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Misappropriating 'trust'
By Neera Chandhoke
Theories of trust wish away exploitation and social struggles by
a clever piece of semantic engineering.
THE AGITATION launched by the workers at the Maruti factory in
Gurgaon is significant for one main reason. It has challenged the
basic assumptions that lie beneath the post- Fordist, or more
precisely Japanese, strategies of factory management, that the
historically tension ridden relationship between the workers and
the management has been radically transformed. Or that our
societies have transited to new ways of negotiating the
relationship between proprietors and labour on terms of
cooperation, partnership, and trust. If Fordist regimes of
accumulation were marked by a hierarchically organised labour
process, vertically organised assembly line mass production, and
clear divisions between the workers, the supervisors, and the
management, post- Fordist factory regimes are characterised by
the abolition of both vertical integration as well as
hierarchies.
These business methods were to completely invert the Fordist
regime of factory management, inasmuch as they inserted the
shopfloor worker into what was till then an exclusive managerial
ethos. Conversely, managers should be able to take the place of a
shopfloor worker in cases of shortages. The managerial staff is
available to the workers at all times, and deals with vexatious
matters immediately. This system has found its most expressive
form in the famed single status uniform and canteen imagery. Many
companies, anxious to emulate the Japanese success story, closed
the managerial dining room, bid goodbye to the supervisors, and
integrated the shopfloor workers into the decision-making
process. It is not surprising that one of the earliest examples
of the flow line assembly plant - the Fiat motor works at
Lingotto in Turin - has been transformed into a museum.
The assumptions that lie behind such strategies are in the main
three. First, that what has been historically theorised as the
basic tension in capitalism - that between the propertied and the
working classes - has been transcended. Second, that the
interests of the working classes are and should be subordinated
to the interests of the company, rather that the interests of the
working classes are the interests of the owners of the company.
And third, that collective life whether in the work place or in
the wider society is and should be marked by cooperation and
trust rather than conflict and struggle.
The logic that underlay business methods was not confined to the
work place. It spilled over into theorisations of political and
social life; theorisations that bordered on naivete at best, and
neo-conservatism at worst. But it found ready resonance in a
world which had triumphantly declared an end to socialism.
Encouraged by the demise of actually existing socialist
societies, Francis Fukuyama, of the clash of civilizations fame,
suggested, in his 1995 `Trust. The Social Virtues and the
Creation of Prosperity', that the key to economic prosperity as
well as healthy democratic life is trust. Fukuyama traced the
economic success of a society to one simple fact - that the
community should be defined by shared ethical horizons, which
bind all people into networks of trust.
For long, theorists have recognised that economic activity cannot
occur in a vacuum and that it requires as a condition certain
social attributes. Adam Smith insisted on the need for sympathy
as a binding force among economic actors in his lesser known but
infinitely richer work - The Theory of Moral Sentiments. And
contemporary works on civil society identify an otherwise
troubled sphere with what is called social capital. In other
words, theorists have been concerned with setting in place the
social context of accumulation.
But in the hands of Fukuyama, notions of trust border on neo-
conservatism subordinating the individual to the community, and
the non- propertied classes to the propertied ones. Defining
trust as the expectation that people will abide by the shared
norms that define the ethical horizons of a community, he argues
that generalised trust is important for the efficient functioning
of the economy. Whereas particularised trust is confined within
the clan, it is generalised trust across community boundaries
which facilitates the coordination of economic activities across
time and space. Generalised trust in other words enables economic
activity to occur without the need for a host of laws, contracts,
and explicit rules that are both cumbersome as well as costly.
Shared ethical horizons on the other hand enable low transaction
costs.
Accordingly, trust allows economic activities to extend beyond
the boundaries of the community or clan, the construction of
large-scale economic activities, and the sustenance of an
intricate division of labour. That is why those societies that
possess high degree of trust such as the United States, Germany,
and Japan exhibit high degrees of economic success whereas those
countries that possess low degrees of trust such as southern
Italy, China, and Korea do not show much results.
But what is happening in the U.S., he warns us, is that the
stocks of trust are eroding precisely because of the `rights
revolution', which occurred in the second half of the 20th
century. Rights promote individualism and self-seeking behaviour
and weaken group solidarity. Therefore, whereas we find in
American life stores of trust from earlier times, we also find
the increasing tendency of asocial individualism that isolates
and atomises individuals and hampers economic creativity.
Note that in Fukuyama's thesis there is absolutely no mention of
a commodity called power, which organises society along the axis
of power and powerlessness. He completely and perhaps
deliberately ignores the fact that linkages between the
participants of a production process are not horizontal but
vertical, and that this vertical and hierarchical organisation
pre-empts any kind of trust among people whose interests, and
whose world views, are not only different but incommensurable.
Fukuyama's rejection of rights extends this power blindness, for
it is only rights that have enabled the dispossessed to speak
back to history, and to demand what is rightfully theirs. But for
Fukuyama, rights are primarily the means of advancing selfish
individual interests against group norms that may well be unjust,
inequitable, and inhospitable to the dignity of the individual.
This borders on neo-conservatism, for, as history has shown us,
only rights can guard us against vulnerability to power - the
right to associate and agitate against unfair managerial
practices for instance. And when we look at history, we realise
that it is only when workers began to assert rights against what
Marx called the `extraction of absolute surplus value' that
working conditions improved - relatively speaking. We should be
able to see quite clearly why an analysis of trust in terms of
the moral dispositions of a community, does great disservice to
the rights of all disprivileged and dispossessed citizens to
demand a place in the sun, a place that is rightfully theirs, by
reasons of right.
But theories of trust wish away exploitation and social struggles
by a clever piece of semantic engineering. Correspondingly, when
such theories are applied in the work place, the basic conflict
between the workers and the propertied classes is conjured away
by common dining rooms and one uniform as in the Maruti factory.
It is, however, one of the major accomplishments of history that
theories that do not take into account the basic contradictions
of society are doomed to irrelevance. Nothing illustrates this
more than the happenings in the Maruti factory. The workers have
been agitating for a month for better production incentives. On
October 12, the management demanded that the workers sign an
undertaking that they would not engage in any activity that may
affect production and discipline. Those workers who do not sign,
warned the management, would not be allowed to enter the factory,
and would be deemed to be on illegal strike.
Note the use of the term `discipline'. This makes it quite clear
that all notions of shared moral norms collapse when it comes to
the interests of the managers and the proprietors. The main body
of the workers refused to sign such an undertaking, accordingly
the production of about 1,500 vehicles a day has been
jeopardised. And this in a company that once under the influence
of Japanese business methods delivered 140 per cent productivity!
The approach of generating trust through a common uniform and one
canteen has obviously run its full course.
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