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arbetaren:klassenbortom [Y-m-dH:i] titorelli Genomkorrning. |
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- | ====== The class beyond the workers' | ||
- | //Fredrik Samuelsson// | ||
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- | The contemporary workers' | ||
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- | Obviously, this is not the case today, but how do we approach this new situation? The bourgeois answer is to declare the working class dead, and along with it goes class struggle. Today, we are told, we have new contradictions to grasp: worker--unemployed, | ||
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- | Instead, vast layers of the left respond by closing their eyes and let the changes go unnoticed. Old forms of organisation and old symbols are made into fetisches. Sometimes they find the guilty party: the social democrats and the union bureaucrats sold their ideals, they betrayed the movement. If we replace the central committee we can still win back what has been lost. They often try to reconquer past forms: ' | ||
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- | We do not mourn the decline of the old workers' | ||
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- | Of course class struggle exists today -- otherwise the capitalistic system would be inconceivable. Because capital is basically nothing but labour: living labour and former living labour objectified in its dead form: machines, commodities and money. Capital is dependent on the worker for its own existence -- as is the worker, as labour power, dependent on capital for his existence. This basic relationship between capital and labour makes all contradictions in terms of length of the work day or work intensity, in terms of wages and working conditions, as present today as they ever were. Capital has penetrated our entire existence, thus making more and more areas subject to the form of commodity and also the contradictions penetrate society in its entirety, far beyond the gates of the industry. | ||
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- | But if the class contradictions remain, how can we understand the decline of the workers' | ||
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- | The entrance of capitalism always consisted of primitive accumulation, | ||
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- | Careful regulations of the factory and mandatory public school became the tools to readapt the workers. There were also campaigns from philanthropists in the educated middle class aimed at the working class in order to counter the claimed depravity and moral chaos amongst the workers. To remedy this illness education circles and workers' | ||
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- | When the workers' | ||
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- | The real power of workers is to be found in their ability to stop being workers, refusing creation of value, which capital needs. The official workers' | ||
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- | What is the cause of the crisis of the workers' | ||
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- | - In compliance with the spread of mass consumption, | ||
- | - Because of the success of the workers' | ||
- | - When a wave of workers' | ||
- | - When capital aimed at a new neo-liberal counter-strategy, | ||
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- | Finally, class composition has changed the last few decades, which also influences organisation and forms of struggle. Within industry the entire chain of production has been transformed into one single production line, with lean production and just-in-time as words of honour. By the minimisation of bufferts and stock the entire work organisation is put under pressure, from the subtractors to the truck drivers. Quite often work teams with responsibility for quality are used, and sometimes piece work in groups are used, in order to put pressure on everyone in the group to maximise performance and to assist one another. These work teams are also used to split the workers in competing groups. | ||
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- | Simultaneously there has been a displacement of the labour market, at the pace of rationalisation of industry, thus making a majority of the working class part of the service sector. But the service sector has at the same time been ' | ||
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- | Lean production, with its zero policy on margins, as well as the rationalisation of the service sector, forces capital to demand flexible and on-demand labour power. Capital needs to use working hours at a maximum in order to increase surplus value. The last fifteen years the different forms of temporary employment has increased in numbers, as well. More and more people are travelling through a jungle of temping, trial employment, project employment, internships, | ||
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- | In order to make this possible, the politics of the labour market has shifted. Today politicians do not strive to create full employment, they strive to make unemployment productive; they want to make the unemployed into a truly effective army of reserves, by making the constantly in search of a job and constantly employable. They should be prepared to assist when capital needs them, at temporary and part-time employments. More and more actions of coercion are put into practice in order to accomplish this. One clear example is the social democratic project " | ||
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- | We can often hear the mourning song in relation to the lost strength of the workers' | ||
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- | Struggle has always happened in silence, faceless and clandestine -- sometimes breaking through at a larger scale. Of course we can spread experiences of struggle, but there is no point whatsoever in trying to fetischise former forms of struggle and organisation. New conditions alter the forms of struggle. One clear-cut example of this is the wave of wildcat strikes from 1970 up until 1990, when it suddenly tumbled. One of the reasons behind the decline can probably be found in the increase of fines for participants, | ||
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- | We have to see the advantages of the present situation. Capital is still in desperate need of labour in order to create surplus value. Rationalisations would not be necessary, nor would the attempts at increase of control and exploitation, | ||
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- | For the sake of capital the decline of the workers' | ||
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- | Indeed, just-in-time has made capital more vulnerable than earlier. By removing all margins capital aimed at increasing pressure on the working class. At the same time it means that even limited actions of the working class can have a huge impact on capital. In order for production to run smoothly the entire chain of production must run without serious interruptions. With lean production even a sudden, local conflict, entailing transporters or production line workers, can be enough to paralyse the mightiest of corporate giants. As a corollary, lean production effectivises forms of struggle such as overtime blockades, slow-downs, absence and calling in sick, which can cause huge problems for capital. | ||
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- | Neither are workers as easily fooled as corporate head quarters would like to believe. New forms of team work often become forums for criticising leadership and the workers do not fall for new-speak on increased participation in decision-making. Nor are part-time employees and employment agency workers as emotionally attached to a certain company as a regular employee. They lack loyalty and see work as ' | ||
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- | The industrialisation of the service sector implies that earlier boundaries between different layers are dissolved and a larger part of labour power is put directly under capital' | ||
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- | //Published in // |