Is there a decline of solidarity?

I believe that what pessimistic analysts like Kurt Cobb fail to see is that while the mainstream system is indeed decomposing, and with the counter-mechanisms that provided solidarity with a context of a industrial-labour society, at the same time, new structures are emerging that are creating new compulsions and affordances for sharing, cooperation and expressions of solidarity.

What do you think?

The following is excerpted from Kurt Cobb:

Regarding the effects of the meltdown and the increases in inequality/inequity:

The public has failed to band together effectively to put an end to it. Why is this so? I do not propose a comprehensive explanation here, but rather I will outline what I believe is a neglected and central reason for the lack of solidarity among America’s middle- and lower-class voters on economic and other issues. The explanation comes from William Catton Jr., author of Bottleneck, who also wrote a classic book on human ecology entitled Overshoot.

In Bottleneck Catton explains that the late 19th century French sociologist Emile Durkheim believed that the division of labor in society which resulted in heightened interdependence among humans also led inevitably to greater solidarity. Catton counters with the views of American sociologist E. A. Ross who believed that that same interdependence was leading to far more vulnerability among humans to predatory behavior from other humans. Catton leans toward Ross’s view for a very important reason: Humans now labor in narrow occupational niches within our highly complex society in the same way that species occupy ecological niches in nature. This specialization leads to competition within each niche for the limited number of positions available.

Consequently, the harder the economic times, the more intense the competition for the reduced number of positions within each niche. This leads to anxiety among those already holding a job since they are often not skilled enough to find work in other niches. The employee often asks himself or herself, “What could I possibly do if I were no longer able to do this kind of work?” Naturally, this concern also creates anxiety among those who are unemployed and seeking jobs within a particular niche.

So, it is no wonder that those in the middle and lower strata of society have a difficult time joining together for common action when they are daily locked in a struggle over keeping or getting jobs in their respective niches. This competition becomes especially acute in the United States where access to health care services, pension programs and other social benefits are largely dependent on having a job and thus add to each job holder’s and job seeker’s worries.

It makes sense then that in European nations which have generous universal services available at little or no cost, middle- and lower-class people are less afraid to band together when they feel their position in society threatened by elites. This is in part because basic income support, health care and other services are available with or without a job. The French, in particular, have long been notable for their general strikes and other work stoppages and protests that have frequently caused the French government either to give up on planned changes adversely affecting working people or reverse changes already made.

It also makes sense that wealthy elites in the United States largely oppose the expansion of social benefits such as health care. These benefits would tend to make it easier for middle- and lower-class people to find solidarity because competitive pressure to seek a job to obtain them would be reduced. I am reminded of the American Liberty League formed during the Great Depression to oppose President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. The league drew from the cream of America’s corporations. Some of the members even said publicly that reduced wages resulting from economic contraction would improve discipline and character among America’s workers–code words for preventing any substantial solidarity from arising among the lower classes.

Catton believes, however, that the competition among individuals in occupational niches in modern industrial society cannot be eliminated. The division of labor which has made the growth in population and the power of modern civilization possible will also be its undoing. He believes the division of labor will continue to increase alienation and predation among and between humans. And, that will make it difficult to gain consensus to act decisively in the face of the urgent challenges of climate change, resource depletion, pollution, soil degradation and the myriad problems which threaten humankind.”

1 Comment Is there a decline of solidarity?

  1. AvatarDavid de Ugarte

    It is a little bit confusing indeed, but it gets clear if you take on account

    1) Ultraspecialization is a consequence of overscaled rentist pseudo-monopolies (fueled by the most overscaled and rentist industry: finance). The general trend (P2P origined) is towards multispecialization of the same persons in lower scale industries.

    2) If you take a look to Spain, Portugal, Greece or Italy you dont see less solidarity but just the opposite: millions of unemployed and young people who are not covered by state-mony now, are protected by families or live in kind-if-urban-kibbutz were incomes are shared under a very primitive system of social security.

    3) Massive movilizations stopped… true. But in decades there were so great, social deliberation. Deliberation is what is needed before movilization in order to address it to concrete objectives and make them affordable (see Iceland)

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