SIXTY YEARS A SOCIALIST AND BEFORE (ZOOM)
Speaker: Janet Carter
To connect to a Zoom meeting, click https://zoom.us/j/7421974305
Speaker: Janet Carter
To connect to a Zoom meeting, click https://zoom.us/j/7421974305
… with religion and sex and TV
And you think you’re so clever and classless and free
But you’re still ******* peasants as far as I can see”
Allowing him a little artistic licence, John Winston Lennon got it about right. We modern wage-workers are just as subjugated as any feudal serf – the difference being that we are coerced not by physical force but by market forces. While the owning class don’t screw us in broad daylight with openly exploitative forced labour, the capitalist wages system lets them achieve the same, if not better, result as any feudal lord – they end up with the loot without having to raise a finger for it.
Free? Us? Yeah, right!
Burning Issue
City of
Angels is burning,
As the rich
watch their real estate
Consumed by
a changing climate.
Are they
capable of learning
That their
way of living has stalled?
Because their
world can’t be sustained,
Pools of
profit need to be drained,
Common humanity
recalled.
The not so
rich, the very poor
Also must
act in this same scene
To abolish,
at last, what’s been
Fuelling the
problem. Profits soar
While the
free market keeps trading,
Even as the
earth’s degrading.
D. A.
‘Absolute surplus-value: produced by prolongation ODF the working-day.’
Marx and Engels: A Conceptual Concordance
‘The CEO of one of India’s largest conglomerates, Larsen & Toubro (L&T), has come under fire after advocating for a 90-hour work week. During an interaction with employees, S N Subrahmanyan, chairman of L&T, which has interests from infrastructure to IT and defence, said he “regrets” he is “not able to make you work on Sundays.”
“If I can make you work on Sundays, I will be more happy, because I work on Sundays,” Subrahmanyan was heard telling employees in an undated video that has emerged on Reddit. “What do you do sitting at home? How long can you stare at your wife? How long can the wife stare at husband?” he asked.
Subrahmanyan gave the example of the Chinese, who work 90 hours a week, suggesting that “if you have got to be on top of the world.. You have to work 90 hours a week.”
His statement went viral on social media and drew sharp criticism from all sections of society. Harsh Goenka, the chairman of RPG Enterprises, in a post on X wrote: “90 hours a week? Why not rename Sunday to ‘Sun-duty’ and make ‘day off’ a mythical concept!” “Work-life balance isn’t optional, it’s essential,” he added.
The billionaire founder and chairman of Marico Ltd., a consumer goods company, suggested “undeniably, hard work is the backbone of success, but it is not about the hours clocked in.”
Thousands of social media users also targeted Subrahmanyan, pointing out his significantly higher earnings compared to the average employee of the conglomerate. Subrahmanyan took home a total salary of around $6 million (510 million Indian rupees) in 2023-2), according to company filings. This is 500 times more than the average salary at L&T.
Celebrities, including top Bollywood actress Deepika Padukone, slammed the L&T chief’s 90-hour work week remark, highlighting the fact that such an approach would be bound to create mental health issues.
However, some users felt that the L&T chairman had a point and responded with memes. Others questioned the context of his remarks and also pointed out that L&T is building massive infrastructure projects both in the country and abroad, and these are assets that people criticizing Subrahmanyan are proud of.’
The statements added fuel to the existing debate on working hours versus productivity sparked by Narayana Murthy, the founder of the India-based tech giant Infosys, who in 2023 suggested that young workers in India should log at least 70 hours per week, suggesting that this is “what Germans and Japanese did” after World War II.
Some industry watchers opined that assessing the number of hours is a poor way of calculating work efficiency. “The quality of work put in matters. If the right teams are chosen, what can be done in 90 hours can be done in 60 also,” Mohan Lavi, former CFO and now a partner at K.P. Rao & Co told RT. He added, “With an increasing importance being given to health and work-life balance, a mandate of 90 hours would be an unnecessary target.”
From the Winter 1985-6 issue of the World Socialist
In any form of society wealth is created by the application of human labour-power to nature-given materials. In capitalist society, whether 'private' or state varieties, this fact is concealed by the need to procure capital to furnish machinery and equipment and to pay wages — thus the capitalist apologia that capital and labour are complementary. The relationship is one created by capitalism and, whereas the skills and energies of workers can, if allowed access to natural resources, produce all the goods and services required by human beings, a train-load of money, left over an area where seismographic tests have indicated, say, the presence of oil, will not succeed even in breaking the soil.
Capital, in the form of money, is simply congealed labour, an exchange equivalent of commodities already produced by wage labour. In its constant form (raw materials, buildings, machinery, etc.) it is, similarly, a representation of accumulated labour. It is labour-power that produces all wealth and it is in our role as wealth-producers obliged to sell ourselves on the labour market for a wage or salary that the working class is exploited. We are not, as a class, exploited as consumers or as taxpayers but as producers.
Capitalism's exploitive mechanism is the wages system. We live in a society where the means of life such as food, clothing and shelter have to be purchased with money. For the great majority of people, that money is derived from a wage packet or a salary cheque which they receive from their employer for the sale of their labour-power, their mental or physical ability to contribute to the production of wealth. It is this necessity to sell its labour-power that divides the working class from the minority of capitalists who — whether they choose to work or not — are able to live by profit or by rent or interest. Thus capitalism divides the human family into two distinct and conflicting classes: the capitalist class, which buys labour-power, and the working class, which sells labour-power. Inevitably, as in all transactions between buyer and seller, there is a conflict of interest between these two classes with one trying to sell its labour-power for as much as possible and the other trying to buy it as cheaply as possible.
The source of all wealth, as we have observed, is human labour-power applied to nature-given materials. But the wealth produced, which, under capitalism takes the form of a great aggregation of commodities, does not belong to the class that produces it but, instead, to the class whose claim to ownership of the natural resources and the means of production (themselves the product of past expenditure of labour-power) are enshrined in law and enforced, if necessary, by the coercive power of the state.
The unassailable fact that all wealth is produced by the working class demonstrates that the source of capital accumulation and of the profit, rent and interest that underwrites the affluence, power and privilege of the capitalist class is the surplus of wealth produced over and above what the working class is paid for its labours. This is in accordance with the economic laws of a market economy for though the workers do receive the value of the commodity they sell, their labour-power, nevertheless their exploitation is through the wages system.
What we get for the sale of our labour-power to our employers is a wage or salary that equates to the price currently being paid for our particular type of labour-power. Our ability to work, in capitalist society, is a commodity the price of which is determined by the same factors as govern the price of other commodities. When a particular commodity is in short supply its price tends to rise and, when it is plentiful, its price tends to fall. To say this, however, begs the question: above what does it rise and fall? The answer is its value and that value is determined by its labour cost of production or, in other words, by the amount of socially-necessary labour time required under average conditions of production to produce it from start to finish. It is value that determines the point above and below which prices fluctuate in line with supply and demand.
Since our labour-power is sold on the labour market as a commodity, its value is determined in the same way as any other commodity. In other words, the value of labour-power is determined by the amount of socially-necessary labour required to maintain us as useful, functioning units of production and enable us to provide for the next generation of wage slaves. The value of particular types of labour-power varies, then, in accordance with the amount of training or education that is required to equip workers with certain skills and these greater values are reflected in the inequality of wages.
But labour-power has a unique property: it can create value of greater quantity than the value required in its own production. It is this capacity to create surplus value that lies at the heart of the workers' exploitation and the capitalists' profit. In any given period labour-power can produce wealth greater than the equivalent of the socially-necessary labour required in its own production. Let us say that workers in a particular industry produce a value amounting to double that of the value of their own labour-power. In half of each day they would produce a value equal to the value represented by their wages for a full day. For the second half of each day they would produce a surplus over and above the value they received in the form of wages or salary. This surplus value belongs to their employer and represents his profit, after payment of rent or Interest if the employer has such obligations.
The ratio of labour-power paid for by an employer to that spent by the worker in creating surplus value determines the rate of exploitation of the worker or, as Marx called it, the rate of surplus value. "The rate of surplus value, all other circumstances remaining the same, will depend in the proportion between that part of the working day necessary to reproduce the value of the labouring power and the surplus time performed for the capitalists" (Value, Price and Profit).
This, then, is the seat of capitalist exploitation of the working class. Other conditions, such as the state of the market, the degree of working class organisation in trade unions and, even, the form of capitalist organisation, may affect or influence the rate of exploitation of the worker at particular times but such influences can themselves be cancelled out by market forces. It is the tyranny of the wages system that itself imposes on the working class their slave status. Where the wages-system exists, irrespective of what party holds political power or whether ownership of the wealth-producing machinery is vested in the state or is in private hands, capitalism exists. That is why Marx refused to support the nonsensical slogan of "a fair day's pay for a fair day's work" and urged workers to inscribe instead on their banner "ABOLITION OF THE WAGES SYSTEM".
That is why the World Socialist Movement defines Socialism as a wageless, moneyless and classless society of common ownership and production for use.
Richard Montague
(Ireland)
https://socialiststandardmyspace.blogspot.com/2024/08/the-tyranny-of-wages-system-1985-6.html
From
the Socialist Standard
‘The
popular lie, often put forward by champions of Britain’s welfare
state, that “no one starves to death here any more” has currently
been exposed as such by the recent high-lighting in the media of the
condition known as hypothermia.
But
hypothermia (or “low heat”) is nothing new. Old people have died
by the thousand from lack of food, fuel and clothing for years under
the welfare state. But only lately has there been significant
publicity about it. From the Sunday Express we learn, “Soaring fuel
costs which lead to thousands of old people economising on home
heating were blamed yesterday for a massive rise in the number of
elderly patients being taken to hospital suffering from effects of
cold... One theory being put forward for the higher than ever toll is
that pensioners, many living alone on small incomes, are frightened
of using heating and lighting appliances because of the cost. So they
sit at home without heating... Pensions, with the present price of
electricity and food, don’t go very far”
From
the Daily
Mirror :
“The tragedy spotlights the problem of hypothermia which claims an
average of 45,000 lives in Britain each year... Ninety thousand old
people have been given a twin death sentence—by the coldest weather
for four years and rocketing fuel prices... The Department of Health
and Social Security recommends a minimum temperature of 21C for
homes. Yet a survey shows that 89 per cent of pensioners’
living-room temperatures were below the Government standard. And that
was before the increased fuel prices.”
To
the Socialist the answer to the problem would seem obvious. Food,
fuel and clothing, like all other needs should be freely available
(not
only to the elderly)
to all human beings.
But
what are the capitalist solutions to the problem? Call in on elderly
neighbours to find out if anyone is actually dying. (Milkmen are
regarded as being useful here.)
Doctors
can obtain special wide range thermometers so that if they find a
cold, collapsed old patient in a cold house, lacking food, fuel and
clothing they’ll be able to pinpoint the diagnosis.
And,
so public-spirited is the Daily
Mirror that
they devoted a front page to the problem. Indeed, the way they
launched their “campaign” one almost got the impression they were
offering to finance food, fuel and clothing themselves. But, in fact,
what they came up with was a free “cut-out” sos sign for those
dying of hypothermia to put in their windows for the milkman etc. to
see. And listen to the further contributions of these philanthropic
crusaders:- “If you know old people who live on their own, make
sure they have a copy of the warning poster” (and the Daily
Mirror supplied
it free remember.) "If you see the Daily
Mirror's SOS
sign in a window, see what help you can give. Knock on the door and
give all the help you can”.
But
the altruistic Mirror also
gives a good capitalistic reason for donating SOS signs to the dying.
It quotes Mr. Hugh Faulkner, director of Help the Aged who “welcomes
the Mirror's campaign.”
“The plight of the old is frightening this winter. The winter
weather has really hit us now. Food and fuel bills are higher than
ever before and pensions have just not kept pace with
inflation. Someone,
sometime will eventually realise it is cheaper for the nation to keep
old people warm and well fed in their own home than have them go to
hospital.”
(our italics). So please help “the nation” to do it cheaper,
chaps!
Still
the Mirror:-
“Everyone can help to alleviate the suffering and misery which is
piled on old people year by year”, (they don’t say by whom).
Then, in thick type:- “Today, the Daily
Mirror appeals
to everyone to help the old to survive winter. Be a busybody and you
could save a life.” Then a broad hint that the neighbours should
come up with the necessary funds: - “Check that the old man or
woman living down the road is all right. Make sure they are warm and
have enough food. If not, get in touch with the local welfare
services and run a few errands to stock up their food larder.”
Other advice the beneficent Mirror gives
free is:- “make sure there is an efficient heater. . . . and they
need at least one hot meal a day and frequent snacks and hot
drinks.”
Actually,
another newspaper takes the prize. The Stoke-on-Trent Evening
Sentinel comes
up with this:- “A cheap thermometer to alert old people to the
dangers of cold and hypothermia went on sale at Stafford today. The
thermometer at 20p, is being marketed by an Essex firm as a
non-profit making venture.”
Four
chemists in the Stafford area have agreed to sell the thermometers
which are blue and white. When the temperature falls to the blue
zone—below 15.5 Centigrade —it indicates danger to the old people
from cold. “This may not save lives but could alert people who may
not realise they are in danger”, said Mrs. Jane York, the firm’s
social representative. “The see-at-glance thermometer could also
warn social workers and visitors of old people at risk,” explains
Mrs. York.
What
useful gifts—stick one of these on their wall and the pensioner
dying of cold will be able to see exactly why.
It
makes one marvel at the bitter irony and cynicism which can
unconsciously be spewed out by people not wanting to face the
obvious. Were it not so tragic it would be hilarious.’
R. B. Gill
The above piece is from the Standard of March 1976. It was edited to disguise when it was published. Almost fifty years on its content is as relevant today as it was then. Arguably, many older people are even worse off given the cost increases in utility bills. The removal of the Winter Fuel Payments, upon which many relied, were removed by Labour as soon as they got into government. Parts of the legacy media are talking of the Labour Party taking us all back to the 1970’s at a rate of knots. Whilst they are demonstrating incompetence at running capitalism on its behalf we don’t want to see capitalism better run. We want to see it replaced. It is ridiculous to think that another fifty years should go by without capitalism being abolished and replaced with socialism.
https://socialiststandardmyspace.blogspot.com/2020/02/capitalist-solutions-to-hypothermia-1976.html
Discussion on what happened in 2024 and what is likely to happen in 2025.
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‘The deployment of artificial intelligence could deal a heavy blow to the worldwide labour market and result in massive layoffs in global companies, the World Economic Forum (WEF) Future of Jobs report warns.
The study, which surveyed hundreds of large businesses worldwide, found that 41% of companies plan to slash their workforce by 2030 in response to the increasing capabilities of AI. Further, 77% of companies are preparing to reskill and upskill their existing staff from 2025 to 2030 for better human-machine collaboration.
The report predicted that 170 million new jobs will be created by the end of the decade, while 92 million jobs will be displaced. The WEF noted that skills in AI, big data, and cybersecurity are expected to be in high demand.
“Trends such as generative AI and rapid technological shifts are upending industries and labour markets, creating both unprecedented opportunities and profound risks,” Till Leopold, the head of Work, Wages and Job Creation at the WEF, said.
The WEF said that advances in AI, robotics, and energy systems, particularly in renewable energy and environmental engineering, are expected to boost demand for specialist roles in these fields.
The report also identified job categories that will face the largest decline in numbers due to AI and other technological trends. They include service clerks, executive secretaries, payroll clerks, and graphic designers.
“The presence of both graphic designers and legal secretaries just outside the top 10 fastest-declining job roles, a first-time prediction not seen in previous editions of the Future of Jobs Report, may illustrate GenAI’s increasing capacity to perform knowledge work,” the report said.
The report stressed that the impact of AI extends beyond job displacement, highlighting the potential of the technology to augment human output, rather than replace it outright.
The WEF concluded that “human-centered skills” such as creative thinking, resilience, flexibility, and agility will continue to be critical.
Meanwhile, high-profile figures and scientists have raised concerns in recent years over the potential dangers posed by AI. Last year, computer scientist and author Paul Graham warned that the use of AI for writing will result in the majority of people losing the skill in a few decades.
The labour market will change significantly because of the adoption of advanced technology, according to Daniil Gavrilov, the head of the Artificial Intelligence Research Laboratory at T-Bank AI Research. Everything a human is capable of doing can be done by AI, and machines can do it well, he said in an interview with RIA Novosti last year.
Gavrilov noted that in the short and medium term, employees will have to master AI skills in order to remain competitive.’
The below is from the Socialist Standard June 2022
‘In this issue we spotlight the rise and rise of Artificial Intelligence, a hot topic that raises fundamental questions about how it should be used, and what happens if it develops in ways we don’t expect and don’t want.
Currently AI is strictly horses for courses, confined within rule-based parameters and master of just one thing at a time, rather than becoming a super-jack of all trades. So, like numerical engines before the era of programmable general-purpose computing, it has been of limited use. But artificial general intelligence (AGI) is without doubt the ultimate goal, and the race is on to achieve it.
With this in mind, and with a chequered history of failed AI winters behind them, developers are concentrating on the ‘can we do it?’ question rather than the bigger ‘should we do it?’ question. Even less ethically distracted are investors whose only question is ‘can we make money out of it?’ This is not encouraging, given capitalism’s track record.
One problem with AI is that the more advanced it gets, the less we understand it. AI is increasingly a ‘black-box’ phenomenon, whose inner workings are a mystery to us and whose results are often inexplicable and unverifiable by other means. We can’t just treat it like a Delphic oracle, because it’s already clocked up embarrassing gaffes such as building racism and sexism into its staff-hiring rationales, or factorising income instead of health conditions into its medical outcomes estimates. And there have been several public relations disasters, with AIs answering enquiries with profanities after reading the online Urban Dictionary, Facebook chatbots creepily inventing their own language that no human can understand, and Amazon’s Alexa laughing demonically at its own joke: ‘Why did the chicken cross the road? Answer – because humans are a fragile species who have no idea what’s coming next’ (bit.ly/3wd4vh6).
Then there is the lack of internationally agreed definitions, paradigms and developmental standards, in the absence of which each developer is left to make up their own rules. Can we expect global agreement when we can’t get states to agree on climate change? In the absence of such a framework, it’s no wonder that people fear the worst.
Frankenstein-anxiety is nothing new in the history of technology, of course, and if we banned every advance that might go wrong we would never have stopped wearing animal skins and woad. It’s uncontroversial to say that the possible advantages to capitalism are huge, and indeed we’re already seeing AI in everything from YouTube preference algorithms to self-drive tractors and military drone swarms. And that’s small potatoes next to the quest for the holy grail of AGI. But while all this promises big profits for capitalists, what are the pros and cons in human terms? What is the long-term effect of the automation of work, for example? Tech pundits including Tesla boss Elon Musk take it for granted that most of us will have no jobs and that the only solution is a Universal Basic Income, a solution we argue is unworkable.
That’s not the worst of it. In 1950 Alan Turing wrote, ‘[T]he machine thinking method […] would not take long to outstrip our feeble powers. At some stage therefore we should have to expect the machines to take control’. IJ Good, Turing’s colleague at Bletchley Park, helpfully added, ‘The first ultra-intelligent machine is the last invention that man need ever make, provided that the machine is docile enough to tell us how to keep it under control’ (bit.ly/3FNCekb). The last thing we ever need, or the last thing we ever do, this side of a Singularity that wipes humans from the Earth?
It’s not so much a question of a Terminator-style Armageddon with machines bent on our annihilation. Even in capitalism it’s hard to imagine anyone investing in developing such a capability, at least not on purpose. But the fear is that it could happen by accident, as in the proposed ‘paperclip apocalypse’, in which a poorly considered instruction to make as many paperclips as possible results in the AI dutifully embarking on the destruction of the entire globe in order to turn everything into paperclips. Musk has similarly argued that AI does not have to be evil to destroy humanity: ‘It’s just like, if we’re building a road and an anthill just happens to be in the way, we don’t hate ants, we’re just building a road, and so, goodbye anthill’ (cnb.cx/3yJ7pMl).
Stuart Russell, in his excellent 2021 Reith lectures on AI (see our summary here), makes a telling observation about capitalist corporations like the fossil fuel industry, arguing that they operate as uncontrolled superintelligent AIs with fixed objectives which ignore externalities. But why only certain industries? We would go one further and argue that capitalism as a whole works like this. It doesn’t hate humans or the planet, but is currently destroying both in the blind and disinterested quest to build ever greater profits, so goodbye world, to paraphrase its richest beneficiary, one Elon Musk.
Musk is right about one thing, saying ‘the least scary future I can think of is one where we have at least democratized AI because if one company or small group of people manages to develop godlike digital superintelligence, they could take over the world’. It’s rather ironic that, once again, Musk sees himself as part of the solution, not part of the problem.
To democratise AI you would first need to democratise social production, because in capitalism science and tech are sequestered behind barriers of ownership by private investors anxious to avoid any uncontrolled release of potentially profitable knowledge into the environment. AI needs to belong to all humanity, just like all other forms of wealth, which is why socialists advocate post-capitalist common ownership. In such circumstances, a global standardisation of AI development rules becomes genuinely feasible, and as Russell argues, it wouldn’t be that difficult to program AIs not to kill us all in the quest for more paperclips: you simply build in an uncertainty principle, so that the AI understands that the solution it has devised may not be the one humans really want or need. It’s a sensible approach. If only humans used a bit of natural intelligence and adopted it, they’d get rid of capitalism tomorrow.’
Paddy Shannon