BOOK REVIEW: THE FUTURELESS JOB 
 
Book Review: THE JOBLESS FUTURE  
by Stanley Aronowitz & William DiFazio 
University of Minnesota Press, 1994 
 
 
This book ain't about no pork-chop.  Its serious stuff.  The  
authors contend jobs -- work as we know it -- is going away.  They  
cite the tendency of new jobs to be part-time and/or temporary,  
and often at minimum wage.  Official unemployment figures fail to  
measure the state of partial employment and those who have given  
up looking for work.  The authors mention the thousands of layoffs  
at GM, IBM, Boeing, Kodak and Sears and that even "the older and  
most prestigious professions of medicine, university teaching,  
law, and engineering are in trouble: doctors and lawyers and  
engineers are becoming like assembly-line clerks... proletarians"  
(p. 54).  The authors comment ":... we have yet to feel the long- 
term effects on American living standards that will result from  
the elimination of well-paid professional, technical and  
production jobs" (p. xi). 
 
The mass of layoffs and the destruction of high-quality, well- 
paid, permanent jobs is produced by three closely related  
developments: 
 
"First in response to pervasive, long-term economic stagnation and  
to new scientifically based technologies, we are experiencing  
massive restructuring of patterns of ownership and investment in  
the global market.  Fewer companies dominate larger portions of  
the world market in many sectors, and national boundaries are  
becoming progressively less relevant to how business is done,  
investment deployed and labor employed... Second, the relentless  
application of technology has destroyed jobs and, at the same  
time, reduced workers' living standards by enabling transnational  
corporations to deterritorialize production... " and thirdly, U.S.  
corporations are locating not only low-skilled jobs, but also  
design and development activities in other countries such as India  
and China where labor is both skilled and cheap (p 8-9).  
 
Their thesis may be synopsized: "All of the contradictory  
tendencies involved in the restructuring of global capital and  
computer-mediated work seem to lead to the same conclusion for  
workers of all collars -- that is, unemployment, underemployment,  
decreasingly skilled work, and relatively lower wages.  These sci- 
tech transformations of the labor process have disrupted the  
workplace and worker's community and culture.  High technology  
will destroy more jobs than it creates.  The new technology has  
fewer parts and fewer workers and produces more product.  This is  
not only in traditional production industries but for all workers,  
including managers and technical workers...." (p. 3). 
 
Commenting particularly on computer programmers: "The specific  
character of computer-aided technologies is that they no longer  
discriminate between most categories of intellectual and manual  
labor.  With the introduction of computer-aided software  
programming (CASP), the work of perhaps the most glamourous of the  
technical professions associated w/ computer technology --  
programming -- is irreversibly threatened.  Although the "real"  
job of creating new and basic approaches will go on, the ordinary  
occupation of computer programmer may disappear just like that of  
the drafter, whose tasks were incorporated by computer-aided  
design and drafting by the late 1980s.  CASP is an example of a  
highly complex program whose development requires considerable  
knowledge, but when development costs have been paid and the price  
substantially reduced, much low-level, routine programming will be  
regulated to historical memory" (p. 21). 
 
Arguing the above is the meat (& potatoes) of the book but  
chapters are given over to exploring aspects of these  
developments, particularly the commercialization of science and  
the university (i.e. the subordination of knowledge to serve  
profit-motives to the detriment of any other determinant). 
 
Other chapters look at a city-planning office to study the effects  
CAD has had on the city-drafters and designers over the years;  
unions and their experience organizing "professionals" such as  
doctors, teachers and lawyers; the university tiered, tracked and  
tenure system; and recent writers on class (What!!! Class you  
say?!). 
 
The authors devote a chapter to class analysis because -- though  
soft-pedaling -- they locate an important nexus of social change  
in a "New Class" of knowledge workers (after the work of Alvin  
Gouldner but with important qualifications), especially as the  
blue-collar worker and the service worker are replaced by  
automation.  They acknowledge that members of the new class have  
"traditionally been the servant of corporate capital and the  
state." But Aronowitz and DiFazio see that with the  
proletarianization of knowledge workers described in their book --  
and while capital still depends on their labor -- the new class  
begins questioning their identification with an exploitative  
ruling elite. 
 
Here the authors' argument is weak. They say that computer  
programmers etc. constitute a new class, yet at the same time --  
while describing its disappearance -- they are arguing that they  
really aren't that much different from their blue and pink collar  
cousins. Why not look to those outside of production altogether --  
the marginalized former factory workers, managers, operators, (and  
yes, even programmers) etc., unemployed, or barely employed in  
temp or part-time or minimum wage work, who have little or no  
stake in the status quo -- as the "new class"? 
 
An interesting couple of pages in _The Jobless Future_ traces the  
origins of "The War on the Poor", talking of a changing perception  
particularly amongst "liberals and leftist intellectuals" which  
has seen the resurfacing of the English 18th century ideal that  
"moral character" is built by economic independence -- without  
consideration that a (growing) unemployable class has no hope of  
participating in a shrinking labor market.   
 
In the last chapter, the authors suggest some "pathways" for the  
future, taking into account presuppositions of their book study.   
"In addition, our proposals assume the goal of assuring the  
_possibility_ of the full development of individual and social  
capacities" (p. 343).  Things they argue for: The need to reduce  
working hours; regulating capital to prevent capital flight;  
education as a right rather than a privilege (particularly  
poignant in "knowledge" times); a guaranteed income; a new  
research agenda steered away from profit to human motives and so  
on. They argue that we need to go beyond "full employment" towards  
"no employment" -- through the steps of shorter work weeks,  
redistributed work load, and so forth, and work to set things up  
so that such is possible. 
 
Aronowitz and DiFazio's argument for a jobless future is  
convincing.  It's recommended reading for those trying to get a  
handle on the changing workplace and its social fall-out.  Their  
book also seems to have arrived into a spate of no-future-for-work  
commentary.  There's the FutureWork list (see below).  There is  
also Breecher writing in _Z Magazine_, a recent _Business Week_  
article on the "Re-Thinking Work", a _Fortune_ cover story on "The  
End of the Job", the Canadian book _Shifting Time_ by Armine  
Yalnizyan, T. Ran Ide & Arthur J. Cordell, and the new book by  
Jeremy Rifkin, _The End of Work_. 
 
In the face of these observations and predictions, nothing is  
being done to address the social dislocation upon us (unless you  
count prison construction) when the agency by which humans obtain  
necessities -- through sale of their skills and abilities -- is  
going away.  Even worse, as Aronowitz and DiFazio remark at the  
start of their book, a grand delusion is in operation "as experts,  
politicians, and the public become acutely aware of new problems  
associated with the critical changes in the economy -- crime,  
poverty, homelessness, hunger, education downsizing, loss of tax  
revenues to pay for public services, and many other social issues  
-- the solution is always the same: jobs, jobs, jobs" (p. xi). 
 
St.Ack 
 
 
>From CPU: Working in the Computer Industry, Issue 013 02/15/95
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