https://www.mail-archive.com/marxism-thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu/msg06693.html
Marxism in the Realm of Necessity as negation of the attitudes toward work in
the classical European period
I happened to read the below and it occurred to
me that a lot of Marx's fundamental concepts on work and
labor are almost simple negations of the attitudes toward
them in the European classical periods.
In standing Hegel off his head onto his feet
they were doing the same to classical philosophy.
For Marxism , the Realm of Freedom, communism,
is a negation of this negation, as work
becomes a combination of the source of
material wealth and the ancient notion of "leisurely"
on a different level at the same time. It is productive
of necessities , but not toil.
CB
http://www.coe.uga.edu/~rhill/workethic/hist.htm
Attitudes Toward Work During the Classical Period
One of the significant influences on the culture of the western
world has been the Judeo-Christian belief system. Growing awareness of the
multicultural dimensions of contemporary society has moved educators to
consider
alternative viewpoints and perspectives, but an understanding of western
thought is an important element in the understanding of the history of the
United States.
Traditional Judeo-Christian beliefs state that sometime after the dawn
of creation, man was placed in the Garden of Eden "to work it and take care of
it" (NIV, 1973, Genesis 2:15). What was likely an ideal work situation was
disrupted when
sin entered the world and humans were ejected from the Garden. Genesis 3:19
described the human plight from that time on. "By the sweat of your brow you
will eat
your food until you return to the ground, since from it you were taken; for
dust you are and to dust you will return" (NIV, 1973). Rose stated that the
Hebrew belief
system viewed work as a "curse devised by God explicitly to punish the
disobedience and ingratitude of Adam and Eve" (1985, p. 28). Numerous
scriptures from the
Old Testament in fact supported work, not from the stance that there was any
joy in it, but from the premise that it was necessary to prevent poverty and
destitution (NIV; 1973; Proverbs 10:14, Proverbs 13:4, Proverbs 14:23, Proverbs
20:13, Ecclesiastes 9:10).
^^^^^^
CB: For Marx material labor is essential
to human existence, of course
Capital I: "So far therefore as labour is a creator
of use value, is useful labour, it is a
necessary condition, independent of all forms of
society, for the existence of the human race;
it is an eternal nature-imposed necessity,
without which there can be no material exchanges
between man and Nature, and therefore no life. "
^^^^^^
The Greeks, like the Hebrews, also regarded work as a curse
(Maywood, 1982). According to Tilgher (1930), the
Greek word for work was ponos, taken from the Latin poena, which meant sorrow.
Manual labor was for slaves. The cultural norms allowed free men to pursue
warfare, large-scale commerce, and the arts, especially architecture or
sculpture (Rose, 1985).
^^^^^^
CB: Contrast this with Marx's
attitude to material or "manual
labor" above.
^^^^^^
Mental labor was also considered to be work and
was denounced by the Greeks. The mechanical arts
were deplored because they required a person to use practical thinking,
"brutalizing the mind till it was unfit for thinking of truth" (Tilgher, 1930,
p. 4).
^^^^^
CB: Consider Marx's Second Thesis
on Feuerbach wherein he declares
that the of the truth of theory is practice.
Marx , in contrast with the above concept
makes "practical thinking" essential
to "thinking the truth".
^^^^^^
Skilled crafts were accepted and recognized as having
some social value, but were not regarded as much better than work appropriate
for slaves. Hard work, whether due to economic need or under the orders of
a master, was disdained.
It was recognized that work was necessary for the satisfaction of material
needs, but philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle made it clear that the
purpose for
which the majority of men labored was "in order that the minority,
the élite, might engage in pure exercises of the mind--art,
philosophy, and politics" (Tilgher, 1930, p. 5).
^^^^^
CB; This seems related to Engels'
focus on the contrast between
materialism and idealism's
attitude to the relationship
between thought and being.
^^^^^^
Plato recognized the notion of a division of labor, separating them
first into categories of rich and poor, and then into categories
by different kinds of work, and he argued that such an arrangement
could only be avoided by abolition of private property (Anthony, 1977).
^^^^^
CB: Which argument Marx and
Engels make in the _Manifesto
of the Communist Party_
^^^^^^
Aristotle supported the ownership of private property and wealth.
He viewed work as a corrupt waste of time that would make a citizen's
pursuit of virtue more difficult (Anthony, 1977).
Braude (1975) described the Greek belief that a person's prudence,
morality, and wisdom was directly proportional to the amount of leisure
time that person had. A person who worked, when there was no
need to do so, would run the risk
of obliterating the distinction between slave and master.
^^^^^^
CB: Do tell .
^^^^^^
Leadership, in the Greek state and culture, was based on the
work a person didn't have to do, and any person who broke
this cultural norm was acting to subvert the state itself.
The Romans adopted much of their belief system from the
culture of the Greeks and they also held manual labor in low
regard (Lipset, 1990). The Romans were industrious, however,
and demonstrated competence in organization, administration,
building, and warfare. Through the empire that they established,
the Roman culture was spread through much of the civilized world
during the period from c500 BC until c117 AD (Webster Encyclopedia, 1985). The
Roman empire spanned most of Europe, the Middle East, Egypt,
and North Africa and greatly influenced the Western culture in which the
theoretical constructs underlying this study were developed.
Slavery had been an integral part of the ancient world
prior to the Roman empire, but the employment of slaves was much more widely
utilized by the Romans than by the Greeks before them (Anthony, 1977).
Early on in the Roman system, moderate numbers of slaves were held and they
were treated relatively well. As the size of landholdings grew, however,
thousands
of slaves were required for large-scale grain production on some estates, and
their treatment grew worse. Slaves came to be viewed as cattle, with no rights
as human beings
and with little hope of ever being freed. In fact, in some instances cattle
received greater care than slaves, since cattle were not as capable of caring
for
themselves as were slaves (Anthony, 1977).
For the Romans, work was to be done by slaves, and only two occupations were
suitable for a free man--agriculture and big business (Maywood, 1982). A goal
of these endeavors, as defined by the Roman culture, was to achieve an
"honorable retirement into rural peace as a country gentleman" (Tilgher, 1930,
p. 8).
Any pursuit of handicrafts or the hiring out of a person's arms was considered
to be vulgar, dishonoring, and beneath the dignity of a Roman citizen.
Philosophically, both the Greeks and the Romans viewed the
work that slaves performed and the wealth that free men possessed
as a means to achieve the supreme ideal of life--man's independence of
external things, self-sufficiency, and satisfaction with one's self (Tilgher,
1930).
^^^^^^
CB: Sounds like bougeois individualism
and Robinsonade.
^^^^^^
Although work was
something that would degrade virtue, wealth was not
directly related to virtue except in the matter of how it was used.
The view of Antisthenes that wealth and virtue were incompatible
and the view of the Stoics that wealth should be pursued for the purpose of
generosity and social good represented extremes of philosophical thought. The
most accepted
view was that pursuit of gain to meet normal needs was appropriate.
>From the perspective of a contemporary culture, respect for workers
upon whom the economic structure of a nation and a society
rested would have been logical for the Greeks and the Romans, but no such
respect was evident. Even free men, who were not privileged to be wealthy and
were obliged
to work along side slaves, were not treated with any sense of gratitude,
but were held in contempt.
^^^^^^^
CB: To do otherwise would subvert
the fundamental class structure.
^^^^^^
The cultural norms of the classical era
regarding work were in stark contrast to the work ethic of the latter day.
Attitudes Toward Work During the Medieval Period
The fall of the Roman empire marked the beginning of a period generally known
as the Middle Ages. During this time, from c400 AD until c1400 AD, Christian
thought dominated the culture of Europe (Braude, 1975). Woven into the
Christian conceptions about work, however, were Hebrew, Greek, and Roman
themes.
Work was still perceived as punishment by God for man's original sin, but to
this purely negative view was added the positive aspect of earnings which
prevented one from
being reliant on the charity of others for the physical needs of life
(Tilgher, 1930).
Wealth was recognized as an opportunity to share with those who might be less
fortunate and work which produced wealth therefore became acceptable.
Early Christian thought placed an emphasis on the shortness
of time until the second coming of Christ and the end of the world. Any
attachment to physical things of the world or striving to accumulate excessive
wealth was frowned
upon.
^^^^^
CB: In this regard the Christian movement
as a revolutionary movment of the
slaves against the Roman society
was at least theoretical successful.
The transformation from Rome to
the Middle Ages was the result of
class struggle and an oppressed/
exploited class partial victory.
^^^^^^
^^^^^
As time passed and the world did not end, the Christian
church began to turn its attention to social structure and the organization of
the believers on earth. Monasteries were formed where monks performed the
religious
and intellectual work of the church (reading, copying manuscripts, etc.),
but lay people tended to the manual labor needed to supply the needs of the
community. People who were wealthy were expected to meet their own needs, but
to
give the excess of their riches to charity.
^^^^^
CB: ??? Thought they were
extracting surpluses from
serfs/peasants/craftpeople
by direct extortion ???
^^^^^
Handicraft, farming, and small scale commerce were acceptable
for people of moderate means, but receiving interest for money loaned, charging
more than a "just" price, and big business were not acceptable (Tilgher, 1930).
As was the case for the Greeks and the Romans, social status
within the medieval culture was related to the work a person did.
Aristotelianism was also evident in the system of divine law taught by the
Catholic church during this time
(Anthony, 1977). A hierarchy of professions and trades was developed by St.
Thomas Aquinas as part of his encyclopedic consideration of all things human
and
divine (Tilgher, 1930). Agriculture was ranked first, followed by the
handicrafts and then commerce. These were considered to be the work of the
world, however,
and the work of the church was in a higher category (Rose, 1985). The ideal
occupation was the monastic life of prayer and contemplation of God (Braude,
1975; Tilgher, 1930).
Whether as a cleric or in some worldly occupation, each person embarked on a
particular work course as a result of the calling of God, and it was the duty
of a worker to
remain in his class, passing on his family work from father to son.
In the culture of the medieval period, work still held no intrinsic value.
The function of work was to meet the physical needs of one's family and
community, and to avoid idleness which would lead to sin (Tilgher, 1930).
Work was a part of the economic structure of human society which, like all
other things, was ordered by God.
^^^^^^
CB: This section is off and
blind to the feudal lords and
ladies of the manor, knights
etc.
^^^^^
Protestantism and the Protestant Ethic
With the Reformation, a period of religious and political
upheaval in western Europe during the sixteenth century, came
a new perspective on work. Two key religious leaders who influenced the
development of western culture during this period were Martin Luther and John
Calvin. Luther was
an Augustinian friar who became discontent with the Catholic church and was a
leader within the Protestant movement. He believed that people could serve God
through their work, that the professions were useful, that work was the
universal base of society and the cause of differing social classes, and that a
person should work
diligently in their own occupation and should not try to change from the
profession to which he was born. To do so would be to go against God's laws
since God assigned
each person to his own place in the social hierarchy (Lipset, 1990; Tilgher,
1930).
The major point at which Luther differed from the medieval
concept of work was regarding the superiority of one form of work over another.
Luther regarded the monastic and contemplative life, held up as the ideal
during
the middle ages, as an egotistic and unaffectionate exercise on the part of the
monks, and he accused them of evading their duty to their neighbors (Tilgher,
1930).
For Luther, a person's vocation was equated as his calling, but all calling's
were of equal spiritual dignity. This tenant was significant because it
affirmed manual labor.
Luther still did not pave the way for a profit-oriented economic
system because he disapproved of commerce as an occupation (Lipset, 1990;
Tilgher, 1930). From his perspective, commerce did not involve any real work.
Luther also
believed that each person should earn an income which would meet his basic
needs, but to accumulate or horde wealth was sinful.
According to Weber (1904, 1905), it was John Calvin who
introduced the theological doctrines which combined with those of Martin
Luther to form a significant new attitude toward work. Calvin was a French
theologian whose
concept of predestination was revolutionary. Central to Calvinist
belief was the Elect, those persons chosen by God to inherit eternal life. All
other people were damned and nothing could change that since God was
unchanging.
While it was impossible to know for certain whether a person was one of the
Elect, one could have a sense of it based on his own personal encounters with
God.
Outwardly the only evidence was in the person's daily life and deeds, and
success in one's worldly endeavors was a sign of possible inclusion as one of
the Elect.
A person who was indifferent and displayed idleness was most
certainly one of the damned, but a person who was active, austere, and
hard-working gave evidence to himself and to others that he was one of God's
chosen ones (Tilgher, 1930).
Calvin taught that all men must work, even the rich, because to
work was the will of God. It was the duty of men to serve as God's instruments
here on earth, to reshape the world in the fashion of the Kingdom of God, and
to become a
part of the continuing process of His creation (Braude, 1975).
Men were not to lust after wealth, possessions, or easy living, but were to
reinvest the profits of their labor into financing further ventures. Earnings
were thus to be
reinvested over and over again, ad infinitum, or to the end of time (Lipset,
1990).
^^^^^^^
CB: Hmmm That sounds familiar.
No wonder Weber referred to the
"spirit" of capitalism.
^^^^^^^
Using profits to help others rise from a lessor level of subsistence
violated God's will since persons could only demonstrate that they were among
the Elect through their own labor (Lipset, 1990).
Selection of an occupation and pursuing it to achieve the greatest
profit possible was considered by Calvinists to be a religious duty.
Not only condoning, but encouraging the pursuit of unlimited profit
was a radical departure from the Christian beliefs of the middle ages. In
addition, unlike Luther, Calvin considered it appropriate to seek an occupation
which would
provide the greatest earnings possible. If that meant abandoning
the family trade or profession, the change was not only allowed, but it was
considered to be one's religious duty (Tilgher, 1930).
The norms regarding work which developed out of the Protestant
Reformation, based on the combined theological teachings of Luther and Calvin,
encouraged work in a chosen occupation with an attitude of service to God,
viewed
work as a calling and avoided placing greater spiritual dignity on one
job than another, approved of working diligently to achieve maximum profits,
required reinvestment of profits back into one's business, allowed a person to
change
from the craft or profession of his father, and associated success in one's
work with the likelihood of being one of God's Elect.
Two Perspectives of the Protestant Ethic
The attitudes toward work which became a part of the culture
during the sixteenth century, and the economic value system which they
nurtured, represented a significant change from medieval and classical ways of
thinking
about work (Anthony, 1977). Max Weber, the German economic sociologist, coined
a term for the new beliefs about work calling it the "Protestant ethic." The
key
elements of the Protestant ethic were diligence, punctuality,
deferment of gratification, and primacy of the work domain (Rose, 1985). Two
distinct perspectives were evident in the literature with regard to the
development of the
Protestant ethic.
One perspective was the materialist viewpoint which stated that
the belief system, called the Protestant ethic, grew out of changes in the
economic structure and the need for values to support new ways of behavior.
Anthony (1977)
attributes this view to Karl Marx. The other perspective, delineated by Max
Weber (1904, 1905), viewed changes in the economic structure as an outgrowth of
shifts
in theological beliefs. Regardless of the viewpoint, it is evident that a rapid
expansion in commerce and the rise of industrialism coincided with the
Protestant Reformation (Rose, 1985).
Bernstein (1988), in an argument supporting the materialist
viewpoint, enumerated three sixteenth century trends which
probably contributed to the support by Luther and Calvin of diligence: (1) a
rapid population increase of Germany and Western Europe, (2) inflation, and (3)
a high
unemployment rate. Probably the most serious of these
was the rapid expansion in population. Between 1500 and 1600, the population of
Germany increased by 25% and the British population increased by 40%
(Bernstein, 1988).
In the cities, the increases were even greater as people from rural areas were
displaced by enclosure of large tracts of land for sheep farming. In addition,
the import
of large quantities of silver and gold from Mexico and Peru contributed
to inflation in general price levels of between 300% and 400%, and even higher
inflation in food prices (Bernstein, 1988). Along with the growth in population
and the
inflation problems, unemployment was estimated at 20% in some cities
(Bernstein, 1988). People without jobs became commonplace on the streets of
cities,
begging and struggling to survive.
European cities acted to alleviate the problems of unemployment
and begging on the streets by passing laws which prohibited begging.
The general perception of the time was that work was available for those who
wanted to work, and that beggars and vagrants were just lazy. The reality was
that the
movement of people into the cities far exceeded the capacity of the urban
areas to provide jobs. The theological premise that work was a necessary
penance for
original sin caused increased prejudice toward those without work. Bernstein
(1988) suggested that a fundamental misunderstanding of the economic realities
facing
the poor contributed to the theological development of the Protestant ethic.
>From a marxist view, what actually occurred was the development of a religious
>base of support for a new industrial system which required workers who would
>accept
long hours and poor working conditions (Anthony, 1977; Berenstein, 1988).
Berenstein did not accuse the theological leaders of the Protestant Reformation
of deliberately constructing a belief system which would support the new
economic order, but proposed that
they did misconstrue the realities of the poor and the unemployed of their day.
>From the perspective of Max Weber (1904, 1905), the theological beliefs
came first and change in the economic system resulted. Motivation of persons to
work hard and to reinvest profits in new business ventures was perceived as an
outcome primarily of Calvinism. Weber further concluded that countries with
belief systems which were predominantly Protestant prospered more under
capitalism
than did those which were predominantly Catholic (Rose, 1985).
The Work Ethic and the Rise of Capitalism
During the medieval period, the feudal system became the
dominant economic structure in Europe. This was a social, economic, and
political system under which landowners provided governance and protection to
those who
lived and worked on their property. Centralization of government, the growth of
trade, and the establishment of economically powerful towns, during the
fifteenth century, provided alternative choices for subsistence, and the feudal
system died out (Webster Encyclopedia, 1985). One of the factors that made the
feudal
system work was the predominant religious belief that it was sinful for people
to seek work other than within the God ordained occupations fathers passed on
to their sons.
With the Protestant Reformation, and the spread of a
theology which ordained the divine dignity of all occupations as well as the
right of choosing one's work, the underpinnings of an emerging capitalist
economic system were established.
economic system were established.
Anthony (1977) described the significance of an ideology
advocating regular systematic work as essential to the transformation from the
feudal system to the modern society. In the emerging capitalist system,
work was good. It satisfied the economic interests of an increasing number of
small businessmen and it became a social duty--a norm. Hard work brought
respect
and contributed to the social order and well being of the community. The
dignity with which society viewed work brought dignity for workers as well, and
contempt for those who were idle or lazy.
The Protestant ethic, which gave "moral sanction to profit making through hard
work, organization, and rational calculation" (Yankelovich, 1981, p. 247),
^^^^^
CB: While they conveniently ignored that most
of the work upon which the profit
was made was done by slaves
in imperial colonies, and masses
of poor workers for the Elect.
The fictional character Robinson
Crusoe had stored up and delivered
to him a fortune from his slave
plantation in Brazil after 28 years
when he finally
got off the island where he did
"so much" diligent and hard work, but
not nearly enough to make the
fortune that his slaves did for him.
The amazing thing was the plantation
just sort of fell into his ownership
without even his having any money
capital ahead of time , as he went
there penniless after escaping from pirates
in North Africa. It seemed to be
his status as an Englishman that
naturally bestowed upon him the
status of slave owning capitalist.
And his capital , plant-plantation
just kept on operating for him
all the while he was stranded on
the island.
^^^^^^
spread throughout Europe and to America through the Protestant sects. In
particular, the English Puritans, the French Huguenots, and the Swiss and Dutch
Reformed subscribed to Calvinist theology that was especially conducive to
productivity and capital growth (Lipset, 1990). As time passed, attitudes and
beliefs which supported hard work became secularized, and were woven into the
norms of Western culture (Lipset, 1990; Rodgers, 1978; Rose, 1985; Super,
1982).
Weber (1904, 1905) especially emphasized the popular writings of Benjamin
Franklin as an example of how, by the eighteenth century, diligence in work,
scrupulous
use of time, and deferment of pleasure had become a part of the popular
philosophy of work in the Western world.
The Work Ethic in America
Although the Protestant ethic became a significant factor
in shaping the culture and society of Europe after the sixteenth century, its
impact did not eliminate the social hierarchy which gave status to those whose
wealth
allowed exemption from toil and made gentility synonymous with leisure
(Rodgers, 1978). The early adventurers who first found America were searching,
not for
a place to work and build a new land, but for a new Eden
where abundance and riches would allow them to follow Aristotle's
instruction that leisure was the only life fitting for a free man.
^^^^^
CB: And like Aristotle's society
the abundance and riches didn't
all just fall from heaven but some were
produced by the labor
of brutalized slaves, whom the gentile
Europeans oppressed and
exploited with the major force
of the state power.
^^^^^^^
The New England Puritans, the Pennsylvania Quakers, and
others of the Protestant sects, who eventually settled in America, however,
came with no hopes or illusions of a life of ease.
The early settlers referred to America as a wilderness, in part because they
sought the spiritual growth associated with coming through the wilderness in
the Bible (Rodgers, 1978).
From their viewpoint, the moral life was one of hard work and determination,
and they approached the task of building a new world in the wilderness as an
opportunity to prove
their own moral worth. What resulted was a land preoccupied with toil.
When significant numbers of Europeans began to visit the new world in the early
1800's, they were amazed with the extent of the transformation (Rodgers, 1978).
Visitors
to the northern states were particularly impressed by the industrious pace.
They often complained about the lack of opportunities for amusement, and they
were perplexed by
the lack of a social strata dedicated to a life of leisure.
Work in preindustrial America was not incessant, however. The
work of agriculture was seasonal, hectic during planting
and harvesting but more relaxed during the winter months. Even in workshops
and stores, the pace was not constant. Changing demands due to the seasons,
varied
availability of materials, and poor transportation and communication
contributed to interruptions in the steadiness of work. The work ethic of this
era did not demand
the ceaseless regularity which came with the age of machines,
but supported sincere dedication to accomplish those tasks a person might have
before them. The work ethic "was not a certain rate of business but a way of
thinking" (Rodgers, 1978, p. 19).
^^^^^^^
CB: Ballad for Americans, Appalachian Spring
the rational kernel of America to which
Obama appeals...except...
Well, there was the genocidal usurpation
of the Indigenous Peoples' aboriginal home
^^^^^^
The Work Ethic and the Industrial Revolution
As work in America was being dramatically affected by the
industrial revolution in the mid-nineteenth century, the work ethic had become
secularized in a number of ways. The idea of work as a calling had been
replaced by
the concept of public usefulness. Economists warned of the poverty and decay
that would befall the country if people failed to work hard, and moralists
stressed
the social duty of each person to be productive (Rodgers, 1978). Schools
taught, along with the alphabet and the spelling book, that idleness was a
disgrace. The work ethic
also provided a sociological as well as an ideological explanation for the
origins of social hierarchy through the corollary that effort expended in work
would
be rewarded (Gilbert, 1977).
Some elements of the work ethic, however, did not bode well
with the industrial age. One of the central themes of the work ethic was that
an individual could be the master of his own fate through hard work. Within the
context
of the craft and agricultural society this was true. A person could advance his
position in life through manual labor and the economic benefits it would
produce. Manual labor,
however, began to be replaced by machine manufacture and intensive division of
labor came with the industrial age. As a result, individual control over the
quantity
and methods of personal production began to be removed (Gilbert, 1977).
The impact of industrialization and the speed with which it spread
during the second half of the nineteenth century was notable. Rodgers (1978)
reported that as late as 1850 most American manufacturing was still being done
in
homes and workshops. This pattern was not confined to rural areas,
but was found in cities also where all varieties of craftsmen plied their
trades. Some division of labor was utilized, but most work was performed using
time-honored hand
methods. A certain measure of independence and creativity
could be taken for granted in the workplace. No one directly supervised
home workers or farmers, and in the small shops and mills, supervision was
mostly unstructured. The cotton textile industry of New England was the major
exception.
Rodgers (1978) described the founding, in the early 1820's, of
Lowell, Massachusetts as the real beginning of the industrial age in America.
By the end of the decade, nineteen textile mills were in operation in the city,
and 5,000
workers were employed in the mills. During the years that followed, factories
were built in other towns as competition in the industry grew. These cotton
mills were
distinguished from other factories of the day by their size, the discipline
demanded of their workers, and the paternalistic regulations imposed on
employees (Rodgers, 1978). Gradually the patterns of employment and management
initiated in the cotton mills spread
to other industries, and during the later half of the nineteenth century, the
home and workshop trades were essentially replaced by the mass production of
factories.
In the factories, skill and craftsmanship were replaced by discipline
and anonymity. A host of carefully preserved hand trades--tailoring, barrel
making, glass blowing, felt-hat making, pottery making, and shoe
making--disappeared as they
were replaced by new inventions and specialization of labor (Rodgers, 1978).
Although new skills were needed in some factories, the trend was toward a
semiskilled labor force, typically operating one machine to perform one small
piece of a manufacturing process.
The sense of control over one's destiny was missing in the new workplace, and
the emptiness and lack of intellectual stimulation in work threatened the work
ethic
(Gilbert, 1977). In the secularized attitudes which comprised the work ethic up
until that time, a central component was the promise of psychological reward
for efforts
in one's work, but the factory system did little to support a sense of purpose
or self-fulfillment for those who were on the assembly lines.
The factory system also threatened the promise of economic
reward--another key premise of the work ethic. The output of products
manufactured by factories was so great that by the 1880's industrial capacity
exceeded that which the economy could absorb (Rodgers, 1978). Under the system
of home
and workshop industries, production had been a virtue, and excess goods were
not a problem. Now that factories could produce more than the nation could use,
hard work
and production no longer always provided assurance of prosperity.
In the first half of the twentieth century, the industrial system continued to
dominate work in America and much of the rest of the world. Technology
continued to advance, but
innovation tended to be focused on those areas of manufacture which had not yet
been mastered by machines. Little was done to change the routine tasks of
feeding
materials into automated equipment or other forms of semiskilled labor which
were more economically done by low wage workers (Rodgers, 1978).
The Work Ethic and Industrial Management
Management of industries became more systematic and
structured as increased competition forced factory owners to hold costs down.
The model of management which developed, the traditional model, was
characterized by a very authoritarian style which did not acknowledge the work
ethic. To the contrary, Daft and Steers (1986) described this model as holding
"that the average worker was basically lazy and was motivated almost entirely
by money (p. 93)." Workers
were assumed to neither desire nor be capable of autonomous or self-directed
work.
As a result, the scientific management concept was developed, predicated on
specialization and division of jobs into simple tasks. Scientific management
was claimed to
increase worker production and result in increased pay. It was therefore seen
as beneficial to workers, as well as to the company, since monetary gain was
viewed as the
primary motivating factor for both.
As use of scientific management became more widespread in
the early 1900's, it became apparent that factors other than pay were
significant to worker motivation. Some workers were self-starters and didn't
respond well to
close supervision and others became distrustful of management when pay
increases failed to keep pace with improved productivity (Daft and Steers,
1986). Although unacknowledged
in management practice, these were indicators of continued viability of the
work ethic in employees.
By the end of World War II scientific management was considered
inadequate and outdated to deal with the needs of industry (Jaggi, 1988). At
this point the behaviorist school of thought emerged to provide alternative
theories for guiding
the management of workers. Contrary to the principles of scientific management,
the behaviorists argued that workers were not intrinsically lazy. They were
adaptive.
If the environment failed to provide a challenge, workers became lazy, but if
appropriate opportunities were provided, workers would become creative and
motivated.
In response to the new theories, managers turned their attention
to finding various ways to make jobs more fulfilling for workers. Human
relations became an important issue and efforts were made to make people feel
useful and
important at work. Company newspapers, employee awards, and company social
events were among the tools used by management to enhance the job environment
(Daft and Steers, 1986), but the basic nature of the workplace remained
unchanged. The adversarial relationship between employee and employer
persisted.
In the late 1950's job enrichment theories began to provide the
basis for fundamental changes in employer-employee relationships. Herzberg,
Mausner, and Snyderman (1959) identified factors such as achievement,
recognition,
responsibility, advancement, and personal growth which, when provided as an
intrinsic component of a job, tended to motivate workers to perform better.
Factors such
as salary, company policies, supervisory style, working conditions, and
relations with fellow workers tended to impair worker performance if
inadequately provided for, but did not particularly improve worker motivation
when present.
In 1960, when the concepts of theory "X" and theory "Y" were
introduced by McGregor, the basis for a management style conducive to achieving
job enrichment for workers was provided (Jaggi, 1988). Theory "X" referred to
the authoritarian management style characteristic of scientific management but
theory "Y" supported a participatory style of management.
Jaggi (1988) defined participatory management as
"a cooperative process in which management and workers work together to
accomplish a common goal (p. 446)." Unlike authoritarian styles of management,
which
provided top-down, directive control over workers assumed to be unmotivated
and in need of guidance, participatory management asserted that worker
involvement in
decisionmaking provided valuable input and enhanced employee satisfaction and
morale. Yankelovich and Immerwahr (1984) described participatory management as
a
system which would open the way for the work ethic to be a powerful resource in
the workplace. They stated, however, that the persistence of the traditional
model in
American management discouraged workers, even though many wanted to work hard
and do good work for its own sake.
The Work Ethic in the Information Age
Just as the people of the mid-nineteenth century encountered
tremendous cultural and social change with the dawn of the industrial age, the
people of the late twentieth century experienced tremendous cultural and
social shifts with the advent of the information age. Toffler (1980) likened
these times of change to waves washing over the culture, bringing with it
changes in norms and
expectations, as well as uncertainty about the future.
Since 1956 (Naisbitt, 1984) white-collar workers in technical, managerial, and
clerical positions have outnumbered workers in blue-collar jobs. Porat (1977),
in a study for the U.S. Department of Commerce, examined over 400 occupations
in 201 industries. He determined that in 1967, the economic contribution
of jobs primarily dealing with production of information, as compared with
goods-producing jobs, accounted for 46% of the GNP and more than 53% of the
income earned. Some jobs in manufacturing and industry also became more
technical and necessitated
a higher level of thinking on the job as machines were interfaced with
computers and control systems became more complex.
Yankelovich and Immerwahr (1984) contrasted the work required of most people
during the industrial age with the work of the information age. Industrial age
jobs were
typically low-discretion, required little decisionmaking, and were analyzed and
broken into simple tasks which required very little thinking or judgement on
the part of
workers. Information age jobs, in contrast, were high-discretion and required
considerable thinking and decisionmaking on the part of workers (Miller, 1986).
In the
workplace characterized by high-discretion, the work ethic became a much more
important construct than it was during the manipulative era of machines.
Maccoby (1988) emphasized the importance, in this setting, of giving employees
authority to make decisions which would meet the needs of customers as well as
support the goals of their own companies.
As high-discretion, information age jobs provided opportunities for greater
self-expression by workers, people began to find more self-fulfillment in their
work.
Yankelovich and Harmon (1988) reported that a significant transformation in the
meaning of the work ethic resulted. Throughout history, work had been
associated with pain, sacrifice, and drudgery. The previously mentioned Greek
word for work, ponos, also meant "pain."
For the Hebrews as well as for the medieval Christians, the unpleasantness of
work was associated with Divine punishment for man's sin. The Protestant ethic
maintained that work was a sacrifice that demonstrated moral worthiness, and it
stressed the importance of postponed gratification. With the information age,
however, came work which was perceived as good and rewarding in itself. Most
workers were satisfied with their work and wanted to be successful in it
(Wattenberg, 1984).
According the Yankelovich and Harmon (1988), the work ethic
of the 1980's stressed skill, challenge, autonomy, recognition, and the quality
of work produced. Autonomy was identified as a particularly important factor
in worker satisfaction with their jobs. Motivation to work involved trust,
caring, meaning, self-knowledge, challenge, opportunity for personal growth,
and dignity (Maccoby, 1988; Walton, 1974). Workers were seeking control over
their work and a sense of empowerment
and many information age jobs were conducive to meeting these needs. As a
result, the work ethic was not abandoned during the information age, but was
transformed
to a state of relevance not found in most industrial age occupations.
Even though the information age was well established by the
1980's and 1990's, not all jobs were high-discretion. Some occupations
continued to consist primarily of manual labor and allowed minimal opportunity
for worker
involvement in decisionmaking. In addition, authoritarian forms of management
continued to be utilized and the potential of the work ethic was wasted.
Statistics
reported by Yankelovich and Immerwahr (1984) indicated that by the early
1980's, 43% of the workforce perceived their jobs as high-discretion and 21% of
the workforce perceived their jobs as low-discretion. The high-discretion
workers were likely to be better educated, to be in white-collar or service
jobs, and to have experienced technological changes in their work.
The low-discretion workers were more likely to be union members, to be in
blue-collar jobs, and to be working in positions characterized by dirt, noise,
and pollution.
The Work Ethic and Empowerment
As a result of the rapid changes associated with the Information Age workplace,
codified and systematized knowledge not limited to a specific organizational
context was important during the 1980's and 1990's (Maccoby, 1983). Higher
levels of education became necessary along with skills at solving problems,
managing people, and applying the latest information to the tasks at hand. With
increased education, higher expectations and aspirations for careers emerged.
Young people, in particular, entering the workforce with high school and
college educations, expected opportunities for advancement (Maccoby, 1983;
Sheehy, 1990). They anticipated that talent and hard work would be the basis
for success rather than chance or luck. In essence, information age workers
expected application of a positive work ethic to result in rewards, and they
sometimes became impatient if progress was not experienced in a relatively
short period of time (Sheehy, 1990).
For workers who acquired positions of supervision or ownership, motivation to
accomplish personal goals through success in the organization enhanced the
expression of work ethic attributes. Barnard (1938) identified the process of
persons in an organization coordinating their activities to attain common goals
as important to the well-being of the organization. One of the essential
elements for this process was the creation and allocation of satisfaction among
individuals (Barnard, 1938).
Further explanation for organizational behavior was provided by a model
developed by Getzels and Guba (Getzels, 1968). The major elements of the model
were institution, role, and expectation which formed the normative dimension of
activity in a social system; and individual, personality, and need-disposition
which constituted the personal dimension of activity in a social system
(Getzels, 1968). To the extent that a person's work ethic beliefs influenced
personality and need-disposition, the observed behavior of that individual
within the context of the workplace would be affected. Particularly in the
high-discretion workplace of the information age, role and expectations found
within the workplace would tend to be reinforced by a strong work ethic.
Other Changes in the Workplace
Besides changes in the jobs people performed, changes in the levels of
education required for those jobs, and changes in the extent to which people
were given control or empowerment in their work, the workforce of the 1980's
and 1990's reflected a larger number of women and a reduced number of workers
older than 65. Changes in gender and age of workers had a significant impact on
the culture of the later twentieth century and influenced the pattern of work
related norms such as the work ethic.
Rodgers (1978) told of the growing restlessness of women in the late 1800's and
the early 1900's. As the economic center of society was moved out of the home
or workshop and into the factory, women were left behind. Some women became
operatives in textile mills, office workers, or salesclerks, and increased
numbers were employed as teachers (Sawhill, 1974). Women comprised a relatively
small percentage of the workforce, however, and their wages were about half
that of men. Those who labored at housework and child-rearing received no pay
at all and often were afforded little respect or appreciation for what they
did.
It was not until World War II and the years following that women began to enter
the workplace in great numbers. In 1900 women made up 18% of the nation's
workforce, but by 1947 they comprised 28% of the workforce (Levitan & Johnson,
1983). By 1980 42.5% of the nation's workers were women (Stencel, 1981). In
1990 the number of women workers was approaching 50% of the workforce, and
Naisbitt and Aburdene (1990) reported that women held 39.3% of all executive,
administrative, and management jobs. Due to the increase in the number of women
working outside the home, their attitudes about work have become a significant
influence on the work ethic in the contemporary workplace.
Comparisons of attitudes of men and women in the workplace have shown that men
tended to be more concerned with earning a good income, having freedom from
close supervision, having leadership opportunities, and having a job that
enhanced their social status. Women were inclined to seek job characteristics
which allowed them to help others, to be original and creative, to progress
steadily in their work, and to work with people rather than things (Lyson,
1984). Women, more than men, also tended to seek personal benefits such as
enjoyment, pride, fulfillment, and personal challenge (Bridges, 1989).
Another trend which shaped the workforce of the later twentieth century was an
increase in the number of older workers who retired from their jobs. Statistics
reported by Quinn (1983) showed that in 1950, persons 65 years old and older
comprised 45.8% of the workforce as compared to 18.4% in 1981. Part of this
trend can be explained by the continued shift away from agriculture and
self-employment--occupations which traditionally had high older worker
participation rates. In addition, increased provision for retirement income, as
a result of pensions or other retirement plans, has removed the financial
burden which necessitated work for many older adults in the past.
Deans (1972) noted a trend on the part of younger workers to view work
differently than older workers. He found less acceptance, among young people
entering the workforce, of the concept that hard work was a virtue and a duty
and less upward striving by young workers compared to that of their parents and
grandparents. Yankelovich (1981) reported findings which contradicted the view
that younger workers were less committed to the work ethic, but he did find a
decline in belief that hard work would pay off. This was a significant shift
because pay and "getting ahead" were the primary incentives management used to
encourage productivity during the industrial age. If economic reward had lost
its ability to motivate workers, then productivity could be expected to
decline, in the absence of some other reason for working hard (Yankelovich,
1981). Within this context, the work ethic, and a management style which
unfettered it, was a significant factor for
maintaining and increasing performance.
Previous Section
Influences Shaping the Contemporary Work Ethic
The work ethic is a cultural norm that places a positive moral value on doing a
good job and is based on a belief that work has intrinsic value for its own
sake (Cherrington, 1980; Quinn, 1983; Yankelovich & Immerwahr, 1984). Like
other cultural norms, a person's adherence to or belief in the work ethic is
principally influenced by socialization experiences during childhood and
adolescence. Through interaction with family, peers, and significant adults, a
person "learns to place a value on work behavior as others approach him in
situations demanding increasing responsibility for productivity" (Braude, 1975,
p. 134). Based on praise or blame and affection or anger, a child appraises his
or her performance in household chores, or later in part-time jobs, but this
appraisal is based on the perspective of others. As a child matures, these
attitudes toward work become internalized, and work performance is less
dependent on the reactions of others.
Children are also influenced by the attitudes of others toward work (Braude,
1975). If a parent demonstrates a dislike for a job or a fear of unemployment,
children will tend to assimilate these attitudes. Parents who demonstrate a
strong work ethic tend to impart a strong work ethic to their children.
Another significant factor shaping the work attitudes of people is the
socialization which occurs in the workplace. As a person enters the workplace,
the perceptions and reactions of others tend to confirm or contradict the work
attitudes shaped in childhood (Braude, 1975). The occupational culture,
especially the influence of an "inner fraternity" of colleagues, has a
significant impact on the attitudes toward work and the work ethic which form
part of each person's belief system.
Among the mechanisms provided by society to transfer the culture to young
people is the public school. One of the functions of schools is to foster
student understanding of cultural norms, and in some cases to recognize the
merits of accepting them. Vocational education, for example, has as a stated
goal that it will promote the work ethic (Gregson, 1991; Miller, 1985). Reubens
(1974) listed "inculcation of good work attitudes" as one of the highest
priorities for high school education. In the absence of early socialization
which supports good work attitudes, schools should not be expected to
completely transform a young person's work ethic orientation, but enlightening
students about what the work ethic is, and why it is important to success in
the contemporary workplace, should be a component of secondary education.
Previous Section
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