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Thursday, October 16, 2014

"MATURE ADULT WORKERS!" -- WHERE ARE THEY? A READER COMMENTS


 “MATURE ADULT WORKERS!” -- WHERE ARE THEY?
A READER COMMENTS

James R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
© October 16, 2014





A READER WRITES:

In your excerpt on “mature adult workers” you did not touch on the fact that the current "deal" is to get rid of workers reaching that terminal age of "62" when they root out more expensive workers with threats, trying to herd them into agreeing to severance plans that only serve the company. 

This has been rampant in hospitals, drug companies, and many more businesses and establishments...blindsiding them, then dispatching them. 

I'll bet you can read between the lines.  Why is this so important to the powers that be to pull the plug on people when they are so close to retirement??? 

Is this much different than companies forcing employees out due to reorganization or redundancy exercises? 

I suppose companies implement such plans to start new hires at lower wages.  Who is there to "trust"?

No longer is it a world where you put in your 25 or 30 years and retire.  Now you are just out on your rear.  This is common knowledge, but I suspect there is some research and statistics on this. 

Be well, and keep up the missives

DR. FISHER RESPONDS:

Thank you for your interesting comments.  T
This segment that generated your comments is from THE WORKER, ALONE! GOING AGAINST THE GRAIN and relates to "mature adult worker," a worker, I might add, who is practically nonexistent, mainly because he is programmed to have other people (companies) solve his problems, and that is not going to happen anymore.

The book is basically about workers, mainly professional workers, imploring them "to take charge” of their work, and by doing so, take charge of their lives.  

Instead, due to their conditioning, they are more likely to wail about unfairness issues against the company and its management, wondering why these people aren’t doing “the right thing.”  The reason is quite apparent, because they don’t have to.  It is not how the capitalistic system is set up or how it works.  Workers are disposable when management through ignorance, incompetence or malfeasance results in the company not making a profit and going belly up.   Management protects its own quite egregiously.   So, it has been for more than one hundred years.

What you allude to as going on in the healthcare and pharmaceutical industry, "retiring" people before they reach retirement age or the level of maximum social security benefits, has been going on for years.

In one of my books (WORK WITHOUT MANAGERS) I write about the CEO of K-Mart having a 20-40-60 plan.  This secret policy referred to employees with 20 years of service, making $40,000 or more, and over 60-years-of-age calling for a review of their status to see if they could quietly be removed from employment with K-Mart.

After many years of tolerating this policy Mercer David Grayson, et al led a class action suit against K-Mart, which exposed the whole practice.  The court favored the plaintiffs, but K-Mart counter suited and so this brouhaha has been going on for nigh twenty years (see details on google).

Making $40,000 then was the equivalent of earning $60,000 or more now due to inflation.

No, it is not right, but my book is not about what is right or wrong, but rather an attempt to engage workers to assuming ownership of what they do.  But, alas, they seldom show such inclination in my experience.  When they do, it can bring about monumental results.  Instead, they resort to homicide or sabotage, or as I say in other books, resort to the six silent killers that cost corporations billions of dollars (see Six Silent Killers: Management’s Greatest Challenge, and Corporate Sin: Leaderless Leaders and Dissonant Workers).  

That said once in a while we have breakthrough, which always starts with an individual.

Take Curtis Charles “Curt” Flood, the outstanding St. Louis Cardinal outfielder of Major League Baseball.  In 1969, he was part of a multiple player swap with another major league team, and he refused to go.    

Instead of honoring the player swap, he contacted his attorney, then the Director of the Players Association, Marvin Miller, and sued baseball for violating his collective bargaining rights, which incidentally, at the time were non-existent. 

A single baseball player took on the $multi-billion baseball corporation, and won the right to negotiate his own contract, no longer was he to be chattel of a major league owner.  It threw shock waves through professional sport.  What’s more, he won his case!

Suddenly, all professional athletes could negotiate competitive contracts with baseball owners, indeed, with owners in any professional sport.  It spawn a new profession, professional agents for athletes, and led to athletes becoming mega-millionaires. 

However, it doomed Curt Flood's career.  He died at the age of 59, and had a hard life for "going against the grain." 

Forty-five years later, professional athletes have close to parity while most corporate workers don't.

Corporate society controls the game.  In a modest way, I have been fighting that reality for forty plus years with many books (Work Without Managers, The Worker, Alone, Six Silent Killers, Corporate Sin, Time Out for Sanity, and Who Put You in the Cage?}, along with nearly one thousand articles.

Nothing will change professional workers’ status until workers like Curtis Charles Flood, say, "Hell, no, I won't go!"  And with that action, change the calculus.

In THE WORKER, ALONE, I come down hard on professional workers as well as managers, as these workers represent up to 90 percent of the workforce.

At the turn of the last century (1900), when tool and die makers built automobiles, and there was not yet a General Motors, workers did everything: they planned the work, worked the plan, purchased supplies, set up their own machines, and maintained them, and worked to produce a profitable product.  They had control!  The owner of the shop worked right beside them.  It was similar to the pre-industrial guild.

Corporations were established and gained momentum during WWI, developing a new class of workers called "managers," who became a force in WWII as industrial production of war machines won that war.

By then owners had retired from the workplace, concentrating on selling stock to finance their enterprises with managers running the day-to-day operation.
From 1945 through 1980, the corporation became top heavy with managers with as many as twelve levels of management in a hierarchical pyramid, that was, until Japan, Inc. started to eat the corporate lunch steel, automobiles, appliances, glass, and rubber products.

This development show American industry going from controlling 60 percent of the world manufacturing market after WWII to 30 percent or less today.

Once owners were no longer on the premises, managers became surrogates owners, although only employees, themselves.  They secured their status by appointing CEO friendly Boards of Directors, and came to act as if they were, indeed, the owners.  The minute that mindset set in, it was impossible to move management to engage in reality.

Workers, who during the guild days acted like owners, now acted like renters.  The adversary relationship between labor and management became an undeclared war between workers and managers during the 20th century, and has spilled over into the 21st century.  This could have been avoided, but wasn’t. 

At the end of WWII (1945), the American workforce was 90 percent blue-collar with labor unions primed to confront corporate management with demands for wage and fringe benefit concessions for workers.  Unfortunately, for these concessions came with a terrible price.  Workers surrendered control of what they did.

Workers have been powerless ever since, despite the fact that the organization has radically changed from 90 percent blue-collar to nearly 90 percent white collar or professional with blue-collar only a little north of 10 percent.  

No longer in control, workers sued for more and more wage and benefit concessions unable or unwilling to sue for more control of work without making wage and benefit concessions. 

The irony here is that labor unions kept suing for more and more wage and benefit or entitlement programs suing themselves as an entity right out of relevance, and suing workers right out of their jobs.  Today, the automotive industry, which led this charge, is practically on life support from the federal government. 

This has led to a mass corporate exodus of many companies to foreign countries for survival.

Or if workers still had a job, because they weren’t respected or included in the decision-making, they became reactive to management’s demands as if dependent 12-year-old children in 50-year-old bodies, and then they gravitated from this status to becoming counter dependent on the company for their total well being as if the company owed them a living.

I have written most workers are suspended in terminal adolescence in learned helplessness whatever the color of their collar, blue or white.

That dependent mentality survives to this day, although the corporation as an entity is becoming anachronistic and managers increasingly atavistic.

I worked for three major corporations, consulted for several others, but never bought into the corporate culture.  Nor did I ever join the corporate club albeit reaching executive status.  The corporation and its culture has been my laboratory, fodder for my books, and leading to this writing career. 

You didn't ask for this but this gives you a flavor of my mind on the subject.

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