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Work and the Economy

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Title: Work and the Economy


1
Work and the Economy
2
The Social Significance of Work
  • In modern societies, paid work is important for
    several reasons
  • money
  • activity
  • variety
  • a way to structure time
  • social contacts
  • personal identity

3
The Social Significance of Work
  • Work means performing tasks to produce goods and
    perform services that cater to human needs.
  • Work is done in exchange for a regular wage.
  • The economy consists of institutions that provide
    for the production and distribution of goods and
    services.

4
The Economy
  • Labor - the group of people who contribute their
    physical and intellectual services to the
    production process in return for wages.
  • Capital - wealth owned or used in business by a
    person or corporation.

5
The Economy
  • Primary Sector extraction of raw materials and
    natural resources from the environment
    (pre-industrial)
  • Secondary Sector processing of raw materials
    into finished goods (industrial)
  • Tertiary Sector provision of services, rather
    than goods (post-industrial)

6
Informal Economy
  • Transactions outside the sphere of regular
    employment and includes the exchange of cash for
    services provided and the direct exchange of
    goods or services.

7
Characteristics of the Industrial Economy
  • New forms of energy, mechanization, and the
    growth of the factory system.
  • Increased division of labor and specialization
    among workers.
  • Universal application of scientific methods to
    problem solving and profit making.
  • Introduction of wage labor, time discipline, and
    workers deferred gratification.
  • Strengthening of bureaucratic organizational
    structure.

8
Characteristics of the Postindustrial Economy
  • Information displaces property as the central
    preoccupation in the economy.
  • Workplace culture shifts away from factories and
    toward diverse work settings, the employee, and
    the manager.
  • The conventional boundaries between work and home
    are breached.

9
Work in a Postindustrial SocietyLabor
Participation by Sector
  • Primary - extracting material goods from nature -
    farming, mining, etc.
  • Secondary - goods manufactured - products such as
    automobiles and appliances
  • Tertiary - provision of services - broad area,
    ranging from physicians to housekeepers

10
Economic Systems Capitalism
  • Four distinctive features
  • Private ownership of the means of production.
  • Pursuit of personal profit.
  • Competition and consumer choice.
  • Lack of government intervention.

11
Economic Systems Capitalism
  • United States, Western Europe, Japan
  • Based on private ownership of the means of
    production
  • Laissez-faire/Adam SmithGovernment should play a
    minor or no role at all in the market
  • Reality (Great Depression) has shown that the
    state does need to play an active role in
    Capitalist systems

12
Economic Systems Socialism
  • Three distinctive features
  • Collective ownership of the means of production.
  • Pursuit of collective goals.
  • Centralized decision-making (government control
    of economy).

13
Economic Systems Socialism
  • China, Cuba, North Korea
  • Traditionally viewed as a transition stage
    between the movement from capitalism to communism
  • State controls significant elements of the means
    of production
  • The state dictates the direction and level of
    production
  • Private property still exists but in small
    quantities

14
Economic Systems Mixed
  • Sweden, much of northern Europe, Canada
  • Also known as social democracies
  • Elements of capitalism and socialism
  • Major institutions (education, health, utilities)
    run by the state to guarantee access for all
  • High taxes but virtual absence of poverty

15
The Modern Economy
  • Capitalist system with
  • Private ownership of the means of production
  • Profit as incentive
  • Free competition for markets to sell goods
  • Acquisition of cheap materials
  • Utilization of cheap labor
  • Restless expansion investment to accumulate
    capital

16
Unemployment
  • Unemployment has been a recurrent problem in the
    industrialized countries in the twentieth
    century.
  • Because work is a structuring element in a
    person's psychological makeup, the experience of
    unemployment is often disorienting.

17
Types of Unemployment
  • Cyclical - result of lower rates of production
    during recessions.
  • Seasonal - result of shifts in the demand for
    workers based on holidays.
  • Structural - skills needed by employers do not
    match skills of unemployed.

18
Labor Markets
  • Primary labor market high-paying jobs with good
    benefits, some degree of security, and the
    possibility for future advancement
  • Secondary labor market low-paying jobs with few
    benefits, very little job security, and very
    little possibility for future advancement

19
Race and Labor Markets
  • Are racial minorities channeled into the
    secondary labor market?
  • How do inequalities in education perpetuate this
    cycle?
  • Poorer schools less scholarships and poorer
    parents means have to work through college
    poorer grades than students who dont have to
    work less attractive job offers

20
The Changing Nature of Work
  • The globalizing of economic production, together
    with the spread of information technology, is
    altering the nature of the jobs most people do.
  • Over the past 20 years, in all industrialized
    countries except for the United States, the
    average length of the workweek has been reduced.

21
Technology and Work
  • Computers are deskilling labor
  • Computers are making work more abstract
  • Computers limit workplace interaction
  • Computers increase employers control of workers
  • Create more options for working from remote
    locations

22
Corporations
  • Corporation an organization with a legal
    existence, including rights and liabilities,
    apart from that of its members
  • Incorporating protects wealth of individual
    owners from lawsuits affecting the business
  • Of over 24 million businesses in the U.S., 5
    million are incorporated

23
Corporate Capitalism
  • With the globalizing of the economy, most large
    corporations have become transnational, or
    multinational, companies.          

24
Largest Nonfinancial U.S. Transnational
Corporations
25
Competition
  • Shared Monopoly when four or fewer companies
    supply 50 of more of a particular market
  • Oligopoly when several companies overwhelmingly
    control an entire industry
  • What are some examples in the U.S.?
  • Corporate Conglomerates

26
Increasing Competition in a Global Economy
  • Outsourcing
  • American companies may outsource jobs in order to
    reduce production costs by utilizing cheaper
    labor in other countries
  • Enables American companies to compete in a global
    market, but takes jobs out of domestic job market

27
Unions and Strikes
  • Unions - defensive organizations, providing a
    measure of control for workers over their
    conditions of labor.
  • Strike
  • a temporary stoppage of work by a group of
    employees to express a grievance or enforce a
    demand.
  • the source of major industrial conflict.

28
Unions and Strikes
  • In recent years, strike activity has diminished
    as workers fear losing their jobs.
  • In 2000 only 39 strikes involving more than 1,000
    workers were reported.
  • Number of workers involved in the actions
    declined from more than 2.5 million in 1971 to
    339,000 in 1997.

29
Unions and Strikes
  • Labor unions in Western countries are facing a
    threat from three related changes
  • The recession in world economic activity
  • The rise to power of rightist governments in many
    countries that launched anti-union assaults
  • The decline of the older manufacturing industries
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