The famous slogan ‘education, education, education’ captured an economic policy that focused on human capital to ensure people were equipped for this new world
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In contrast, across the road the Treasury assumed declining real wages across western market economies given globalisation. Yet the task was not to regulate the labour market, for this would further price people out of work, but rather to secure tax credits to supplement the disposable pay of workers funded by a never ending growth engineered through a compact with the city.
Both views, although noticeably different, cohered to resist any attempts to contest the character of work performed. Political attempts to regulate and dignify labour were consistently resisted or diluted; indeed nothing was really achieved after 2001. Meanwhile, tax credits allowed employers to free ride; wages flat-lined and work intensified at the expense of genuine technological change and good work.
Today, despite a radical veneer, much fashionable thinking on the radical left directly follows from the New Labour years. Once again we appear beholden to a post-work futurology written from urbane steel-and-ivory towers which would have us sidestepping the political imperative of improving the quality of work in order to demand full automation and Universal Basic Income – tax credits on an epic industrialised scale.
Political attempts to regulate and dignify labour were consistently resisted or diluted; nothing was really achieved after 2001
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Once again, labour market realities are wished away by utopian technological assertions. The ‘bullshit’ jobs we see today, the ones we failed to confront earlier, are now simply deemed worthless. Yet how does this help those suffering from modern labour market humiliation? Does it not mean we disrespect their suffering?
Meanwhile flowing from this diagnosis, to make matters even worse, and again in a very similar way to New Labour, a radical rethink of the very purpose of the Left, and who it represents, is taking place. Paul Mason spoke to this when he wrote about the “new core of the labour project“; one that “must be based on the realisation that labour’s heartland is now in the big cities. Among the salariat and among the globally orientated, educated part of the workforce”.
In short, the Left is rethinking its political demographic and the working class is once again on the wrong side of history. It now asserts that through combinations of automation, Millennial drift into the cities and the progressive effects of higher education that the base of the Left now lies not amongst a proletariat but rather with an educated, networked youth. To quote Mason once again: “labour is the de facto party of the urban salariat. Its heartland is Remainia“.
The Left is rethinking its political demographic and the working class is once again on the wrong side of history
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Who and what is responsible for the rise in authoritarian populism? The political philosopher Michael Sandel offers a compelling argument. Across the globe, progressive politics is in retreat; it long ago collapsed into a soulless managerialism. It must rebuild its ethical core including how it understands the meaning and dignity of work in the lives of the people it wishes to lead. Yet from New Labour to today, the way that much of the Left considers work and labour can reinforce this very detachment and in so doing help build the very forces that they seek to resist – the far right.
It is not just about job loss or the unfairness of a wage crash it is about humiliation and respect, hope and despair. The authoritarian Right scavenge on the rage that these forces can ferment, while the Left appear to have lost the ability to recognise and respect the dignity provided by meaningful work.
Hired suggests that once again we need to put the study of work and human labour centre stage. To begin with, 50 years on from Donovan, Labour could do worse than form a new Royal Commission but not just on the on the future of work but also its character and the role it performs in our lives. That would be a real start.
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