Skills for sustainability

By LBV

27 Oct 2009

Karl Marx walks into a modern day factory in China and is clearly not impressed to see the conditions of workers.

“Bloomin ‘eck,” he exclaims, “almost 150 years since I wrote Das Kapital workers are still brutally exploited in sweatshops. Workers of China unite, let’s have a Communist revolution!” 

It sounds like the beginning of a political joke, but it isn’t. 

Admittedly, we could imagine an innocent bystander telling the German philosopher that actually the whole country has been ruled by the Communist Party for 60 years, and perhaps smiling at his embarrassment, but there is no punch here that will generate laughs.

If on the other hand Karl Marx visited 21st Century London he would see an awful lot of changes in the working conditions since he co-wrote with Hengels the Communist Manifesto.

There is a minimum salary, it is illegal to make children work, in fact they are provided with free education; motherhood is protected, factories are nicer places to work and the government pays welfare money to unemployed people, even if they don’t try too hard to get a job.

So we have two paradoxical situations. If Marx visited China he would be unimpressed to see the conditions of workers, even if the country is currently ruled by a Communist party of obvious Marxist inspiration.   

And if he could see the conditions of workers in most western countries perhaps he would be impressed by what he would see.

It is now 20 years since the Berlin Wall was pulled down and on that day in November 1989 it was obvious that capitalism – albeit not perfect itself – had no credible alternatives.

With all this in mind it would be unfair to underestimate the influence of socialism on the improvement of the standard of living many people now have.

All the fights for higher wages, better working environment, equal opportunities and a fairer deal for workers could not have happened without a relentless, ideologically organised pressure.

And the bosses - although reluctant to part from their cherished profits – eventually found it more convenient to give up a little bit of surplus money than face industrial unrest.

I could add that since the fall of Berlin Wall, capitalism without the demands of an antithetic system has become self indulgent .Wall Street brokers became masters of universe, the Black-Scholes model and the notion that you can trade a share indefinitely and risk free if you make the right calculations became the gospel of a new economy. 

Generous dividends had to be paid to shareholders and if there was no money for research and development who cared? 

Manufacturing became the poor relative, something to be relocated in remote places, while the service sector – anything that would not soil your hands - appeared to be the way to go.

The case of Fiat is exemplary. At the end of 1980’s they decided to branch out from their core business – making nice little cars – and decided to diversify buying shares of capital intensive business, including insurance, thus subtracting resources from its automotive division.

As a result they started making crap cars and a decade later they were on the verge of collapse until a change of management made sure that it reverted to doing what it knew best: nice little cars.  

The role of the watchdog could have been easily played by trade unions but, for some reason, they failed to deliver. Generally regarded as important stakeholders they are always consulted –and listen – when the future of a organisation is a stake.

The problem is they appear to play by the book instead of looking at the bigger picture.  

When BMW sold Rover, unions supported the consortium that promised to maintain the employment levels instead of those who wanted to make the company competitive. Experience shows that when companies are kept artificially alive sooner or later they will collapse with even more serious consequences. 

So, for the sake of saving a few hundred jobs at the time, 5,000 of them were lost a few years later. I wonder why unions did not think of trading redundancy for training.

I am reliably informed that – for example - body work staff can be realistically transformed into sought after CNC machine operators within about six months.

You don’t need an economist to understand the difference between the expense of 50 weeks of training and the cost – emotional and financial – of long term unemployment.

And such a suggestion is not the solution of a complicated economic equation, just the application of the old Chinese adage: “If you give a man a fish you feed him for a day, if you teach him how to fish you feed him for life”. 

Renato Cappucci set up the UK arm of TAR-OX. 

Enjoyed this? Read more from LBV

Latest news

1

Working on wellbeing

Working on wellbeing

26 Apr 2024

2

New skills hub to boost employability of Blackpool residents Realise Skills Hub

New skills hub to boost employability of Blackpool residents

26 Apr 2024

3

£10m sports hub approved for Preston park Ashton Park Sports Hub Visual

£10m sports hub approved for Preston park

26 Apr 2024

4

Fagan & Whalley will attend Multimodal 2024 Multimodal.jpg.jpg

Fagan & Whalley will attend Multimodal 2024

26 Apr 2024

5

Blackburn College appoints new chair to corporation board Mark Allanson

Blackburn College appoints new chair to corporation board

26 Apr 2024

Background image for hub sign up block

LBV Hub

Reach 50,000 members of the Lancashire business community

Post your news
Post your events
Post your offers
Company profile
Social reach
Magazine coverage
Sign-up
Events
Business Networking in Preston- BNI Brunch
EVENT LISTING SIZING Brunch .png.png
LBV Hub Networking
26 Apr 2024

Business Networking in Preston- BNI Brunch

Samlesbury Preston Hotel, Preston New Road, Preston, PR5 0UL

09:30 - 11:00

Business Networking in Blackburn - BNI Infinity
EVENT LISTING BNI Infinity.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
26 Apr 2024

Business Networking in Blackburn - BNI Infinity

Hampton by Hilton, 2 Frontier Ave, Blackburn, BB1 3AL

06:30 - 08:30

Business Networking in Blackburn - BNI Vista
EVENT LISTING SIZING Vista.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
30 Apr 2024

Business Networking in Blackburn - BNI Vista

Hampton by Hilton, 2 Frontier Ave, Blackburn, BB1 3AL

06:45 - 08:30

Driving Energy Efficiency and Sustainability: Software Solutions for the Metal Industry
LBV Hub Webinar
30 Apr 2024 - 30 Apr 2024

Driving Energy Efficiency and Sustainability: Software Solutions for the Metal Industry

Online - Zoom, Blackpool, FY4 2FG

10:00 - 11:00

Business Networking in Chorley - BNI Endeavour
EVENT LISTING SIZING Endeavour.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
30 Apr 2024

Business Networking in Chorley - BNI Endeavour

Oak Royal, Bury Lane, Chorley, PR6 8SW

06:30 - 08:30

FREE online event - 30 Minutes: How to decarbonise your business
BU 2024 Events2.jpg.jpg
LBV Hub Webinar
01 May 2024

FREE online event - 30 Minutes: How to decarbonise your business

Online, Blackpool , FY4 1EW

10:00 - 10:30

Business Networking in Lancaster - Eden Business Network
EVENT LISTING Eden Business Network.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
01 May 2024 - 01 May 2024

Business Networking in Lancaster - Eden Business Network

The Borough, 3 Dalton Square, Lancaster, LA1 1PP

18:30 - 20:30

Business Networking in Preston - BNI Diamond
EVENT LISTING BNI Diamond.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
01 May 2024

Business Networking in Preston - BNI Diamond

The Marriot Hotel, Garstang Road, Broughton, PR3 5JB

07:15 - 09:00

Business Networking in Accrington - BNI Zeus
EVENT LISTING SIZING Zeus.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
01 May 2024

Business Networking in Accrington - BNI Zeus

The Mill House, Corn Mill Yard, Accrington, BB5 5HX

06:45 - 08:30

Business Networking in Lancaster - BNI Castle
EVENT LISTING BNI Castle.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
02 May 2024

Business Networking in Lancaster - BNI Castle

Vale of Lune RUFC, Powder House Lane, Lancaster, LA1 2TT

06:45 - 08:30

Business Networking in Burnley - BNI Kudos
EVENT LISTING BNI Kudos.png.png
LBV Hub Networking
02 May 2024 - 02 May 2024

Business Networking in Burnley - BNI Kudos

Prairie Sports Village, Windemere Avenue, Burnley, BB10 2FU

06:45 - 08:30

30 Minutes: How to decarbonise your business FREE Online Event
BU 2024 Events2.jpg.jpg
LBV Hub Webinar
02 May 2024

30 Minutes: How to decarbonise your business FREE Online Event

Online, Blackpool , FY4 1EW

14:00 - 14:30

Advertise with us

Reaching 50,000 members, our print, digital and event platforms offer a fantastic way to raise your business profile and help you grow.

Find out more Lbv115 Online Graphic
Subscribe now

Weekly news bulletin