Thank you, sir.
I'm not familiar with that particular citation. It's certainly the case that by most of the measures of job quality—and that would include part-time versus full-time, permanent versus temporary, and measures of the utilization of your skills—the quality of work has deteriorated modestly since the recession. It isn't a night and day change. There are still some good jobs being created in the economy and some good jobs we have retained, but the average quality of work since the recession has certainly deteriorated.
That would be one of the factors behind the stagnation in real incomes that we certainly see in the data.