively for one organisation and are bound by the expectations of traditional employment. They cannot take other clients. They are expected to prioritise the organisation’s needs and develop deep internal expertise.
But the relationship offers little real stability. Employment can end abruptly for reasons unrelated to individual performance—restructuring, cost pressures, strategic pivots. The individual’s contribution becomes secondary to shifting organisational priorities.
Employees therefore bear the risks of contracting—income uncertainty and constant re-evaluation—without receiving contractor-level compensation or flexibility. Companies, meanwhile, gain workforce flexibility without paying the market price for it.
This arrangement produces a predictable tension.
Companies want commitment. They want employees willing to relocate, work beyond contracted hours and invest deeply in institutional knowledge. But they can no longer offer the security that once made such commitment rational.
Today’s “permanent employee” may simply be a contractor with benefits.
Employees want predictability. They need to plan financially, develop expertise and build careers. But they cannot rationally commit loyalty when loyalty is unlikely to be reciprocated.
Both sides want something the other cannot provide. Companies want committed employees without guaranteeing security. Employees want stable careers without committing long-term loyalty. The result is a quiet but persistent mistrust.
If employment relationships are already temporary, organisations may need to design them honestly around that reality.
Compensation would change. Contractors command premiums—often 30 to 50 per cent above full-time equivalents—because they bear income risk. Permanent contractors currently bear similar risks without receiving the compensation.
Benefits would change. Healthcare, retirement plans and vesting structures assume long-term employment. In a world of temporary work, benefits would need to become portable and immediately vested rather than tied to tenure.
Companies want commitment without security. Employees want stability without loyalty. The result: a quiet stalemate.
Career development would change. Companies often train employees assuming they will stay long enough for the investment to pay off. If that assumption no longer holds, development would shift toward immediately useful and portable capabilities.
Expectations would change as well. Companies would stop asking for sacrifices they cannot reciprocate. Employees would stop performing loyalty they do not feel. The relationship would become explicit: these are the skills we need now, this is the market price, and the arrangement lasts as long as the need exists.
This vision may not be appealing. But it is at least honest.
The current fiction carries real costs.
Employees plan their lives around stability that may not exist, taking on financial and family obligations that they cannot sustain through inevitable employment gaps. They invest in specialised career paths that depend on roles that may disappear.
When the employment relationship ends suddenly—as it often does today—the damage extends beyond lost income. Plans unravel. Investments in organisational knowledge lose value. Trust in institutions erodes.
The modern workforce may be living through the rise of the “permanent contractor.
Companies face different consequences. When employees rationally treat employment as temporary, organisations struggle to build institutional knowledge, long-term capability or durable culture. Knowledge walks out the door with every departure. Innovation requiring sustained investment becomes harder to sustain.
Both sides pay the price for a bargain that no longer reflects reality.
Employers cannot promise stability. Competitive pressure, shareholder expectations and economic volatility make long-term guarantees difficult.
Employees cannot promise loyalty when their own security is uncertain.
So both sides perform. Companies speak of mission, values and long-term careers. Employees signal engagement and organisational commitment. Everyone recognises the theatre, but the system continues because no one has redesigned the script.
The permanent contractor exists in this gap—between what employment pretends to be and what it has quietly become.
When employment becomes temporary for everyone, the system itself needs redesign.
Perhaps the real question is not whether this transformation is good or bad. It is whether organisations and workers will continue pretending full-time employment offers stability, or begin designing compensation, benefits and expectations around the reality that most work relationships are now temporary.
The permanent contractor is not a temporary phase of modern work. It is the system we have created.
The only remaining question is whether we acknowledge it honestly—or continue performing the fiction.