Labor and Monopoly Capital

Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century is a book about the economics and sociology of work under monopoly capitalism by the political economist Harry Braverman. Building on Monopoly Capital by Paul A. Baran and Paul Sweezy, it was first published in 1974 by Monthly Review Press.[1][2]

Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century
Cover of the 1974 edition
AuthorsHarry Braverman
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectLabor
PublisherMonthly Review Press
Publication date
1974
Media typePrint

Arguments

Intended as a direct assault on management of blue-collar labor under capitalism,[3] Braverman's book started what came to be called, using Braverman's phraseology, "the labor process debate".[4] This had as its focus a close examination the nature of "skill" and the finding that there was a decline in the use of skilled labor as a result of managerial strategies of workplace control. It also outlined workers' resistance to such managerial strategies.[5]

Specifically, Braverman subjected Frederick Winslow Taylor to intense critique, describing Taylor's strident pronouncements on management's attitudes to workers as the "explicit verbalization of the capitalist mode of production". He argued that, in the present day, the 'successors to Taylor are to be found in engineering and work design, and in top management'.[1]

According to Braverman, Taylorism had not been superseded by more humanistic management methods, such as those of Hugo Münsterberg or Elton Mayo (as most textbooks then argued). Braverman instead argued that these 'practitioners of "human relations" and "industrial psychology"' have supplemented Taylor's influence by forming 'the maintenance crew for the human machinery'.[1]

Braverman argued that knowledge of Taylorism's profound impact on the twentieth century workplace, and management-labor relations, was poor due to a widespread misunderstanding of the historical development of the workplace. Indeed, Braverman's book was written in an accessible fashion precisely to make it easy for workers to comprehend the huge historical and structural changes which had taken place around them.[6]

The French edition
The Portuguese edition

Key thinkers

Key thinkers examined in Labor and Monopoly Capital were Karl Marx, Charles Babbage, Vladimir Lenin, F. W. Taylor, Frank Gilbreth, William Leffingwell, Elton Mayo, and Lyndall Urwick.

Although the book did not include new archival research, Labor and Monopoly Capital built on influential historians such as E.P. Thompson, Alfred Chandler, J.D. Bernal, David Landes, Lyndall Urwick, and E.F.L. Brech. In particular, Urwick was attacked as the 'rhapsodic historian of the scientific management movement'.[1]

Sociological analysis was provided by such authors as Paul Sweezy, Paul A. Baran, Georges Friedmann, William Foote Whyte, and Daniel Bell.

Impact

According to one source, the book sold 120,000 copies between 1974 and its 1999 reissue.[7]

Labor and Monopoly Capital was read widely in many languages and had particular impact on scholarly debate in Britain, to the extent that one author described the phenomenon as 'Bravermania'.[8][9]

Despite being overtly hostile to academic sociology,[10] Labor and Monopoly Capital became one of the most important sociological books of its era. It revived academic interest in both the history and the sociology of workplaces setting the agenda for many subsequent historians and sociologists of the workplace.

Historical studies influenced by Labor and Monopoly Capital include research into deskilling, bureaucracy, Marxist historiography, business history, historical sociology, the Bedaux System, Bedaux Unit, and the Taylor Society.

Some authors including David F. Noble thought Braverman was overly pessimistic about how subordinated to capital labor had become,[3] and produced case studies as to how workers had resisted management interventions at the point of production.[11][12]

Several historians have responded to Labor and Monopoly Capital by revealing through archival research that the Taylor Society had been far more liberal than Braverman suggested Taylor's long-term influence had been.[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20] The Taylor Society even included a small number of Marxists such as Walter Polakov.[21]

The Great Recession and Taylorism 2.0

Amidst the aftermath of the Great Recession, on Labor Day 2009, the Wall Street Journal declared Labor and Monopoly Capital to be number one among the 'Five Best Books on Working'.[22]

Like Baran and Sweezy's Monopoly Capital, Braverman's book made a comeback during the Great Recession and debates on the composition of the contemporary working class[22] and 'Taylorism 2.0'.[23] Some commentators including the Financial Times argued that digital technology afforded managers a new chance to subordinate labor to capital, but added that digital technology also offered workers new forms of organization and resistance.[24][25][26][27]

See also

References

  1. Braverman, Harry (January 1998). Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century. New York: Monthly Review Press. ISBN 0-85345-940-1.
  2. "Monthly Review | Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century".
  3. "Against Management: Harry Braverman's Marxism".
  4. Littler, Craig R., 'The Labour Process Debate: A Theoretical Review, 1974-88' in David Knights, and Hugh Willmott (eds.), Labour Process Theory (Basingstoke and London: Macmillan Press, 1990).
  5. Meiksins, P. (1994). "Labor and Monopoly Capital for the 1990s: A Review and Critique of the Labor Process Debate". Monthly Review. 46 (6): 45–59. doi:10.14452/MR-046-06-1994-10_4. S2CID 144196954.
  6. Braverman, Harry (1974). Labor and monopoly capital: The degradation of work in the twentieth century. Monthly Review Press. ISBN 9780853453406.
  7. "Harry Braverman". www.Marxists.org. Retrieved August 17, 2017.
  8. Littler, Craig R., and Graeme Salaman. "Bravermania and beyond: recent theories of the labour process." Sociology 16.2 (1982): 251-269.
  9. Michael Rowlinson, Cadbury's New Factory System (Aston University PhD thesis, 1987). Available from the British Library: https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?did=1&uin=uk.bl.ethos.379418
  10. On pp. 96–97, Braverman remarks that 'The cardinal feature of these various schools and the currents within them is that, unlike the scientific management movement, they do not by and large concern themselves with the organization of work, but rather with the conditions under which the worker may best be brought to cooperate in the scheme of work organized by the industrial engineer ... Most orthodox social scientists adhere firmly, indeed desperately, to the dictum that their task is not the study of the objective conditions of work, but only of the subjective phenomena to which these give rise: the degrees of "satisfaction" and "dissatisfaction" elicited by their questionnaires.'
  11. Noble, David F. Forces of Production: a Social History of Industrial Automation. Transaction Publishers, 1984.
  12. Rowlinson, Michael. "The early application of scientific management by Cadbury." Business History 30.4 (1988): 377-395.
  13. Trombley, Kenneth E., and Morris Llewellyn Cooke. Life and Times of a Happy Liberal. (1954).
  14. Nyland, Chris. Reduced Worktime and the Management of Production. Cambridge University Press, 1989.
  15. Schachter, Hindy L. Frederick Taylor and the public administration community: A reevaluation. Suny Press, 1989.
  16. Carlos Pabon, 'Regulating capitalism: the Taylor Society and political economy in the inter-war period' (University of Massachusetts Amherst PhD thesis, 1992) PDF online here
  17. Nyland, Chris, and Tom Heenan. "Mary van Kleeck, Taylorism and the control of management knowledge." Management Decision 43.10 (2005): 1358-1374.
  18. Bruce, Kyle. "Henry S. Dennison, Elton Mayo, and human relations historiography." Management & Organizational History 1.2 (2006): 177-199.
  19. Brech, Edward, Andrew Thomson, and John F. Wilson. Lyndall Urwick, Management Pioneer: A Biography. Oxford University Press, 2010.
  20. Nyland, Chris, Kyle Bruce, and Prue Burns. "Taylorism, the International Labour Organization, and the Genesis and Diffusion of Codetermination." Organization Studies 35.8 (2014): 1149-1169.
  21. Kelly, Diana J. "Marxist Manager amidst the Progressives: Walter N Polakov and the Taylor Society." (2004).
  22. Michael R. Weatherburn, Scientific Management at Work: the Bedaux System, Management Consulting, and Worker Efficiency in British Industry, 1914–48 (Imperial College PhD thesis, 2014). Weatherburn, Michael (July 2014). "Download PDF from Imperial College, London". doi:10.25560/25296. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  23. John C Antush, 'Taylorism 2.0: Transforming Teachers Into Mere Test Proctors. The Degradation of Teachers’ Work through Standardized Testing and the New York City Evaluation System': http://blackeducator.blogspot.com/2014/06/taylorism-20-transforming-teachers-into.html
  24. Return of 'Taylorism' on steroids, Financial Times, 8 September 2016: https://www.ft.com/content/12f85bc3-5816-48f6-88f6-7f64fdd99af8
  25. deWinter, Jennifer; Kocurek, Carly A.; and Nichols, Randall, "Taylorism 2.0: Gamification, Scientific Management and the Capitalist Appropriation of Play" (2014). SIAS Faculty Publications. 531. https://digitalcommons.tacoma.uw.edu/ias_pub/531
  26. Paul Heideman, 'Technology and Socialist Strategy' Jacobin magazine, 4 July 2015: https://jacobinmag.com/2015/04/braverman-gramsci-marx-technology

Further reading

  • Braverman, Harry. 'Two comments.' Monthly Review 28.3 (1976): 122-23.
  • Littler, Craig R. The development of the labour process in capitalist societies: a comparative study of the transformation of work organization in Britain, Japan, and the USA. Heinemann Educational Publishers, 1982.
  • Littler, Craig R., and Graeme Salaman. "Bravermania and beyond: recent theories of the labour process." Sociology 16.2 (1982): 251-269.
  • Littler, Craig R., 'The Labour Process Debate: A Theoretical Review, 1974-88' in Knights, David, and Willmott, Hugh (eds.), Labour Process Theory (Basingstoke and London: Macmillan Press, 1990).
  • Arlie Russell Hochschild. The Managed Heart: Commercialization of Human Feeling (1983).
  • Bryan D. Palmer, “Before Braverman: Harry Frankel and the American Workers’ Movement,” Monthly Review 50, no. 8 (1999): 33
  • Dave Renton, Against Management: Harry Braverman's Marxism (n.d.) online here.
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