
- ISBN: 9781552663264
- Price: $22.95 CAD
- Publication Date: Sep 2009
- Rights: World
- Pages: 176
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Request Examination CopyIf You’re in My Way, I’m Walking
The Assault on Working People since 1970
Thom Workman
“If you’re in my way I’m walking.” This arrogant statement by former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien on the occasion of his physical altercation with a protester in Hull, Quebec in the mid-1990s symbolizes the spirit of the relentless drive of capital to rewrite the historical compromise reached with working people after World War II. This early post-war compromise—sometimes referred to as the Fordist Compact—was associated with improving wages and rising living standards for working people. But in recent decades those achievements of the working class are being deliberately rolled back.
Workman surveys many features of this experience: changing public perceptions of working life, the deregulation of labour law, the decline in unionization rates, the eclipse of union militancy, the stagnation of real wages, the disproportionate absorption of women into the low-wage sphere and the dismantling of social policy. He demonstrates the unravelling of the post-war compact and its replacement with a far more ex-ploitative relationship between capital and labour. He also points to the decline of the Canadian left and its inability to counter the capitalist onslaught effectively. Nevertheless, there are reasons to be hopeful. Workman calls for a rebuilding of the left through the restoration of left culture. To do this he says that the left must “quit politics,” work to promote the collective memory of working-class achievements, create venues to listen to working people in today’s economy, reject nationalism outright and encourage the labour movement to exploit its disruptive capacity. This revitalized left will form the basis of a deepening social critique, the political lessons of which will prove to be invaluable for working people in the long run.
Contents
The Neoliberal Rollback in Historical Perspective • Eroding the Pillars of the Frodist Worker: Conceptions of Working Life and Labour Law • Eroding the Pillars of the Fordist Worker: Unionization Rate, Work Stop-pages and Declining Wages • The Unprotected Worker and the Low-wage Sphere • Neoliberalism at the Margins of the Working World • Restoring the Canadian Left • Selected Bibliography
About the Author
Thom Workman received a PhD from York University. He is Professor of Political Science at University of New Brunswick – Fredericton. His research interests include political and social thought, critical political discourses, Marxism and labour history. He is currently involved in research projects on the political and social thought of A.N. Whitehead, ancient Greek thought on war and empire, and imperialism and Canada. Thom teaches courses on literature and politics, alternative political communities, alienation, modern political theory, political leadership, and conflict studies.
Excerpt
Reviews
Socialist Studies Review (Volume 6, Spring 2010)
Jean Chretien explained his throttling of protestor Bill Clennett on ‘Flag Day’ in 1996 with the simple statement: ‘I had to go, so if you’re in my way, I’m walking.’ Not only is the incident one politician’s knee-jerk reaction when faced with popular resistance to neoliberal policies, it is an apt description of the steamrolling central logic of neoliberalism. Workman draws on vivid examples and copious facts and figures to document the assault on working people. This violent assault is often disguised as the ‘natural’ outcome of the market, but its impact is as real as a ‘Shawinigan handshake.’ The reader will be forgiven if, having read Workman’s description of current wages and working conditions, she feels like Chretien himself has got his hands around her neck.
At the centre of Workman’s book is an examination of the downward wage logic of neoliberalism in Canada. This logic which aims to re-estabilsh profit levels has resulted in a violent assault on working people through liberalized trading regimes, scaled-back social programs and restrictive labour laws and policies. Each of the six chapters which make up If You’re In My Way contributes to Workman’s analysis of the downward wage logic. Chapter one develops a systematic understanding of capitalism and the failure of past attempts to fix the system through the fordist compromise. Chapter two looks at changes in labour law and their effects on the balance of power between workers and capital. Chapters three and four examine the declining rate of unionization, falling incidence of strikes, the stagnation in real wages, and the low-wage sphere. Chapter five explores how restructured state programs have advanced the downward wage logic, and shifted the state away from its limited workers into an ever-deteriorating labour market. In the final chapter Workman presents his thoughts on what it would take to restore the Canadian Left.
One of the most thought-provoking sections of the book is Workman’s conceptual and strategic discussion of minimum wage policy in chapter four. He argues that the function of minimum wage policy under neoliberalism ‘has gone from being a device to ratify low-wage spheres in the economy to being a legislative instrument in the assault on all wage earners’ (83). Workman argues that historically the minimum wage never functioned to generate upward pressures on all wages. Instead, upward wage pressures came from the workplace conflict of organized labour against capital. The workplace is the natural locus of wage struggle, says Workman, rather than sympathetic campaigns in the political sphere.
Workman argues that the labour movement undermines the real basis of its strength when it accepts government regulation as the method to set wage rates: ‘sustained gravitation away from this anticipated locus of the wage struggle [the workplace] reflects the the degradation of organized labour within neoliberal society’ (85). A further problem with the focus on the minimum wage is that, even if the minimum wage were to be doubled it would hardly be a living wage. Workman argues cogently that the left needs to shift its attention to the entire low-wage sphere. The minimum wage is part and parcel of the broader pattern of stagnation real wages for all workers, which has resulted in from the ongoing profitability crisis of capitalism. When the left focuses its low-wage strategy on raising the minimum wage, Workman argues, it weakens rather than strengthens solidarity among all low-wage workers. Low-wage workers (roughly everyone earning under the median wage) do not directly benefit from an increase in the minimum wage. This causes conflict between minimum-wage and low-wage workers and transforms the minimum wage into a ‘wage anchor’ to which all low-wage workers and low-wage work is compared, and contributes to wage restraint and mitigation of labour militancy (i.e ‘i earn three dollars over the minimum wage, therefore I should count myself luck’).
Workman’s style is impassioned, entertaining, and a welcome change from the measure tone of mist academic writing. He begins each chapter with concrete examples of the problems workers face, from which he moves to a more complex discussion of the underlying issues. While the book is not for the novice reader, upper-level undergraduates should have minimal difficulty following his argument. I used the book in tow fourth-year seminars in Canadian Political Economy, and students found it to be a real eye-opener.
Workman’s book deserves to be read as widely as possible. No other book provides such a detailed account of the contemporary state of working people in Canada. His final chapter is a call for the left to reject efforts to turn ‘bad’ capitalism into ‘good’ capitalism. The book convincingly makes the case that even under the most golden conditions of Keynesianism, poverty, coercion and poor labour market outcomes were the defining features of capitalism. Workman argues in his final chapter that the left will need to restore and deepen left culture. We need to rebuild unions and put our energies into study-sessions, free schools and pamphlets rather than electoral politics to build meaningful left politics. If You’re In My Way offers much thought-provoking material that deserves serious discussion on the socialist left.
—Reviewed by Govind C. Rao, McMaster University
If You’re In My Way, I’m Walking
”If you’re committed to social justice, read this book. Thom Workman’s study combines thoughtful analysis with a ruthless condemnation of the real-life effects of unbridled capitalism. The case for restoring a ‘left culture’ is particularly compelling; it marks the beginning of an important and provocative conversation that is sorely needed.” - Abigail B. Bakan, Department of Political Studies, Queen’s University
”Bravo to Thom Workman for his beautifully written, highly accessible, empirically rich and analytically profound account of the pathologies of contemporary Canadian capitalism. This is a truly exemplary class analysis, all the more so for being eminently readable and drawing deeply on popular culture. The fact that it is topped off by a stunningly clear-headed examination of the limitations of the Canadian political left and labour movement, coupled with an inspired call for the revitalization of a left culture oriented to the promotion of worker-friendly organizations and parties aiming a post-capitalist world, makes it incredibly timely. A must read and one that should be shared and discussed very widely.”– Leo Panitch, Canada Research Chair, York University, Editor Socialist Register.