Everybody is making fun of Potemkin companies in Europe but they are a great idea. Long-term unemployed need serious rehabilitation if they are to be integrated into the workplace. The need for rehabilitation begins after 6 months of unemployment and increases if the jobless stretch is extended.
I’m thinking this is less re-training for employment than an experiment in replacements for traditional employment.
Clearly the end of scarcity (along with other ongoing and coming disruptions) will require major restructuring of life organization for the hundreds of millions in the post industrial world who will be shut out of traditional employment.
This seems to be a better option than guaranteed income or paying people to play video games.
It’s nice to see that the powers that be are doing some planning about the post-labor state.
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// This seems to be a better option than guaranteed income or paying people to play video games.
What does “this” mean? Working part-time, temporary, minimum-wage jobs for one’s entire life? Is my description what you meant by “shut out of traditional employment”? Because if “this” means ‘working’ at Potemkin companies for life, I don’t see how it’s better than “paying people to play video games.”
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Well for one thing it gets people out of their houses.
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” Working part-time, temporary, minimum-wage jobs for one’s entire life?”
“Because if “this” means ‘working’ at Potemkin companies for life, I don’t see how it’s better than “paying people to play video games.””
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“This seems to be a better option than guaranteed income or paying people to play video games.”
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See, links like this is why I think Alain Touraine is talking out of his ass. The move toward part time and temp jobs is not worker driven nor is it generationally driven. Theoretically, with a post scarcity environment and the increasing use of robots and computers to get rid of routine jobs and to make processes more efficient, we should see a labor force like the Jetsons (the dude works maybe one hour twice a week and supports a wife, two children and a dog). But that’s not happening. Look at these workers in a Potemkin company simulating work so they don’t go bonkers. They land jobs that are temporary & pay significantly less than their prior jobs. Look at all these women who take a substantial hit in income when they come back after they leave the workforce temporarily after having a kid.
The link in Thursday’s linkaround is from a guy who speaks at IIMs and made a lot of money in consulting, so he could afford the drop in the income and rates. He is an elite in his country so he had extended family to fall back on if worse came to worse. Such people make a very small portion of the labor market and thus do not affect demand for most jobs.
They should have these companies here since they can’t jail everyone or turn them into prison guards. I think, though the stigma will just transfer to Potemkin companies if they become more common, thus negating much of the psychological benefits.
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Presumably sooner or later they Potemkin aspect will be concealed from most ’employees’. It can’t be that hard, create a few web pages about a company headquartered in another country or state and open up ‘branch offices’.
A fair amount of bureaucratic and/or office work has always been Potemkin in nature (mine surely was but it paid the bills so I didn’t broadcast how useless it mostly was, I thought at the time everyone realized that and was kind of surprised when I found out how seriously some took it).
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“A fair amount of bureaucratic and/or office work has always been Potemkin in nature.”
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“Theoretically, with a post scarcity environment and the increasing use of robots and computers to get rid of routine jobs and to make processes more efficient, we should see a labor force like the Jetsons (the dude works maybe one hour twice a week and supports a wife, two children and a dog).”
“Look at these workers in a Potemkin company simulating work so they don’t go bonkers. They land jobs that are temporary & pay significantly less than their prior jobs. Look at all these women who take a substantial hit in income when they come back after they leave the workforce temporarily after having a kid.”
“I think, though the stigma will just transfer to Potemkin companies if they become more common, thus negating much of the psychological benefits.”
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“So you worked for Zephyr Holdings? Are the stories true? Were the top managers really as crazy as everyone seems to believe?”
Actually, it might be seen as evidence that you can take nearly any kind of crap from nearly any kind of person …
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And hey, if working 1 hour a week looks like a great life, then Touraine might just be right. 🙂
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Of course, some companies are more Potemkin than others — some companies may simply be an interesting study that’s being conducted by elite corporate masters.
I’m reminded of Zephyr Holdings from Max Barry’s “Company” …
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Company_(novel)
It’s a hilariously dark novel about all sorts of corporate fads, but the darkness becomes strange when the main protagonist discovers that he’s actually working for a company within a company, and that Zephyr Holdings is in fact a corporation-sized experiment.
[consults with the Secret Squirrels to determine who stole that one doughnut, and is surprised when they tell me to stop asking trick questions …] 🙂
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