Difference between revisions of "Anarchy 47/Towards freedom in work"
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{{p|s1}}'''Man Citi­zen and Man Worker''' | {{p|s1}}'''Man Citi­zen and Man Worker''' | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Deci­sion-<wbr>making, ac­cord­ing to ortho­dox man­age­ment the­ory is the sole func­tion of man­age­ment; why is it, then, that the prim­ary or non-<wbr>man­aging worker is not a sig­ni­fic­ant de­ci­sion-<wbr>maker in work life, but in so­cial life is a re­spons­ible citi­zen who, when he votes for who shall {{p|7}}rep­res­ent him at local and na­tional level, shares in de­ci­sion-<wbr>making in a co­gent man­ner? Why is it, too, that in work life the chief de­pend­ence is on money re­wards and pen­al­ties to gain be­ha­viour which is con­form­ist to the eco­nomic code of laws, whereas in so­cial life, the large ma­jor­ity of laws are un­writ­ten and de­pend­ence for their oper­a­tion is on free con­sent or morale in the part of the citi­zen? True, the state is lim­it­ing the field of citi­zen free de­ci­sion-<wbr>making, citi­zen free choice, as cent­ral­ised plan­ning in­creases, but it is never­the­less true that man-<wbr>worker and man-<wbr>citi­zen is split schizo­phrenic-<wbr>wise in a man­ner which in­evit­ably makes for ant­agon­ism be­tween work life and leisure life, and de­grades both. Man-<wbr>worker is work con­scious (class con­scious?), but as work life is the im­port­ant, money-<wbr>earn­ing as­pect of living, man-<wbr>citi­zen oc­cu­pies a sec­ond­ary posi­tion and his work-<wbr>con­scious­ness enters strongly into so­cial life with con­sequent {{qq|anti-<wbr>social be­ha­viour that seems like black­mail}} but, at root, is likely to be un­con­scious healthy pro­test against the schizo­phrenic role in the com­mun­ity. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Now, there is a school of apo­lo­gist thought which sug­gests that re­spons­ible in­dus­trial demo­cracy is at work when op­pos­i­tion takes place be­tween trade un­ions and em­ploy­ers in col­lect­ive bar­gain­ing <ref>{{w|Clegg|Hugh_Clegg_(industrial_relations_expert)}}: {{l|''A New Ap­proach to In­dus­trial Demo­cracy''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01000720603}} (Blackwell 1960)</ref>. This plaus­ible the­ory has, it seems, con­sider­able sup­port at ex­ec­ut­ive level within the trade un­ions, but it is really a kind of verbal­ism; for while free op­pos­i­tion is a char­ac­ter­istic of demo­cracy, so also is de­pend­ence on in­di­vidual citi­zen morale and the spread of in­di­vidual de­ci­sion-<wbr>making at the bot­tom as well as at the top of the so­cial struc­ture. A worker who is trained to sit cor­rectly in a chair de­signed to pro­mote max­imum out­put, to move his left arm so and his right arm thus, who is clocked in and out of the works and the lavat­ory while en­gaged on con­tinu­ous, re­pet­it­ive pro­duc­tion in which there is no de­ci­sion-<wbr>making, is cer­tainly not play­ing a re­spons­ible citi­zen role, even though he has {{w|big brother|Big_Brother_(Nineteen_Eighty-Four)}} argu­ing against his em­ployer on hours of work and wages. De­pend­ence on big brother man­ager and big brother trade union ex­ec­ut­ive is equally neur­otic in a situ­a­tion in which plan­ning is for ma­ter­ial ad­vant­age and not also for self-<wbr>respect. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}However, this mat­ter of our schiz­oid cul­ture and of plan­ning for every­thing but self-<wbr>respect was dealt with many years past in {{l|''Free Ex­pres­sion in In­dus­try''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01001424070}} <ref>[[Author:James Gillespie|Gillespie]]: {{l|''Free Ex­pres­sion in In­dus­try''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01001424070}} (Pilot Press 1948)</ref> and there is no need to labour it here. | ||
{{p|s2}}'''Man­age­ment or Leader­ship in Work?''' | {{p|s2}}'''Man­age­ment or Leader­ship in Work?''' | ||
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+ | {{tab}}There is a quaint idea among man­age­ment con­sult­ants and other ex­perts that man­age­ment in­cor­por­ates lead­er­ship. Indeed, in all modern books on man­age­ment this wish­ful no­tion is cul­tiv­ated. Thus a recent book called {{l|''The Busi­ness of Man­age­ment''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01001195778}} <ref>{{l|{{popup|Falk|Sir Roger Salis Falk (1910–1997)}}|https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Roger_Falk}}: {{l|''The Busi­ness of Man­age­ment''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01001195778}} (Penguin 1962)</ref> makes the state­ment that man­age­ment and lead­er­ship are com­ple­ment­ary, {{qq|but they are not the same thing}}. In this, as in the ap­pro­pri­ate lit­er­at­ure, ideas on lead­er­ship are hazy; {{qq|it is an art that is time­less … it is of the spirit … etc.}}, but what­ever lead­er­ship is, it is {{qq|an ele­ment in man­age­ment}}. Three defin­i­tions, the sec­ond and third from polit­ical sci­ence, may help to clear {{p|8}}the air: | ||
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+ | ''Man­age­ment'': Man­age­ment is a (so­cially ne­ces­sary) activ­ity ex­pressed in the sci­ence and art of di­rect­ing, or­gan­is­ing and con­trol­ling ma­ter­ial and human factors within the work in­sti­tu­tion with a view to ef­fect­ive and pro­fit­able re­sults. (No-<wbr>one, I think, will quar­rel with this ortho­dox defin­i­tion of man­age­ment; the {{qq|art}} men­tioned is the art of lead­er­ship). | ||
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+ | ''Lead­er­ship'': Lead­er­ship is a power activ­ity in which the leader and the led ident­ify in­tern­ally with each other (a {{qq|we}} feel­ing) and the leader uses his power in a man­ner which ac­cords with the wishes and ex­pres­sions of the led <ref name="four">{{w|Lasswell<!-- 'Laswell' in original -->|Harold_Lasswell}} & {{w|Kaplan|Abraham_Kaplan}}: {{l|''Power and So­ciety''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01018422534}} (Rout­ledge 1952)</ref>. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Man­age­ment (apart from the situ­a­tion when one man is both policy-<wbr>maker and man­ager) is an agency for its prin­cip­als who are the top policy-<wbr>makers who en­force eco­nomic policy and re­ward or pen­al­ise man­age­ment in terms of re­sults. An agent always iden­ti­fies with his prin­cipal, even when the iden­ti­fi­ca­tion is only ex­ternal and is ex­pressed in formal loy­alty. He acts in con­form­ity with the pur­pose and policy of his prin­cipal. Make no mis­take, it is not said here that all man­agers iden­tify in­tern­ally with their prin­cip­als (a {{qq|we}} feel­ing), al­though formal al­le­giance at least is ex­pected. But if man­age­ment iden­ti­fies with its prin­cip­als, as it must, where is the sup­posed iden­ti­fi­ca­tion be­tween prim­ary work­ers and man­agers? Is there really a {{qq|we}} feel­ing be­tween man­age­ment and man­aged? Is it not, rather a {{qq|we-<wbr>they}} feel­ing? | ||
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+ | ''Boss-<wbr>ship'': Boss-<wbr>ship is a power activ­ity which, though it may con­form to the eco­nomic for­mula, is lack­ing in two-<wbr>way iden­ti­fi­ca­tion and may not in­clude the re­spect and loy­alty of those who are bossed. Boss-<wbr>ship may be ex­pressed in ''master­ship'' or ''skill­ship'', in ''fixer­ship'' or cap­acity to gain con­form­ity by nego­ti­a­tion, in­dul­gen­cies, re­wards and pen­al­ties, and in whole or par­tial ''dic­tat­or­ship'', or all three <ref name="four" />. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}By defin­i­tion, man­age­ment is boss-<wbr>ship when man­age­ment is ortho­dox, and the con­fu­sion about lead­er­ship and man­age­ment comes from the as­so­ci­a­tion of lead­er­ship with skill­ship and fix­er­ship. It may be said that polit­ical sci­ence has no­thing to do with man­age­ment and, in any case, busi­ness could not be run with the defined lead­er­ship. The eco­nomy is part of the body politic even though it has its own for­mula, and lead­er­ship is lead­er­ship just as a rose is a rose. In fact, when I was a shop stew­ard I had the kind of two-<wbr>way iden­ti­fi­ca­tion spoken of in the lead­er­ship defin­i­tion, and when I was a man­ager I had to iden­tify with the policy-<wbr>makers and not with the prim­ary work­ers. When the trade union leader meets the man­aging dir­ector, or the local super­visor meets the shop or union stew­ard, who is then the leader? | ||
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+ | {{tab}}A new defin­i­tion of ortho­dox man­age­ment is in order: | ||
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+ | ''Man­age­ment'': Man­age­ment is skilled power activ­ity ex­pressed in the dir­ec­tion, or­gan­isa­tion and con­trol of human and ma­ter­ial fac­tors with a view to ef­fect­ive, pro­fit­able re­sults on be­half of the prin­cip­als, pub­lic or priv­ate, with whom man­age­ment tends to iden­tify when carry­ing out the eco­nomic aims of their prin­cip­als. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Man­age­ment, though it has yet to be ad­mit­ted in the lit­er­at­ure, is a {{p|9}}power activ­ity. Power is the pro­duc­tion of in­tended ef­fects <ref>{{w|Russell|Bertrand_Russell}}: {{w|''Power''|Power:_A_New_Social_Analysis}} (W. W. Norton 1938)</ref>. Pro­fes­sor {{w|Tawney|R._H._Tawney}}{{s}} defin­i­tion deals with power in a human situ­a­tion, for man­age­ment is a kind of power rela­tion­ship be­tween human beings. Tawney says: | ||
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+ | {{tab}}{{qq|Power may be defined as the cap­acity of an indi­vidual, or group of indi­vidu­als, to mod­ify the con­duct of other indi­vidu­als or groups in the man­ner which he (the power-<wbr>holder) de­sires}} <ref>{{w|Tawney|R._H._Tawney}}: {{l|''Equality''|http://explore.bl.uk/BLVU1:LSCOP-ALL:BLL01011516317}} (Harcourt Brace 1931)</ref>. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}It is clear that man­age­ment is a power activ­ity, but what is not made clear in the lit­er­at­ure is that the power is not given by those led<!-- 'lead' in original --> as in lead­er­ship, but is granted to man­age­ment by the eco­nomic for­mula which makes the power legal and is en­dowed by ex­ist­ing power holders within the busi­ness hier­archy. Thus man­age­ment{{s}} power at root is formal au­thor­ity. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Au­thor­ity does not de­pend only on the eco­nomic for­mula which gives it legal sanc­tion; it de­pends on al­le­giance or formal loy­alty from those over whom au­thor­ity is wielded. The au­thor­ity, as I have said, is legal, and to have legal­ity is to win al­le­giance (but not iden­ti­fi­ca­tion) in the minds of the ma­jor­ity of people, given other things are equal. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}Au­thor­ity has small real power, but the prestige of the per­son hold­ing au­thor­ity is an im­port­ant factor. {{qq|Even a nod from a per­son who is es­teemed}}, said {{w|Plutarch}}, {{qq|is of more force than a thou­sand argu­ments}}. Wealth, status and tech­nical skills are at­trib­utes which tend to in­crease the weight of au­thor­ity, and it is on these that ortho­dox man­age­ment must on the whole de­pend, if out­right co­er­cion is not to be the rule. But, to re­peat, the gain­ing of formal al­le­giance through ex­ternal iden­ti­fi­ca­tion with au­thor­ity itself, or with this or that at­trib­ute of the per­son hold­ing au­thor­ity, is not lead­er­ship. | ||
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+ | {{tab}}The ex­perts, eco­nomic and psy­cho­lo­gical, who have had this point of view on lead­er­ship in work put to them have, without ex­cep­tion, hotly re­jected it. This re­jec­tion is under­stand­able in view of the hun­dreds of books and the many edu­ca­tional courses on man­age­ment which have pro­moted, and still pro­mote, the idea that ortho­dox man­age­ment and lead­er­ship of human beings are in some mys­tical man­ner twin func­tions. But in our ana­lysis of human lead­er­ship there is no re­jec­tion of man­age­ment and the neces­sity for man­age­ment; rather, there is ad­vanced the idea that the man­age­ment struc­ture be de­signed to inte­grate the human lead­er­ship func­tion with tech­no­lo­gical and com­mer­cial func­tions in a man­ner later to be de­scribed. | ||
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Revision as of 14:16, 26 March 2020
Towards
freedom
in work
In an electrical components factory we had trouble planning for smooth flow of components and balancing of operations. Output varied considerably from one operator to another. Monday’s output was some 25% lower than output on Thursday which was the closing day of the bonus week, and work discipline was only fair. After some study a group bonus system was designed and the outline, meaning and purpose of this was put to the group which was then left to discuss it among its members, (free group discussion). The girls agreed to have a trial and they were then invited to check the base times set per operation, (group participation in method). The system was introduced with the quick result that the group members so organised themselves that the flow of work was greatly improved, discipline improved as a result of internal group controls, and output increased by about 12% over that previously attained under the individual piecework system. (Here the group took over the local management function of internal work progressing and, more important, that of local man-
We use the social-
Tens of thousands of kind-
- Sweet Mary your production’s poor,
- Just dry your tears and go,
- For speed and greed are rated high,
- But love-for-others, no.
- Christ! Where’s the electrician?
- Our lamps are burning low!
- Sweet Mary your production’s poor,
The illustration given describes in simple form the group contract system in which the group shares work and the rewards of work, and has a share in decision-
Now, there is a school of apologist thought which suggests that responsible industrial democracy is at work when opposition takes place between trade unions and employers in collective bargaining [1]. This plausible theory has, it seems, considerable support at executive level within the trade unions, but it is really a kind of verbalism; for while free opposition is a characteristic of democracy, so also is dependence on individual citizen morale and the spread of individual decision-
However, this matter of our schizoid culture and of planning for everything but self-
Management: Management is a (socially necessary) activity expressed in the science and art of directing, organising and controlling material and human factors within the work institution with a view to effective and profitable results. (No-
Leadership: Leadership is a power activity in which the leader and the led identify internally with each other (a “we” feeling) and the leader uses his power in a manner which accords with the wishes and expressions of the led [4].
Management (apart from the situation when one man is both policy-
Boss-
By definition, management is boss-
A new definition of orthodox management is in order:
Management: Management is skilled power activity expressed in the direction, organisation and control of human and material factors with a view to effective, profitable results on behalf of the principals, public or private, with whom management tends to identify when carrying out the economic aims of their principals.
Management, though it has yet to be admitted in the literature, is a “Power may be defined as the capacity of an individual, or group of individuals, to modify the conduct of other individuals or groups in the manner which he (the power-
It is clear that management is a power activity, but what is not made clear in the literature is that the power is not given by those led as in leadership, but is granted to management by the economic formula which makes the power legal and is endowed by existing power holders within the business hierarchy. Thus management’s power at root is formal authority.
Authority does not depend only on the economic formula which gives it legal sanction; it depends on allegiance or formal loyalty from those over whom authority is wielded. The authority, as I have said, is legal, and to have legality is to win allegiance (but not identification) in the minds of the majority of people, given other things are equal.
Authority has small real power, but the prestige of the person holding authority is an important factor. “Even a nod from a person who is esteemed”, said Plutarch, “is of more force than a thousand arguments”. Wealth, status and technical skills are attributes which tend to increase the weight of authority, and it is on these that orthodox management must on the whole depend, if outright coercion is not to be the rule. But, to repeat, the gaining of formal allegiance through external identification with authority itself, or with this or that attribute of the person holding authority, is not leadership.
The experts, economic and psychological, who have had this point of view on leadership in work put to them have, without exception, hotly rejected it. This rejection is understandable in view of the hundreds of books and the many educational courses on management which have promoted, and still promote, the idea that orthodox management and leadership of human beings are in some mystical manner twin functions. But in our analysis of human leadership there is no rejection of management and the necessity for management; rather, there is advanced the idea that the management structure be designed to integrate the human leadership function with technological and commercial functions in a manner later to be described.
- ↑ Clegg: A New Approach to Industrial Democracy (Blackwell 1960)
- ↑ Gillespie: Free Expression in Industry (Pilot Press 1948)
- ↑ Falk: The Business of Management (Penguin 1962)
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Lasswell & Kaplan: Power and Society (Routledge 1952)
- ↑ Russell: Power (W. W. Norton 1938)
- ↑ Tawney: Equality (Harcourt Brace 1931)