Title: The Debate about Skilled Work
1The Debate about Skilled Work
- Professor Roger Penn
- University of Bologna
- 2009
2Two Diametrically Opposed Theories of
Trajectories in Skilled Work
- The Marxist Theory of Deskilling Bravermans
Labor and Monopoly Capital - vs
- The Skilling Thesis associated with Human Capital
Theory D. Bell The Coming of
Post-Industrial Society - Both published in the same year 1974
- No references in common
3Deskilling The Context for Braverman
- Braverman associated with Monthly Review journal
founded in 1949 by Paul Sweezy and Leo Huberman - An influential journal but little impact on
American sociology - Best known product of this school was Baran and
Sweezys Monopoly Capital (1966). Indeed,
Bravermans analysis of work is predicated
theoretically upon Baran and Sweezys analysis of
Monopoly Capital ie oligopolistic, organized
capitalism - After mid-1960s increasing interest in
neo-Marxism in the USA partly result of social
conflicts evident in America in late 1960s - These events threw doubt of the utility of the
structural-functionalist consensus paradigm
4The Context for Braverman
- The 1970s witnessed the re-emergence of radical
political economy in both the USA and Western
Europe - Produced the Union of Radical Political
Economists and the journal Insurgent Sociologist
in USA and wide array of groups and journals in
Western Europe, of which the most well known were
New Left Review, Capital and Class and Economy
and Society
5The Context for Braverman
- In the late 1960s in the USA two sets of ideas
had emerged within the social sciences which
formed the concepts against which Braverman
reacted - 1. H. Marcuses One Dimensional Man a German
social philosopher and member of the Frankfurt
school who argued that the affluence generated by
advanced capitalism had produced a mass-consumer
culture that incorporated the working class into
such societies - Accordingly, the working class was no longer a
revolutionary class and the central foci of
radical transformation lie with those groups
marginalized by the capitalist process such as
Blacks Hispanics, Students and Peasants in the
developing world - For Marcuse advanced capitalism had solved the
economic contradictions held to be central to it
by Marx this was a pessimistic view of the
working class
6The Context for Braverman
- 2. Human Capital Theory Chicago School
exponents include Shultz Becker - Post-Industrial Society
- ? shift from Manufacturing ? Services
- ? shift from Manual ? Nonmanual
- ? Expansion of Education.
7The Context for Braverman
- Their central thesis was that technical change
was eradicating physical/manual work,
particularly in manufacturing industry, and was
causing the disappearance of the traditional
working class. - The rationale behind this theory was spelt out
most clearly in Fuchss Service Economy. - The idea was that technical change was
eliminating much routine manual work as a result
of the need for enhanced levels of training and
specialist expertise. - There is a growing need for a technologically
sophisticated workforce. (cf. R. Blauner
Alienation and Freedom and exponents of the new
working class like A. Gorz and S. Mallet).
8The Context for Braverman
- These secular trends were seen as eliminating
routine, labouring, manual jobs and generating
more skilled, knowledgeable positions within
industry. - Furthermore, the increasing intensity of capital
in the manufacturing sector also led to
increasing employment in the service sector. - The image was one of increasing numbers of
teachers, doctors and related service sector
jobs, which also led towards an increasingly
middle class society. - These ideas were closely entwined with notions of
embourgeoisement, the end of ideology and the
growth of middle class society.
9Bravermans Theory
- Braverman took exception to both these views
about the modern working class. - His book attempts to show that an increasing
proportion of jobs whether nominally manual
working class or in the service sector were
becoming more and more akin to classic
proletarian jobs, (i.e. more and more degraded,
subdivided, simplified, routinized, alienating or
straightforwardly boring).
10Bravermans Theory
- Furthermore, Braveman argued that the affluence
that Marcuse made so much of was little more than
the froth on the surface of capitalist societies - Indeed, within the labour process of advanced
capitalist societies, the same factors identified
by Marx as operative in the mid-19th century
equally pertinent in the 1970s in the USA.
11Bravermans Theory
- Braverman argued that the labour process (process
of production whereby labour power is applied to
raw materials and machinery to produce
commodities) in advanced capitalist economies is
determined by capitalist social relations and is
not the result of technical /organizational
factors.
12Bravermans Assumptions I
- That labour creates all value
- That social relations not technical relations
determine the conditions of work. - According to Braverman, labour processes reflect,
in their organization, the antagonistic relations
inherent in capitalist societies. - In particular, managers cannot rely on labour to
work efficiently of its own accord and therefore
managers look to maximize their control over the
labour process and minimize the autonomy of
workers.
13Bravermans Assumptions II
- Within Bravermans model capital needs to
dominate the labour process and weaken the
ability of workers to resist. - Braverman placed considerable emphasis on the
role of Scientific Management (Taylorism) as a
quintessential method of achieving this. - In particular, Scientific Management involved
the subdivision of tasks and the establishment of
new technologies that were less dependent upon
workers craft skills.
14Bravermans Assumptions III
- Braverman suggested that both manual and
non-manual work were being deskilled in his
analyses of craft work (chapter nine) and
clerical work (chapter fifteen). - Consequently, for Braverman, advanced capitalism
is producing a proletarianization of the
workforces of such societies - This is a vindication of Marxs earlier arguments
for deskilling and proletarianization under
conditions of competitive capitalism and for the
associated idea that labour increasingly takes on
the central characteristics of pure labour ie
it becomes an interchangeable commodity
15Bravermans Assumptions IV
- Braverman argued strongly that Taylorism/Scientifi
c Management embodies three fundamental
principles of modern management - The labour process must be made completely
independent of the autonomy, creativity and
ability of the individual worker - There must be a total divorce of mental and
manual labour the separation of conception
from execution. - Capitalists (management) must assume control over
every step of the labour process
16What are the Manifestations of Deskilling?
- Decline in craftsmen
- Increasing separation of mental and physical
labour - Decline in levels of training
- Increase in the interchangeability of labour
17How can these be assessed?
- Decline in the number/proportion of craftsmen?
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22Decline in Skilled Content of Jobs
- A study of technological change in 3 paper
mills in the UK in 1984 employing 408, 250 and
670 - Returned in 1985 to 2 mills to investigate
subsequent changes. - Examination of the effects of technical change
on the division of labour, especially skilled
work since 1970. - Series of visits to interview directors,
managers, trade union representatives (shop
stewards) and various groupings of workers
23Case Study at James Cropper, PLC
- Specialist papermaker coloured card and paper.
- Since 1970 significant changes to production
machinery. - Introduction of computermonitoring equipment
provided continuous information on the weight,
wetness and thickness of paper
24Case Study at James Cropper, PLC
- Operatives had to
- ?decide whether information was accurate
- ?decide what to do if trend data indicated
an emerging problem - Decisions made upon basis of judgment acquired
through experience over a long period working on
the machinery in a team - Internal career trajectory within team ascent
to skilled jobs over time - Numbers of production workers essentially the
same since 1970
25Case Study at James Cropper, PLC
- Large increase in Maintenance Workers
Electricians, Mechanical Fitters and Instrument
Mechanics (Instrumenters) - 1970, Six employed (Electrician and Fitter on
each of 3 shifts) - 1984, 17 employed (2 Fitters, 1 Electrician, 1
Instrumenter and 1 Maintenance Supervisor on each
of 3 shifts plus 1 Electrician and 1 Fitter on a
separate day shift)
26Case Study at James Cropper, PLC
- An apparent correlation between computerization
and job losses but, in fact, this was spurious! - Technical Changes had led to loss of jobs, but
this was associated not with computerization but
the widespread elimination of labouring jobs as a
result of mechanization introduction of
fork-lift trucks, conveyor belts and
palletization of orders for dispatch - Technological change/computerization had changed
skills but had not reduced them. - Particularly evident amongst machine maintenance
workers (electricians/fitters/instrument
mechanics)
27Does Braverman Demonstrate His Case Empirically?
- Not really. It is a capital logic or perhaps
more precisely a labour process logic approach. - Indeed, much of Bravermans argument proceeds by
conflation by assuming what has to be
demonstrated
28Polarisation Thesis
- Various authors Sassen,1988Morris et al 1994
argued that there has been a progressive
bifurcation within the job market - well paid, secure jobs
- vs.
- insecure, low paid work
29Polarisation Thesis II
- These intersect with gender and ethnicity
- women and ethnic minorities tend to be
concentrated in the disadvantaged sector. - Castells (1989) argued for a similar model using
the axis of knowledge - those with knowledge based skills
- vs
- those without knowledge - based skills
30Polarisation Thesis III
- Gallie (1991) 'Patterns of Skill Change Work,
Employment and Society, 5. - Majority of nonmanual and skilled manual
workers believed that their work had become more
skilled. - Most routine non-skilled manual workers felt
the level of skill in their job had either
remained the same or declined.
31SCELI Findings
- 'The data suggest, and they do so compellingly,
that the direction of change was running against
any general process of deskilling.' - _at_ 50 of those employees who had held jobs five
years earlier stated that they had experienced
some gains in skill. - main beneficiaries were respondents in
professional/managerial occupations. - women, in part-time jobs that were non-skilled,
fared worst
32Compensatory Theory of Skill Presuppositions I
- Industrial capitalist society involves a
structured conflict between capital and labour - This conflict is fundamentally asymmetric because
of the essential characteristic of industrial
capitalism the separation of the producer from
the means of production as a result of capitalist
ownership rights - These conflicts take various forms. The two most
central involve conflicts over wages (the
distribution of the surplus) and the organisation
of the division of labour (the 'managerial
prerogative')
33Compensatory Theory of Skill Presuppostions II
- Such conflicts over wages and the managerial
prerogative take place within variable
structures. One key element in these variable
structures of asymmetric conflict is the nature
and structure of the spatial organisation of
employers and employees - These conflicts over wages and over authority
relations are both economic and normative.
Issues of legitimacy are central to both sets of
relationships - A major factor in the actual relationship between
employers and employees is the pattern of
collective organisation of both parties. Such
collective organisation can vary both spatially
and historically.
34The Compensatory Theory Outlined
- Technical change is generating both skilling and
deskilling processes - In advanced capitalist societies these effects
are international - Shift of routine manufacturing from advanced,
- core economies ? less developed, peripheral
economies - ? Internationalisation of the capital goods
(machinery) industry
35The Compensatory Theory Outlined
- Technical changes tend to deskill direct
production roles but put an increased premium on
a range of ancillary skilled tasks that are
associated with the installation, maintenance and
programming of machinery. - Technological changes advantage certain
occupational groups and disadvantage others. - ? production vs maintenance
?mechanical maintenance vs electronic maintenance
36Overall Hypotheses about Trends in Skilled Work
37References
- Castells, M. (1989) End of Millenium, Oxford
Blackwell - Gallie, D. (1991) 'Patterns of Skill Change
'Work, Employment and Society, 5. - Morris, L. et.al (1994) Dangerous Classes,
London Routledge - Penn, R. et.al (1995), Skill and Occupational
Change, Oxford O.U.P. - Sassen, S. (1988) The Mobility of Labour and
Capital, Cambridge C.U.P.