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<nettime> A Lament for the Precariat |
> >A Lament of the Precariat: >an anecdotal narrative >Patrick Lichty > >Capitalism is an acquisitive strategy based on the >proposition that all assets within its field of discourse are evaluated, >accounted, and extracted of value, then discarded. Upon the time of >exhaustion of values >(symbolic or material value) of elements in the system, wither new >reservoirs >of value must be located, the frame of valuation shifted, or the modality >of >exchange must be changed. This includes >people. All bodies trapped within this >recursive squeezing of value and subsequent accumulation of profit from >the >system of exchange either inordinately accumulate the profitability of the >unsustainable system or they progressively enter into increasing states of >precarity. The construction of precarity >through the credit-state is a tool of mass control that effectively >prevents >revolts through debt-indenture, causing the precariat to fear the loss of >what >little they have before they are consigned to the street. However, it is >exactly where capitalism would >have them, as those bodies have become so devalued as to be equivalent to >worthless as labor, and have been drained of capital so that they are >questionable as consumers, and likewise valueless. > >This is a process, at least in terms of the United States, >this devaluation of the masses and the creation of the precariat as >subject of >hegemonic control, that has been unfolding for the past forty years. As >a Youtube video featuring the words of >former US Labor Secretary Robert Reich states, ?Inequality is personal, >it?s expensive, >and it?s created.? In this video, he eloquently >discusses the inevitable concentration of wealth through downsizing, >outsourcing, offshoring (free-trade capitalism such as NAFTA, CAFTA, et >al) and >the systematic de-industrialization/ephemeralization of the United States >into >a service and consumer economy. This was >no more evident than during the Second Gulf War when President George W >Bush >assured the masses to not worry about the war(s) and continue to drive the >economy through robust spending. The >fact that much of this spending was based on the lure of easy personal >credit >is another issue. > >When I entered the workforce in 1985, the (in contrast to >2008) minor recession of the early 80?s was receding, and from my >standpoint, >things were fairly good. I worked for a then-major computer corporation, >sales >were brisk, and our engineering division was strong. At that time, three >things had not happened ? >computer installation was skilled labor and not service, the computer >itself >had not become a commodity appliance, and the market had not flooded. Of >course all these things changed ? with >economies of scale, the personal computer, despite planned obsolescence, >became >commodified. The machines themselves >with their increased complexity, became machines that could no longer be >repaired in the field, and operations contracted into more remote regional >centers. And, with the promise of >well-paying jobs in the computer field, universities (institutions which >are >often complicit on the capitalist cycle of valuation and extraction of >desire) >pumped out electronic technicians and engineers, driving wages down. > > >My anecdotal counterpoint anecdote is only part of the story >relating the shape of capitalist oppression in the 2010?s that have given >rise >to reactions such as the Occupy Movement. >It is, however, a metaphor for the overall gestures taken in the North >American continent, and to some extent, the First World through >strategies like >European austerity ? the decrease of flow into the ecology of capital >through >commodification, increases in productivity, and devaluation of workforce >skill. > >Two other events built the foundations for the society of >the precariat in 1994 and 1997 (surprisingly, under the Democratic US >President >Bill Clinton). These would be the passage of the North American Free Trade >Agreement (NAFTA) and the decrease in capital gains (the tax paid on >gains made >from holdings like stocks or real estate) from 35% to 14% in 1997. The >first would enable Adam Smith?s >prediction of redistribution of wealth through free trade, as money flowed >through the US border into areas with cheap labor, foregrounding a new >form of >precariat, the maquiladora in towns such as Cuidad Juarez. This has a >double gesture, of breaking unions >in the US and creating a lure for subsistence farmers in the South to >come to >the border to be subjected to substandard working conditions on the >border. The reduction in capital gains >in the US created the ability for the upper, and especially Wark?s >Vectoral >Class, the one that extracts value most vociferously from symbolic >exchange, to >increase their concentration of wealth. >Conversely, the lower classes are less likely to invest in the Market, >and thus become excluded from the market-centric view of Late Capitalism. > >Seen through the anecdotal, the latter half of the 90?s was >the rise of the Web, and as the computer industry has long fallen into the >genre of consumer electronics, I had gone into Web Design, and also >Internet >activism. As with other sites of early >techno-adoption like the personal computer before it, the emergent >Vectoral >Class was hard at work evaluating this new milieu of information for the >extraction of wealth. Companies like >Accenture, Allstate, and many other Fortune 500 companies were creating >their >infostructures, and web design was still skilled labor. However, the >labor pool for that mode of >exchange would be changed forever. > >One key flaw in a majority of programs created in the >previous thirty years was that is had not allowed for years above 1999 ? >the >Y2K Bug. This event created a major >upheaval in the cyber-economy. First, >with the sheer magnitude of the problem, there were not enough programmers >available in North America to solve the problem, and India became the >solution >to the issue through outsourcing. With >sheer numbers of technically literate individuals and a devalued >currency, the >market for infoworkers in the United Stated collapsed along with a market >realization that many of the tech start-ups that were lavishly funded in >the >90?s ? were simply not going to turn a profit. >This created the Y2K/Dot.Com Crash of the early 2000s. it also opened >the doors to offshoring in >Asia, as tariffs relaxed for hungry Chinese manufacturers as well. > >Anecdote. Back in my hometown of North Canton, Ohio, The >Hoover Vacuum Cleaner company became consolidated onto Maytag, and then >outsourced to Mexico and China. The >companies I had designed for dumped their web personnel, and ads for web >design >from India for $15/hr (I used to charge $75/hr) emerged. Wark?s Hacker >class (the shapers of >information), if for a time, became a prime target of precarity as >practices >changed to higher degrees of skill, and necessities of locality for >valuation. >As a critical gesture, I even began to outsource my oil painting to >Chinese >ateliers on the grounds that Gainsborough had inexpensive assistants. >Globalist Realism, I called it. > >This whole period of neo-liberalism and free market trade >also had a parallel discourse in the realm of debt-based securities. The >roots of the housing bubble caused by the >progressive trading of conglomerates of housing based speculation based >off of >derivative securities consisting of sub-prime housing loans begins in >1938. That year, so-called ?Fannie Mae? federal >loan corporation is signed into being as Franklin Delano Roosevelt?s ?New >Deal? >(1934) agendas continue to unfold. >Fannie Mae would be converted into a government-sponsored entity (GSE) >linked to the private sector in 1968 as part of the Housing and Home >Development Act, signaling early beginnings of privatization. > >The groundwork for the housing speculation bubble would be >implemented in 1970, as Freddie-Mac, another GSE that buys mortgages on >the >secondary market to create derivative securities made of conglomerates of >these >mortgages. This legislation created the >first major step towards incentivizing the leverage of sub-prime loans as >speculative securities. Subsequent >policies such as the elimination of tax credits for credit card interest >(1986, >pushing individuals towards home equity loans) and deregulation of >securities >practices (1985-1991) would open the door for a downward spiral of greed. > This would occur as higher-risk in the >sub-prime market which have higher interest rates, would be folded into >securities until the Market would ?suddenly realize? that rising defaults >in >housing loans would cascade as the Housing Crisis of 2008, which would >create a >worldwide recession. > >Anecdote. After the dot-com crash, instability seemed to >become manifest. My wife at the time >became concerned for her employment as the academic sector came under >siege in >Louisiana, and I went to graduate school, for better or worse. At best, >I thought it would make my prospects >better if the worst were to happen. One >of the great mantras of capital is that of retraining? I got a 4.0 GPA, >and immediately moved to >Chicago for my first academic job. I was >above the media line, and things seemed bright. > >The result of this crisis would be the pouring of billions >of dollars into collapsed industries and financial institutions like >Goldman-Sachs as institutions deemed ?too big to fail?. However, another >function of the general >trope of financial crisis as factor in precarity through redistribution of >wealth has been aptly described by Brian Holmes on the Nettime list and >in his >seminar on the New Economy at Mess Hall in Chicago. What Holmes has >noticed is the draining of >capital by margins traders that make split-second trades on the >fluctuations of >the market. In short, crisis, however >short, create radical fluctuations of stock prices, allowing for the >siphoning >off of capital injected by world governments, exacerbating wealth >disparity and >the state of precarity. Also, it >reestablishes instability in the market, encouraging the next crisis and >next >iteration of wealth extraction, wage deflation, inequality, and precarity. > >As an intermezzo to this rather depressing decades-long >cycle, it is worthy to note that these socio-economic desiring-machines >have >not gone without notice for any number of decades. Effects of the >expansion of late capitalism?s >exponential expansion have been documented in media such as The People >Bomb (population), Rachel >Carson?s Silent Spring (environment), >and many others. In fact, a recent ICCC >study has shown that because of the global effects of capitalism, >capitalism, >and carbon emission, even under best-case circumstances of carbon >limiting, >humanity is likely going to create an environment incapable of sustaining >a >northern polar icecap by 2050. > >Although my conflation of population, ecology, economy and >the housing bubble may seem disparate, they are all facets of the original >argument that capitalism by definition consumes all in its path, >morphologically changing until all possible assets and resources are >accounted, >valuated, leveraged and converted to money, creating a global ecosystem of >wealth concentration in the planet?s rich, and an expansion of precarity >throughout the planet. My example of the >housing bubble, is merely a metaphor of one facet of the global >neo-liberal >systems concentration of wealth and propagation of precarity; >economically, >ecologically, socially, and so on. > >What, you may ask, is my terminal strategy to this >tightening web of accounting, acquisition, and extraction of value? One >American example comes from the late >1800?s in the Deep South. After the >abolition of slavery in 1865, about 40,000 Blacks and Creoles found >themselves >suddenly free of indenture. However, as >a visit to historical Louisiana plantations revealed, the former slave, >now >free to exercise the holy Capitalist communion of ?choice?, was offered >employment for the plantation, now as a worker. >However, to the surprise of the newly emancipated worker, they were >often beholden to the plantation?s company store through specious credit >practices and inflated prices. This >would create a situation in which the already precarious worker would >quickly >be debt-indentured, merely remediating the situation from slave labor to >slave >wages and debt. This would be reiterated >later in Appalachia through the coal mining industry, as heralded by >Tennessee >Ernie Ford?s classic song, Sixteen Tons, >in which he sings: > >Sixteen Tons, and what >to you get? >Another day older, >And deeper in debt. >Saint Peter, don?t you >call me, cause I Can?t go, >I owe my Soul to the company store. > >Much can be said today for the crisis of debt in the American economy. As >of >September 2013, current US credit card debt averages over $15,000 per >capita >for a total of $11.5 Trillion dollars, which nears the $15.82 Trillion >dollars >of the US Gross Domestic Product in 2012, and the October 2013 US debt of >$16.7 >Trillion dollars according to the website usnationadebtclock.us. >Contrasted >with the median per capita income of $39,000, it would take the average >American until May, with no other expenses or accounting for frequent >24-29% >interest rates to pay off this debt. However, >as one might expect, personal debt and interest rates skew toward the >bottom >demographics. Furthermore, the San >Francisco Department of Public Health has released statistics that on >average, >it takes 5.5 full-time minimum wage jobs just to have a subsistence living >inside the city. This is a spurious >fact, but is important to consider when thinking that San Francisco was >once >the haven of free love and bohemian living. > >Is the system of debt indenture under the current global neoliberal >capitalist >system surprising? Hardly. In The >Making of the Indebted Man, Maurizio Lazzarato reveals the weaving of debt >as a fundamental machine of control under the project of neoliberal >capitalism. I want to emphasize that >this is not just the individual, but also the state to itself and to >corporate >power. The attention to the core problem >in indenture itself is redirected through rhetorics of productivity, >innovation, and entrepreneurism through the creation of small business, >when >the income creation of said small business is a small fraction of the >GDP. The masses are fed stories like those in popular >intellectual talks, Richard Florida?s The >Rise of the Creative Class, and pundits, like Napoleon Hill?s >Depression-era classic, Think and Grow >Rich. However, as a 2013 Salon essay, by Thomas Frank states, the myth of >the creative, the entrepreneur, is dangled out as an imaginary before the >desperate precariat who are holding to the shreds of the American Dream. >According to Frank, the truth is that the exemplars held forth again and >again >are the same ones lionized in the cultural canon, and anaesthetize the >masses >as they are held ?guilty and responsible in the eyes of Capital? before >the >Great, the Universal, Creditor? as Lazzarato states. > >The bleakness of this situation is obvious and appears to be >a terminal strategy of eventual collapse, which is the unspoken taboo of >speaking that Capitalism itself is beholden to Malthusian limits in a >finite >milieu. The individual is merely a site >of leverage in the capitalist scheme of value extraction, and reversing >this >progression requires strategies of resistance. >There are a multitude of sites rising forth in solidarity against debt >indenture, including the Debt Jubilee movement (which buys personal >defaulted >debt for pennies and erases it), strikedebt.org, All in the Red, and the >Occupy >Student Debt campaign. Lazzarato >advocates these resistive strategies, and suggests that the indentured >even >taking more extreme measures, such as the use of personal bankruptcy as >anti-corporate >social tactic. > >What is clear is that clearly America, much of Europe and >significant elements of the First World are locked in a systematic >enforcement >of precarity that is both the product of late capitalism?s early stages of >exhaustion and mass control. The general >result of these states of symbolic and material exhaustion have been >revolutions and depressions, from the October Revolution to the American >collapse of the trusts with the rise of labor in the late 1800?s. With >the failure of austerity in the Eurozone >and the rapid expansion of precarity in the United States with the >unraveling >of regulations, checks, and balances under neoliberalism, the world as a >whole, >and not just the First World, is faced with social pressures that >threaten to >rend the fabric of modern society. > >Ending Anecdote: As of 2013, academia is riddled with outcomes-based >evaluation, >massive online courses, and University of Texas just laid off 20% of their >administrative staff. My old college >underwent a massive reorganization, and I found a better position, but >with >greater precarity as the worker structure takes on a Metropolis-esque >scene of >a highly-paid administrators, vanishing hopes for tenure, and a seething >sea of >contingent educators. It just seems that >this story has merely been a mirror of the macroscopic predicament. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org