AUDIO VERSION
https://www.theguardian.com/news/audio/2018/feb/05/post-work-the-radical-idea-of-a-world-without-jobs-podcast
TEXT VERSION
Work has ruled our lives for centuries, and it does so today more than ever. But a new generation of thinkers insists there is an alternative. By Andy Beckett
Work is the master of the modern world. For most people, it is
impossible to imagine society without it. It dominates and pervades
everyday life – especially in Britain and the US – more completely than
at any time in recent history. An obsession with employability runs
through education. Even severely disabled welfare claimants are required
to be work-seekers. Corporate superstars show off their epic work
schedules. “Hard-working families” are idealised by politicians. Friends
pitch each other business ideas. Tech companies persuade their
employees that round-the-clock work is play. Gig economy companies claim
that round-the-clock work is freedom. Workers commute further, strike
less, retire later. Digital technology lets work invade leisure.
In all these mutually reinforcing ways, work increasingly forms our
routines and psyches, and squeezes out other influences. As Joanna Biggs
put it in her quietly disturbing 2015 book All Day Long: A Portrait of Britain at Work, “Work is … how we give our lives meaning when religion, party politics and community fall away.”
And
yet work is not working, for ever more people, in ever more ways. We
resist acknowledging these as more than isolated problems – such is
work’s centrality to our belief systems – but the evidence of its
failures is all around us.
As a source of subsistence, let alone prosperity, work is now insufficient for whole social classes. In the UK, almost two-thirds of those in poverty – around 8 million people – are in working households. In the US, the average wage has stagnated for half a century.
As a source of social mobility and self-worth, work increasingly
fails even the most educated people – supposedly the system’s winners.
In 2017, half of recent UK graduates were officially classified as
“working in a non-graduate role”. In the US, “belief in work is
crumbling among people in their 20s and 30s”, says Benjamin Hunnicutt, a
leading historian of work. “They are not looking to their job for
satisfaction or social advancement.” (You can sense this every time a
graduate with a faraway look makes you a latte.)
Work is increasingly precarious: more zero-hours or short-term
contracts; more self-employed people with erratic incomes; more
corporate “restructurings” for those still with actual jobs. As a source
of sustainable consumer booms and mass home-ownership – for much of the
20th century, the main successes of mainstream western economic policy –
work is discredited daily by our ongoing debt and housing crises. For
many people, not just the very wealthy, work has become less important
financially than inheriting money or owning a home.
Whether you look at a screen all day, or sell other underpaid people
goods they can’t afford, more and more work feels pointless or even
socially damaging – what the American anthropologist David Graeber
called “bullshit jobs” in a famous 2013 article.
Among others, Graeber condemned “private equity CEOs, lobbyists, PR
researchers … telemarketers, bailiffs”, and the “ancillary industries
(dog-washers, all-night pizza delivery) that only exist because everyone
is spending so much of their time working”.
The argument seemed subjective and crude, but economic data increasingly supports it. The growth of productivity,
or the value of what is produced per hour worked, is slowing across the
rich world – despite the constant measurement of employee performance
and intensification of work routines that makes more and more jobs
barely tolerable.
Unsurprisingly, work is increasingly regarded as bad for your health:
“Stress … an overwhelming ‘to-do’ list … [and] long hours sitting at a
desk,” the Cass Business School professor Peter Fleming notes in his new
book, The Death of Homo Economicus, are beginning to be seen by medical authorities as akin to smoking.
Work is badly distributed. People have too much, or too little, or
both in the same month. And away from our unpredictable, all-consuming
workplaces, vital human activities are increasingly neglected. Workers
lack the time or energy to raise children attentively, or to look after
elderly relations. “The crisis of work is also a crisis of home,”
declared the social theorists Helen Hester and Nick Srnicek in a paper
last year. This neglect will only get worse as the population grows and
ages.
And finally, beyond all these dysfunctions, loom the most-discussed,
most existential threats to work as we know it: automation, and the
state of the environment. Some recent estimates suggest that between a
third and a half of all jobs could be taken over by artificial
intelligence in the next two decades. Other forecasters doubt whether
work can be sustained in its current, toxic form on a warming planet.
Like an empire that has expanded too far, work may be both more
powerful and more vulnerable than ever before. We know work’s
multiplying problems intimately, but it feels impossible to solve them
all. Is it time to start thinking of an alternative?
Our culture of work strains to cover its flaws by claiming to be
unavoidable and natural. “Mankind is hardwired to work,” as the
Conservative MP Nick Boles puts it in a new book, Square Deal. It is an
argument most of us have long internalised.
But not quite all. The idea of a world freed from work, wholly or in
part, has been intermittently expressed – and mocked and suppressed –
for as long as modern capitalism has existed. Repeatedly, the promise of
less work has been prominent in visions of the future. In 1845, Karl
Marx wrote that in a communist society workers would be freed from the
monotony of a single draining job to “hunt in the morning, fish in the
afternoon, rear cattle in the evening, criticise after dinner”. In 1884,
the socialist William Morris proposed that in “beautiful” factories of
the future, surrounded by gardens for relaxation, employees should work
only “four hours a day”.
In 1930, the economist John Maynard Keynes predicted that, by the
early 21st century, advances in technology would lead to an “age of
leisure and abundance”, in which people might work 15 hours a week. In
1980, as robots began to depopulate factories, the French social and
economic theorist André Gorz declared: “The abolition of work is a
process already underway … The manner in which [it] is to be managed …
constitutes the central political issue of the coming decades.”
Since the early 2010s, as the crisis of work has become increasingly
unavoidable in the US and the UK, these heretical ideas have been
rediscovered and developed further. Brief polemics such as Graeber’s
“bullshit jobs” have been followed by more nuanced books, creating a
rapidly growing literature that critiques work as an ideology –
sometimes labelling it “workism” – and explores what could take its
place. A new anti-work movement has taken shape.
Graeber, Hester, Srnicek, Hunnicutt, Fleming and others are members
of a loose, transatlantic network of thinkers who advocate a profoundly
different future for western economies and societies, and also for
poorer countries, where the crises of work and the threat to it from
robots and climate change are, they argue, even greater. They call this
future “post-work”.
For some of these writers, this future must include a universal basic income
(UBI) – currently post-work’s most high-profile and controversial idea –
paid by the state to every working-age person, so that they can survive
when the great automation comes. For others, the debate about the
affordability and morality of a UBI is a distraction from even bigger
issues.
Post-work may be a rather grey and academic-sounding phrase, but it
offers enormous, alluring promises: that life with much less work, or no
work at all, would be calmer, more equal, more communal, more
pleasurable, more thoughtful, more politically engaged, more fulfilled –
in short, that much of human experience would be transformed.
To many people, this will probably sound outlandish, foolishly
optimistic – and quite possibly immoral. But the post-workists insist
they are the realists now. “Either automation or the environment, or
both, will force the way society thinks about work to change,” says David Frayne,
a radical young Welsh academic whose 2015 book The Refusal of Work is
one of the most persuasive post-work volumes. “So are we the utopians?
Or are the utopians the people who think work is going to carry on as it
is?”
One of post-work’s best arguments is that, contrary to conventional
wisdom, the work ideology is neither natural nor very old. “Work as we
know it is a recent construct,” says Hunnicutt. Like most historians, he
identifies the main building blocks of our work culture as 16th-century
Protestantism, which saw effortful labour as leading to a good
afterlife; 19th-century industrial capitalism, which required
disciplined workers and driven entrepreneurs; and the 20th-century
desires for consumer goods and self-fulfillment.
The emergence of the modern work ethic from this chain of phenomena
was “an accident of history,” Hunnicutt says. Before then, “All cultures
thought of work as a means to an end, not an end in itself.” From urban
ancient Greece to agrarian societies, work was either something to be
outsourced to others – often slaves – or something to be done as quickly
as possible so that the rest of life could happen.
Even once the new work ethic was established, working patterns
continued to shift and be challenged. Between 1800 and 1900, the average
working week in the west shrank from about 80 hours to about 60 hours.
From 1900 to the 1970s, it shrank steadily further: to roughly 40 hours
in the US and the UK. Trade union pressure, technological change,
enlightened employers, and government legislation all progressively
eroded the dominance of work.
Sometimes, economic shocks accelerated the process. In Britain in
1974, Edward Heath’s Conservative government, faced with a chronic
energy shortage caused by an international oil crisis and a miners’
strike, imposed a national three-day working week. For the two months it
lasted, people’s non-work lives expanded. Golf courses were busier, and
fishing-tackle shops reported large sales increases. Audiences trebled
for late-night BBC radio DJs such as John Peel. Some men did more
housework: the Colchester Evening Gazette interviewed a young married
printer who had taken over the hoovering. Even the Daily Mail loosened
up, with one columnist suggesting that parents “experiment more in their
sex lives while the children are doing a five-day week at school”.
The economic consequences were mixed. Most people’s earnings fell.
Working days became longer. Yet a national survey of companies for the
government by the management consultants Inbucon-AIC found that
productivity improved by about 5%: a huge increase by Britain’s usual
sluggish standards. “Thinking was stimulated” inside Whitehall and some
companies, the consultants noted, “on the possibility of arranging a
permanent four-day week.”
Nothing came of it. But during the 60s and 70s, ideas about
redefining work, or escaping it altogether, were commonplace in Europe
and the US: from corporate retreats to the counterculture to academia,
where a new discipline was established: leisure studies, the study of
recreations such as sport and travel.
In 1979, Bernard Lefkowitz, then a well-known American journalist,
published Breaktime: Living Without Work in a Nine to Five World, a book
based on interviews with 100 people who had given up their jobs. He
found a former architect who tinkered with houseboats and bartered; an
ex-reporter who canned his own tomatoes and listened to a lot of opera;
and a former cleaner who enjoyed lie-ins and a sundeck overlooking the
Pacific. Many of the interviewees were living in California, and despite
moments of drift and doubt, they reported new feelings of “wholeness”
and “openness to experience”.
By the end of the 70s, it was possible to believe that the relatively
recent supremacy of work might be coming to an end in the more
comfortable parts of the west. Labour-saving computer technologies were
becoming widely available for the first time. Frequent strikes provided
highly public examples of work routines being interrupted and
challenged. And crucially, wages were high enough, for most people, to
make working less a practical possibility.
Instead, the work ideology was reimposed. During the 80s, the
aggressively pro-business governments of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald
Reagan strengthened the power of employers, and used welfare cuts and
moralistic rhetoric to create a much harsher environment for people
without jobs. David Graeber, who is an anarchist as well as an
anthropologist, argues that these policies were motivated by a desire
for social control. After the political turbulence of the 60s and 70s,
he says, “Conservatives freaked out at the prospect of everyone becoming
hippies and abandoning work. They thought: ‘What will become of the
social order?’”
It sounds like a conspiracy theory, but Hunnicutt, who has studied
the ebb and flow of work in the west for almost 50 years, says Graeber
has a point: “I do think there is a fear of freedom – a fear among the
powerful that people might find something better to do than create
profits for capitalism.”
During the 90s and 00s, the counter-revolution in favour of work was
consolidated by centre-left politicians. In Britain under Tony Blair’s
government, the political and cultural status of work reached a zenith. Unemployment
was lower than it had been for decades. More women than ever were
working. Wages for most people were rising. New Labour’s minimum wage
and working tax credits lifted and subsidised the earnings of the
low-paid. Poverty fell steadily. The chancellor Gordon Brown, one of the
country’s most famous workaholics, appeared to have found a formula
that linked work to social justice.
A
large part of the left has always organised itself around work. Union
activists have fought to preserve it, by opposing redundancies, and
sometimes to extend it, by securing overtime agreements. “With the
Labour party, the clue is in the name,” says Chuka Umunna, the
centre-left Labour MP and former shadow business secretary, who has
become a prominent critic of post-work thinking as it has spread beyond
academia. The New Labour governments were also responding, Umunna says,
to the failure of their Conservative predecessors to actually live up to
their pro-work rhetoric: “There had been such high levels of
unemployment under the Tories, our focus was always going to be
pro-job.”
In this earnest, purposeful context, the anti-work tradition, when it
was remembered at all, could seem a bit decadent. One of its few
remaining British manifestations was the Idler magazine,
which was set up in 1993 and acquired a cult status beyond its modest
circulation. In its elegantly retro pages, often rather posh men wrote
about the pleasures of laziness – while on the side busily producing
books and newspaper articles, and running a creative consultancy with
corporate clients, Idle Industries. By the early 21st century, the work
culture seemed inescapable.
The work culture has many more critics now. In the US, sharp recent
books such as Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives (and Why
We Don’t Talk About It) by the philosopher Elizabeth Anderson, and No
More Work: Why Full Employment
Is a Bad Idea by the historian James Livingston, have challenged the
dictatorial powers and assumptions of modern employers; and also the
deeply embedded American notion that the solution to any problem is
working harder.
In the UK, even professionally optimistic business journals have
begun to register the extent of work’s crises. In his 2016 book The
Wealth of Humans: Work and its Absence in the 21st Century, the
Economist columnist Ryan Avent predicted that automation would lead to
“a period of wrenching political change” before “a broadly acceptable
social system” emerges.
Post-work ideas are also circulating in party politics. Last April, the Green party proposed that weekends be lengthened to three days. In 2016, shadow chancellor John McDonnell said Labour was “developing” a proposal for a UBI in the UK. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn told his party conference
last September that automation “can be the gateway for a new settlement
between work and leisure – a springboard for expanded creativity and
culture”.
“It felt like a watershed moment,” says Will Stronge, head of
Autonomy, a British thinktank set up last year to explore the crisis of
work and find ways out of it. “We’re in contact with Labour, and we’re
going to meet the Greens soon.” Like most British post-workists, he is
leftwing in his politics, part of the new milieu of ambitious young
activist intellectuals that has grown up around Corbyn’s leadership. “We
haven’t talked to people on the right,” Stronge admits. “No one’s got
in contact with us.”
Yet post-work has the potential to appeal to conservatives. Some
post-workists think work should not be abolished but redistributed, so
that every adult labours for roughly the same satisfying but not
exhausting number of hours. “We could say to people on the right: ‘You
think work is good for people. So everyone should have this good
thing,’” says James Smith, a post-workist whose day job is lecturing in
18th-century English literature at Royal Holloway, University of London.
“Working less also ought to be attractive to conservatives who value
the family.”
Outside the insular, intense working cultures of Britain and the US,
the reduction of work has long been a mainstream notion. In France in
2000, Lionel Jospin’s leftwing coalition government introduced a maximum
35-hour week for all employees, partly to reduce unemployment and
promote gender equality, under the slogan, “Work less – live more.” The
law was not absolute (some overtime was permitted) and has been weakened
since, but many employers have opted to keep a 35-hour week. In
Germany, the largest trade union, IG Metall, which represents electrical
and metal workers, is campaigning for shift workers and people caring
for children or other relatives to have the option of a 28-hour week.
Even in Britain and the US, the vogues for “downshifting” and
“work-life balance” during the 90s and 00s represented an admission that
the intensification of work was damaging our lives. But these were
solutions for individuals, and often wealthy individuals – the rock star
Alex James attracted huge media attention for becoming a cheesemaker in
the Cotswolds – rather than society as a whole. And these were
solutions intended to bring minimal disruption to a free-market economy
that was still relatively popular and functional. We are not in that
world any more.
And yet the difficulty of shedding the burdens and satisfactions of
work is obvious when you meet the post-workists. Explorers of a huge
economic and social territory that has been neglected for decades– like
Keynes and other thinkers who challenged the rule of work – they
alternate between confidence and doubt.
“I
love my job,” Helen Hester, a professor of media and communication at
the University of West London, told me. “There’s no boundary between my
time off and on. I’m always doing admin, or marking, or writing
something. I’m working the equivalent of two jobs.” Later in our
interview, which took place in a cafe, among other customers working on
laptops – a ubiquitous modern example of leisure’s colonisation by work –
she said knowingly but wearily: “Post-work is a lot of work.”
Yet the post-workists argue that it is precisely their work-saturated
lives – and their experience of the increasing precarity of
white-collar employment – that qualify them to demand a different world.
Like many post-workists, Stronge has been employed for years on poorly
paid, short-term academic contracts. “I’ve worked as a breakfast cook.
I’ve been a Domino’s delivery driver,” he told me. “I once worked in an
Indian restaurant while I was teaching. My students would come in to
eat, and see me cooking, and say: ‘Hi, is that you, Will?’
Unconsciously, that’s why Autonomy came about.”
James Smith was the only post-workist I met who had decided to do
less work. “I have one weekday off, and cram everything into the other
days,” he said, as we sat in his overstuffed office on the Royal
Holloway campus outside London. “I spend it with our
one-and-a-half-year-old. It’s a very small post-work gesture. But it was
a strange sensation at first: almost like launching myself off the side
of a swimming pool. It felt alien – almost impossible to do, without
the moral power of having a child to look after.”
Defenders of the work culture such as business leaders and mainstream
politicians habitually question whether pent-up modern workers have the
ability to enjoy, or even survive, the open vistas of time and freedom
that post-work thinkers envisage for them. In 1989, two University of
Chicago psychologists, Judith LeFevre and Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi,
conducted a famous experiment that seemed to support this view. They
recruited 78 people with manual, clerical and managerial jobs at local
companies, and gave them electronic pagers. For a week, at frequent but
random intervals, at work and at home, these employees were contacted
and asked to fill in questionnaires about what they were doing and how
they were feeling.
The experiment found that people reported “many more positive
feelings at work than in leisure”. At work, they were regularly in a
state the psychologists called “flow” – “enjoying the moment” by using
their knowledge and abilities to the full, while also “learning new
skills and increasing self-esteem”. Away from work, “flow” rarely
occurred. The employees mainly chose “to watch TV, try to sleep, [and]
in general vegetate, even though they [did] not enjoy doing these
things”. US workers, the psychologists concluded, had an “inability to
organise [their] psychic energy in unstructured free time”.
To the post-workists, such findings are simply a sign of how
unhealthy the work culture has become. Our ability to do anything else,
only exercised in short bursts, is like a muscle that has atrophied.
“Leisure is a capacity,” Frayne says.
Graeber argues that in a less labour-intensive society, our capacity
for things other than work could be built up again. “People will come up
with stuff to do if you give them enough time. I lived in a village in
Madagascar once. There was this intricate sociability. People would hang
around in cafes, gossiping, having affairs, using magic. It was a very
complex drama – the kind that can only develop when you have enough
time. They certainly weren’t bored!”
In western countries too, he argues, the absence of work would
produce a richer culture. “The postwar years, when people worked less
and it was easier to be on the dole, produced beat poetry, avant garde
theatre, 50-minute drum solos, and all Britain’s great pop music – art
forms that take time to produce and consume.”
The return of the drum solo may not be everyone’s idea of progress.
But the possibilities of post-work, like all visions of the future, walk
a difficult line between being too concrete and too airy. Stronge
suggests a daily routine for post-work citizens that would include a
provocative degree of state involvement: “You get your UBI payment from
the government. Then you get a form from your local council telling you
about things going on in your area: a five-a-side football tournament,
say, or community activism – Big Society stuff, almost.” Other scenarios
he proposes may disappoint those who dream of non-stop leisure: “I’m
under no illusion that paid work is going to disappear entirely. It just
may not be directed by someone else. You take as long as you want, have
a long lunch, spread the work though the day.”
Town
and city centres today are arranged for work and consumption – work’s
co-conspirator – and very little else; this is one of the reasons a
post-work world is so hard to imagine. Adapting office blocks and other
workplaces for other purposes would be a huge task, which the
post-workists have only just begun to think about. One common proposal
is for a new type of public building, usually envisaged as a
well-equipped combination of library, leisure centre and artists’
studios. “It could have social and care spaces, equipment for
programming, for making videos and music, record decks,” says Stronge.
“It would be way beyond a community centre, which can be quite …
depressing.”
This vision of state-supported but liberated and productive citizens owes a lot to Ivan Illich,
the half-forgotten Austrian social critic who was a leftwing guru
during the 70s. In his intoxicating 1973 book Tools for Conviviality,
Illich attacked the “serfdom” created by industrial machinery, and
demanded: “Give people tools that guarantee their right to work with
high, independent efficiency … from power drills to mechanised
pushcarts.” Illich wanted the public to rediscover what he saw as the
freedom of the medieval artisan, while also embracing the latest
technology.
There is a strong artisan tendency in today’s post-work movement. As
Hester characterises it: “Instead of having jobs, we’re going to do
craft, to make our own clothes. It’s quite an exclusionary vision: to do
those things, you need to be able-bodied.” She also detects a deeper
conservative impulse: “It’s almost as if some people are saying: ‘Since
we’re going to challenge work, other things have to stay the same.’”
Instead, she would like the movement to think more radically about
the nuclear home and family. Both have been so shaped by work, she
argues, that a post-work society will redraw them. The disappearance of
the paid job could finally bring about one of the oldest goals of
feminism: that housework and raising children are no longer accorded a
lower status. With people having more time, and probably less money,
private life could also become more communal, she suggests, with
families sharing kitchens, domestic appliances, and larger facilities.
“There have been examples of this before,” she says, “like ‘Red Vienna’
in the early 20th century, when the [social democratic] city government
built housing estates with communal laundries, workshops, and shared
living spaces that were quite luxurious.” Post-work is about the future,
but it is also bursting with the past’s lost possibilities.
Now that work is so ubiquitous and dominant, will today’s
post-workists succeed where all their other predecessors did not? In
Britain, possibly the sharpest outside judge of the movement is
Frederick Harry Pitts, a lecturer in management at Bristol University.
Pitts used to be a post-workist himself. He is young and leftwing, and
before academia he worked in call centres:
he knows how awful a lot of modern work is. Yet Pitts is suspicious of
how closely the life post-workists envisage – creative, collaborative,
high-minded – resembles the life they already live. “There is little
wonder the uptake for post-work thinking has been so strong among
journalists and academics, as well as artists and creatives,” he wrote
in a paper co-authored last year with Ana Dinerstein of Bath University,
“since for these groups the alternatives [to traditional work] require
little adaptation.”
Pitts
also argues that post-work’s optimistic visions can be a way of
avoiding questions about power in the world. “A post-work society is
meant to resolve conflicts between different economic interest groups –
that’s part of its appeal,” he told me. Tired of the never-ending task
of making work better, some socialists have latched on to post-work, he
argues, in the hope that exploitation can finally be ended by getting
rid of work altogether. He says this is both “defeatist” and naive:
“Struggles between economic interest groups can’t ever be entirely
resolved.”
Yet Pitts is much more positive about post-work’s less absolutist
proposals, such as redistributing working hours more equally. “There has
to be a major change to work,” he says. “In that sense, these people
want the right thing.” Other critics of post-work are also less
dismissive than they first sound. Despite being a Tory MP from the most
pro-business wing of his party, Nick Boles accepts in his book that a
future society “may redefine work to include child-rearing and taking
care of elderly relatives, and finally start valuing these contributions
properly”. Post-work is spreading feminist ideas to new places.
Hunnicutt, the historian of work, sees the US as more resistant than
other countries to post-work ideas – at least for now. When he wrote an article for the website Politico
in 2014 arguing for shorter working hours, he was shocked by the
reaction it provoked. “It was a harsh experience,” he says. “There were
personal attacks by email and telephone – that I was some sort of
communist and devil-worshipper.” Yet he senses weakness behind such
strenuous efforts to shut the work conversation down. “The role of work
has changed profoundly before. It’s going to change again. It’s probably
already in the process of changing. The millennial generation know that
the Prince Charming job, that will meet all your needs, has gone.”
After meeting Pitts in Bristol, I went to a post-work event there
organised by Autonomy. It was a bitter Monday evening, but liberal
Bristol likes social experiments and the large city-centre room was
almost full. There were students, professionals in their 30s, even a
middle-aged farmer. They listened attentively for two hours while Frayne
and two other panellists listed the oppressions of work and then hazily
outlined what could replace it. When the audience finally asked
questions, they all accepted the post-workists’ basic premises. An
appetite for a society that treats work differently certainly exists.
But it is not, so far, overwhelming: the evening’s total attendance was
less than 70.
And yet, as Frayne points out, “in some ways, we’re already in a
post-work society. But it’s a dystopic one.” Office employees constantly
interrupting their long days with online distractions; gig-economy workers
whose labour plays no part in their sense of identity; and all the
people in depressed, post-industrial places who have quietly given up
trying to earn – the spectre of post-work runs through the hard, shiny
culture of modern work like hidden rust.
Last October, research by Sheffield Hallam University
revealed that UK unemployment is three times higher than the official
count of those claiming the dole, thanks to people who come under the
broader definition of unemployment
used by the Labour Force Survey, or are receiving incapacity benefits.
When Frayne is not talking and writing about post-work, or doing his
latest temporary academic job, he sometimes makes a living collecting
social data for the Welsh government in former mining towns. “There is
lots of worklessness,” he says, “but with no social policies to dignify
it.”
Creating a more benign post-work world will be more difficult now
than it would have been in the 70s. In today’s lower-wage economy,
suggesting people do less work for less pay is a hard sell. As with
free-market capitalism in general, the worse work gets, the harder it is
to imagine actually escaping it, so enormous are the steps required.
But for those who think work will just carry on as it is, there is a
warning from history. On 1 May 1979, one of the greatest champions of
the modern work culture, Margaret Thatcher, made her final campaign
speech before being elected prime minister. She reflected on the nature
of change in politics and society. “The heresies of one period,” she
said, always become “the orthodoxies of the next”. The end of work as we
know it will seem unthinkable – until it has happened.
The Guardian
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