Opinion polls are now beginning to show a reluctant
consensus that, whoever is to blame and whatever happens from now on, high
unemployment is probably here to stay. This means we shall have to find ways of
sharing the available employment more widely. But we need to
go further. We must ask some fundamental questions about the future of work.
Should we continue to treat employment as the norm Should we not rather
encourage many other ways for self-respecting people to work Should we not
create conditions in which many of us can work for ourselves, rather than for an
employer Should we not aim to revive the household and the neighbourhood, as
well as the factory and the office, as centres of production and work
The industrial age has been the only period of human history in which most
people’s work has taken the form of jobs. The industrial age may now be coming
to an end, and some of the changes in work patterns which it brought may have to
be reversed. This seems a daunting thought. But, in fact, it could offer the
prospect of a better future for work. Universal employment, as its history
shows, has not meant economic freedom.
Employment became widespread
when the enclosures of the 17th and 18th centuries made many people dependent on
paid work by depriving them of the use of the land, and thus of the means to
provide a living for themselves. Then the factory system destroyed the cottage
industries and removed work from people’s homes. Later, as transport improved,
first by rail and then by road, people commuted longer distances to their places
of employment until, eventually, many people’s work lost all connection with
their home lives and the places in which they lived.
Meanwhile,
employment put women at a disadvantage. In pre-industrial times, men and women
had shared the productive work of the household and village community. Now it
became customary for the husband to go out to paid employment, leaving the
unpaid work of the home and family to his wife. Tax and benefit regulations
still assume this norm today, and restrict more flexible sharing of work roles
between the sexes.
It was not only women whose work status suffered.
As employment became the dominant form of work, young people and old people were
excluded—a problem now, as more teenagers become frustrated at school and more
retired people want to live active lives. All this may now have to
change. The time has certainly come to switch some effort and resources away
from the utopian goal of creating jobs for all, to the urgent practical task of
helping many people to manage without full-time jobs. The article suggests that we should now re-examine our thinking about
the future of work and ______.
A. be prepared to admit that being employed is not the only kind of
work
B. create more factories in order to increase our productivity
C. set up smaller private enterprises so that we in turn can employ
others
D. be prepared to fill in time at home by taking up hobbies and leisure
activities.