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     5th May 08 - Jeffrey Kaplan, Orion magazine
Prviate cars were relatively scarce in 1919 and horse-drawn
conveyances were still common. In residential districts, electric
streetlights had not yet replaced many of the old gaslights. And within
the home, electricity remained largely a luxury item for the wealthy. Just ten years later things looked very different.
Cars dominated
the streets and most urban homes had electric lights, electric flat
irons, and vacuum cleaners. In upper-middle-class houses, washing
machines, refrigerators, toasters, curling irons, percolators, heating
pads, and popcorn poppers were becoming commonplace. And although the
first commercial radio station didn’t begin broadcasting until 1920,
the American public, with an adult population of about 122 million
people, bought 4,438,000 radios in the year 1929 alone.
But despite the apparent tidal wave of new consumer goods and what
appeared to be a healthy appetite for their consumption among the
well-to-do, industrialists were worried. They feared that the frugal
habits maintained by most American families would be difficult to
break. Perhaps even more threatening was the fact that the industrial
capacity for turning out goods seemed to be increasing at a pace
greater than people’s sense that they needed them.
It was this latter concern that led Charles Kettering, director of
General Motors Research, to write a 1929 magazine article called “Keep
the Consumer Dissatisfied.” He wasn’t suggesting that manufacturers
produce shoddy products. Along with many of his corporate cohorts, he
was defining a strategic shift for American industry—from fulfilling
basic human needs to creating new ones.
In a 1927 interview with the magazine Nation’s Business, Secretary of Labor James J. Davis provided some numbers to illustrate a problem that the New York Times
called “need saturation.” Davis noted that “the textile mills of this
country can produce all the cloth needed in six months’ operation each
year” and that 14 percent of the American shoe factories could produce
a year’s supply of footwear. The magazine went on to suggest, “It may
be that the world’s needs ultimately will be produced by three days’
work a week.”
Business leaders were less than enthusiastic about the prospect of a
society no longer centered on the production of goods. For them, the
new “labor-saving” machinery presented not a vision of liberation but a
threat to their position at the center of power. John E. Edgerton,
president of the National Association of Manufacturers, typified their
response when he declared: “I am for everything that will make work
happier but against everything that will further subordinate its
importance. The emphasis should be put on work—more work and better
work.” “Nothing,” he claimed, “breeds radicalism more than unhappiness
unless it is leisure.”
By the late 1920s, America’s business and political elite had found
a way to defuse the dual threat of stagnating economic growth and a
radicalized working class in what one industrial consultant called “the
gospel of consumption”—the notion that people could be convinced that
however much they have, it isn’t enough. President Herbert Hoover’s
1929 Committee on Recent Economic Changes observed in glowing terms the
results: “By advertising and other promotional devices . . . a
measurable pull on production has been created which releases capital
otherwise tied up.” They celebrated the conceptual breakthrough:
“Economically we have a boundless field before us; that there are new
wants which will make way endlessly for newer wants, as fast as they
are satisfied.”
Today “work and more work” is the accepted way of doing things. If
anything, improvements to the labor-saving machinery since the 1920s
have intensified the trend. Machines can
save labor, but only if they go idle when we possess enough of what
they can produce. In other words, the machinery offers us an
opportunity to work less, an opportunity that as a society we have
chosen not to take. Instead, we have allowed the owners of those
machines to define their purpose: not reduction of labor, but “higher
productivity”—and with it the imperative to consume virtually
everything that the machinery can possibly produce.
FROM THE EARLIEST DAYS of the Age of Consumerism there were critics.
One of the most influential was Arthur Dahlberg, whose 1932 book Jobs, Machines, and Capitalism
was well known to policymakers and elected officials in Washington.
Dahlberg declared that “failure to shorten the length of the working
day . . . is the primary cause of our rationing of opportunity, our
excess industrial plant, our enormous wastes of competition, our high
pressure advertising, [and] our economic imperialism.” Since much of
what industry produced was no longer aimed at satisfying human physical
needs, a four-hour workday, he claimed, was necessary to prevent
society from becoming disastrously materialistic. “By not shortening
the working day when all the wood is in,” he suggested, the profit
motive becomes “both the creator and satisfier of spiritual needs.” For
when the profit motive can turn nowhere else, “it wraps our soap in
pretty boxes and tries to convince us that that is solace to our
souls.”
There was, for a time, a visionary alternative. In 1930 Kellogg
Company, the world’s leading producer of ready-to-eat cereal, announced
that all of its nearly fifteen hundred workers would move from an
eight-hour to a six-hour workday. Company president Lewis Brown and
owner W. K. Kellogg noted that if the company ran “four six-hour shifts
. . . instead of three eight-hour shifts, this will give work and
paychecks to the heads of three hundred more families in Battle Creek.”
This was welcome news to workers at a time when the country was
rapidly descending into the Great Depression. But as Benjamin Hunnicutt
explains in his book Kellogg’s Six-Hour Day,
Brown and Kellogg wanted to do more than save jobs. They hoped to show
that the “free exchange of goods, services, and labor in the free
market would not have to mean mindless consumerism or eternal
exploitation of people and natural resources.” Instead “workers would
be liberated by increasingly higher wages and shorter hours for the
final freedom promised by the Declaration of Independence—the pursuit
of happiness.”
To be sure, Kellogg did not intend to stop making a profit. But the
company leaders argued that men and women would work more efficiently
on shorter shifts, and with more people employed, the overall
purchasing power of the community would increase, thus allowing for
more purchases of goods, including cereals.
A shorter workday did entail a cut in overall pay for workers. But
Kellogg raised the hourly rate to partially offset the loss and
provided for production bonuses to encourage people to work hard. The
company eliminated time off for lunch, assuming that workers would
rather work their shorter shift and leave as soon as possible. In a
“personal letter” to employees, Brown pointed to the “mental income” of
“the enjoyment of the surroundings of your home, the place you work,
your neighbors, the other pleasures you have [that are] harder to
translate into dollars and cents.” Greater leisure, he hoped, would
lead to “higher standards in school and civic . . . life” that would
benefit the company by allowing it to “draw its workers from a
community where good homes predominate.”
It was an attractive vision, and it worked. Not only did Kellogg prosper, but journalists from magazines such as Forbes and BusinessWeek
reported that the great majority of company employees embraced the
shorter workday. One reporter described “a lot of gardening and
community beautification, athletics and hobbies . . . libraries well
patronized and the mental background of these fortunate workers . . .
becoming richer.”
A U.S. Department of Labor survey taken at the time, as well as
interviews Hunnicutt conducted with former workers, confirm this
picture. The government interviewers noted that “little dissatisfaction
with lower earnings resulting from the decrease in hours was expressed,
although in the majority of cases very real decreases had resulted.”
One man spoke of “more time at home with the family.” Another
remembered: “I could go home and have time to work in my garden.” A
woman noted that the six-hour shift allowed her husband to “be with 4
boys at ages it was important.”
Those extra hours away from work also enabled some people to accomplish
things that they might never have been able to do otherwise. Hunnicutt
describes how at the end of her interview an eighty-year-old woman
began talking about ping-pong. “We’d get together. We had a ping-pong
table and all my relatives would come for dinner and things and we’d
all play ping-pong by the hour.” Eventually she went on to win the
state championship.
Many women used the extra time for housework. But even then, they often
chose work that drew in the entire family, such as canning. One
recalled how canning food at home became “a family project” that “we
all enjoyed,” including her sons, who “opened up to talk freely.” As
Hunnicutt puts it, canning became the “medium for something more
important than preserving food. Stories, jokes, teasing, quarreling,
practical instruction, songs, griefs, and problems were shared. The
modern discipline of alienated work was left behind for an older . . .
more convivial kind of working together.”
This was the stuff of a human ecology in which thousands of small,
almost invisible, interactions between family members, friends, and
neighbors create an intricate structure that supports social life in
much the same way as topsoil supports our biological existence. When we
allow either one to become impoverished, whether out of greed or
intemperance, we put our long-term survival at risk.
Our modern predicament is a case in point. By 2005 per capita household
spending (in inflation-adjusted dollars) was twelve times what it had
been in 1929, while per capita spending for durable goods—the big stuff
such as cars and appliances—was thirty-two times higher. Meanwhile, by
2000 the average married couple with children was working almost five
hundred hours a year more than in 1979. And according to reports by the
Federal Reserve Bank in 2004 and 2005, over 40 percent of American
families spend more than they earn. The average household carries
$18,654 in debt, not including home-mortgage debt, and the ratio of
household debt to income is at record levels, having roughly doubled
over the last two decades. We are quite literally working ourselves
into a frenzy just so we can consume all that our machines can produce.
Yet we could work and spend a lot less and still live quite
comfortably. By 1991 the amount of goods and services produced for each
hour of labor was double what it had been in 1948. By 2006 that figure
had risen another 30 percent. In other words, if as a society we made a
collective decision to get by on the amount we produced and consumed
seventeen years ago, we could cut back from the standard forty-hour
week to 5.3 hours per day—or 2.7 hours if we were willing to return to
the 1948 level. We were already the richest country on the planet in
1948 and most of the world has not yet caught up to where we were
then.
Rather than realizing the enriched social life that Kellogg’s vision
offered us, we have impoverished our human communities with a form of
materialism that leaves us in relative isolation from family, friends,
and neighbors. We simply don’t have time for them. Unlike our
great-grandparents who passed the time, we spend it. An outside
observer might conclude that we are in the grip of some strange curse,
like a modern-day King Midas whose touch turns everything into a
product built around a microchip.
Of course not everybody has been able to take part in the buying
spree on equal terms. Millions of Americans work long hours at poverty
wages while many others can find no work at all. However, as
advertisers well know, poverty does not render one immune to the gospel
of consumption.
Meanwhile, the influence of the gospel has spread far beyond the land
of its origin. Most of the clothes, video players, furniture, toys, and
other goods Americans buy today are made in distant countries, often by
underpaid people working in sweatshop conditions. The raw material for
many of those products comes from clearcutting or strip mining or other
disastrous means of extraction. Here at home, business activity is
centered on designing those products, financing their manufacture,
marketing them—and counting the profits.
KELLOG’S VISION, DESPITE ITS POPULARITY with his employees, had little
support among his fellow business leaders. But Dahlberg’s book had a
major influence on Senator (and future Supreme Court justice) Hugo
Black who, in 1933, introduced legislation requiring a thirty-hour
workweek. Although Roosevelt at first appeared to support Black’s bill,
he soon sided with the majority of businessmen who opposed it. Instead,
Roosevelt went on to launch a series of policy initiatives that led to
the forty-hour standard that we more or less observe today.
By the time the Black bill came before Congress, the prophets of the
gospel of consumption had been developing their tactics and techniques
for at least a decade. However, as the Great Depression deepened, the
public mood was uncertain, at best, about the proper role of the large
corporation. Labor unions were gaining in both public support and legal
legitimacy, and the Roosevelt administration, under its New Deal
program, was implementing government regulation of industry on an
unprecedented scale. Many corporate leaders saw the New Deal as a
serious threat. James A. Emery, general counsel for the National
Association of Manufacturers (NAM), issued a “call to arms” against the
“shackles of irrational regulation” and the “back-breaking burdens of
taxation,” characterizing the New Deal doctrines as “alien invaders of
our national thought.”
In response, the industrial elite represented by NAM, including
General Motors, the big steel companies, General Foods, DuPont, and
others, decided to create their own propaganda. An internal NAM memo
called for “re-selling all of the individual Joe Doakes on the
advantages and benefits he enjoys under a competitive economy.” NAM
launched a massive public relations campaign it called the “American
Way.” As the minutes of a NAM meeting described it, the purpose of the
campaign was to link “free enterprise in the public consciousness with
free speech, free press and free religion as integral parts of
democracy.”
Consumption was not only the linchpin of the campaign; it was also
recast in political terms. A campaign booklet put out by the J. Walter
Thompson advertising agency told readers that under “private
capitalism, the Consumer, the Citizen
is boss,” and “he doesn’t have to wait for election day to vote or for
the Court to convene before handing down his verdict. The consumer
‘votes’ each time he buys one article and rejects another.”
According to Edward Bernays, one of the founders of the field of public
relations and a principal architect of the American Way, the choices
available in the polling booth are akin to those at the department
store; both should consist of a limited set of offerings that are
carefully determined by what Bernays called an “invisible government”
of public-relations experts and advertisers working on behalf of
business leaders. Bernays claimed that in a “democratic society” we are
and should be “governed, our minds . . . molded, our tastes formed, our
ideas suggested, largely by men we have never heard of.”
NAM formed a national network of groups to ensure that the booklet from
J. Walter Thompson and similar material appeared in libraries and
school curricula across the country. The campaign also placed favorable
articles in newspapers (often citing “independent” scholars who were
paid secretly) and created popular magazines and film shorts directed
to children and adults with such titles as “Building Better Americans,”
“The Business of America’s People Is Selling,” and “America Marching
On.”
Perhaps the biggest public relations success for the American Way
campaign was the 1939 New York World’s Fair. The fair’s director of
public relations called it “the greatest public relations program in
industrial history,” one that would battle what he called the “New Deal
propaganda.” The fair’s motto was “Building the World of Tomorrow,” and
it was indeed a forum in which American corporations literally modeled
the future they were determined to create. The most famous of the
exhibits was General Motors’ 35,000-square-foot Futurama, where
visitors toured Democracity, a metropolis of multilane highways that
took its citizens from their countryside homes to their jobs in the
skyscraper-packed central city.
For all of its intensity and spectacle, the campaign for the
American Way did not create immediate, widespread, enthusiastic support
for American corporations or the corporate vision of the future. But it
did lay the ideological groundwork for changes that came after the
Second World War, changes that established what is still commonly
called our post-war society.
The war had put people back to work in numbers that the New Deal had
never approached, and there was considerable fear that unemployment
would return when the war ended. Kellogg workers had been working
forty-eight-hour weeks during the war and the majority of them were
ready to return to a six-hour day and thirty-hour week. Most of them
were able to do so, for a while. But W. K. Kellogg and Lewis Brown had
turned the company over to new managers in 1937.
The new managers saw only costs and no benefits to the six-hour day,
and almost immediately after the end of the war they began a campaign
to undermine shorter hours. Management offered workers a tempting set
of financial incentives if they would accept an eight-hour day. Yet in
a vote taken in 1946, 77 percent of the men and 87 percent of the women
wanted to return to a thirty-hour week rather than a forty-hour one. In
making that choice, they also chose a fairly dramatic drop in earnings
from artificially high wartime levels.
The company responded with a strategy of attrition, offering special
deals on a department-by-department basis where eight hours had pockets
of support, typically among highly skilled male workers. In the culture
of a post-war, post-Depression U.S., that strategy was largely
successful. But not everyone went along. Within Kellogg there was a
substantial, albeit slowly dwindling group of people Hunnicutt calls
the “mavericks,” who resisted longer work hours. They clustered in a
few departments that had managed to preserve the six-hour day until the
company eliminated it once and for all in 1985.
The mavericks rejected the claims made by the company, the union, and
many of their co-workers that the extra money they could earn on an
eight-hour shift was worth it. Despite the enormous difference in
societal wealth between the 1930s and the 1980s, the language the
mavericks used to explain their preference for a six-hour workday was
almost identical to that used by Kellogg workers fifty years earlier.
One woman, worried about the long hours worked by her son, said, “He
has no time to live, to visit and spend time with his family, and to do
the other things he really loves to do.”
Several people commented on the link between longer work hours and
consumerism. One man said, “I was getting along real good, so there was
no use in me working any more time than I had to.” He added, “Everybody
thought they were going to get rich when they got that eight-hour deal
and it really didn’t make a big difference. . . . Some went out and
bought automobiles right quick and they didn’t gain much on that
because the car took the extra money they had.”
The mavericks, well aware that longer work hours meant fewer jobs,
called those who wanted eight-hour shifts plus overtime “work hogs.”
“Kellogg’s was laying off people,” one woman commented, “while some of
the men were working really fantastic amounts of overtime—that’s just
not fair.” Another quoted the historian Arnold Toynbee, who said, “We
will either share the work, or take care of people who don’t have
work.”
PEOPLE IN THE DEPRESSION-WRACKED 1930s, with what seems to us today to
be a very low level of material goods, readily chose fewer work hours
for the same reasons as some of their children and grandchildren did in
the 1980s: to have more time for themselves and their families. We
could, as a society, make a similar choice today.
But we cannot do it as individuals. The mavericks at Kellogg held out
against company and social pressure for years, but in the end the
marketplace didn’t offer them a choice to work less and consume less.
The reason is simple: that choice is at odds with the foundations of
the marketplace itself—at least as it is currently constructed. The men
and women who masterminded the creation of the consumerist society
understood that theirs was a political undertaking, and it will take a
powerful political movement to change course today.
Bernays’s version of a “democratic society,” in which political
decisions are marketed to consumers, has many modern proponents.
Consider a comment by Andrew Card, George W. Bush’s former chief of
staff. When asked why the administration waited several months before
making its case for war against Iraq, Card replied, “You don’t roll out
a new product in August.” And in 2004, one of the leading legal
theorists in the United States, federal judge Richard Posner, declared
that “representative democracy . . . involves a division between rulers
and ruled,” with the former being “a governing class,” and the rest of
us exercising a form of “consumer sovereignty” in the political sphere
with “the power not to buy a particular product, a power to choose
though not to create.”
Sometimes an even more blatant antidemocratic stance appears in
the working papers of elite think tanks. One such example is the
prominent Harvard political scientist Samuel Huntington’s 1975
contribution to a Trilateral Commission report on “The Crisis of
Democracy.” Huntington warns against an “excess of democracy,”
declaring that “a democratic political system usually requires some
measure of apathy and noninvolvement on the part of some individuals
and groups.” Huntington notes that “marginal social groups, as in the
case of the blacks, are now becoming full participants in the political
system” and thus present the “danger of overloading the political
system” and undermining its authority.
According to this elite view, the people are too unstable and ignorant
for self-rule. “Commoners,” who are viewed as factors of production at
work and as consumers at home, must adhere to their proper roles in
order to maintain social stability. Posner, for example, disparaged a
proposal for a national day of deliberation as “a small but not trivial
reduction in the amount of productive work.” Thus he appears to be an
ideological descendant of the business leader who warned that relaxing
the imperative for “more work and better work” breeds “radicalism.”
As far back as 1835, Boston workingmen striking for shorter hours
declared that they needed time away from work to be good citizens: “We
have rights, and we have duties to perform as American citizens and
members of society.” As those workers well understood, any meaningful
democracy requires citizens who are empowered to create and re-create
their government, rather than a mass of marginalized voters who merely
choose from what is offered by an “invisible” government. Citizenship
requires a commitment of time and attention, a commitment people cannot
make if they are lost to themselves in an ever-accelerating cycle of
work and consumption.
We can break that cycle by turning off our machines when they have
created enough of what we need. Doing so will give us an opportunity to
re-create the kind of healthy communities that were beginning to emerge
with Kellogg’s six-hour day, communities in which human welfare is the
overriding concern rather than subservience to machines and those who
own them. We can create a society where people have time to play
together as well as work together, time to act politically in their
common interests, and time even to argue over what those common
interests might be. That fertile mix of human relationships is
necessary for healthy human societies, which in turn are necessary for
sustaining a healthy planet.
If we want to save the Earth, we must also save ourselves from ourselves. We can start by sharing the work and the wealth. We may just find that there is plenty of both to go around.
Jeffrey Kaplan has long been an activist in the Bay Area. His articles have appeared in various publications, including Yes! and the Chicago Tribune.
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