Interview with Beverly J. Silver
In the last issue we published the translators’ preface for
the German edition of Beverly J. Silver’s book “Forces of Labor”[1].
The author came to Germany in early June 2005 to present the book. This
is an interview for the German magazine “Analyse + Kritik” [http://www.akweb.de]
Q: In
your book Forces of Labor you put a certain emphasis on the perspective
that labor unrest is a kind of driving force of the development of
capitalism. That bears a specific resemblance to an approach in Europe
called workerism or autonomist Marxism. Are there any direct
connections with that kind of thought or is this resemblance accidental?
BS:
The emphasis on labor unrest as something that is continuously
transforming capitalism in part comes out of US traditions. I grew up
in Detroit in the 1960s, and there was in the general understanding of
the 1930s sit-down struggles in Detroit this idea of the structural
strength of workers - that is, the idea that workers’ gains came in
large part through their strategic position at the point of production.
This is something that has been developed in US labor history and
industrial sociology. One of the major influences on my work is the
writings of Piven and Cloward.[2] There are several arguments that they
use at the national level in terms of discussing the history of poor
people’s movements in the US, that reoccur in FoL, but brought to a
global scale. There is the idea of major advances or transformations
coming through upsurges that come only periodically, that these
upsurges are themselves not the result of efforts by organizers or
political parties, but that they come out of structural conditions that
allow for certain kinds of movements. And, in particular, in the
understanding of the 1930s’ labor unrest they emphasize the structural,
positional power of workers at the point of production, in terms of
workers being able to push forward demands. At the same time, they
emphasize that each of these upsurges is brought under control through
a combination not only of repression, concessions and cooptation, but
also through systematic transformations in the organization of
production that weakens movements “behind their backs”, so to speak.
So
there is that heritage or roots of the argument, but also one of the
key intellectual influences on FoL has been my work with Giovanni
Arrighi. During the early period of operaismo Arrighi was actually out
of Italy, he was teaching in Rhodesia/Zimbabwe, and then Tanzania,
developing arguments in which the problem of labor supplies and labor
resistance was seen as central to how colonialism developed, as well as
to the development of national liberation movements in Africa. When
Arrighi went back to Italy in 1969, it was at the height of the autunno
caldo. And at that point, there was the strong influence of the
workers’ struggles at FIAT and, again, the recurrence of struggles
where workers were very skeptical of politics and associational
bargaining power and very determined to preserve their autonomous power
and strength in the struggles - a social-political context that also
strongly influenced the development of operaismo.
But there are
several differences between the operaismo as it developed in Italy and
the influences that came to me, to this book. In 1971 Arrighi and
others formed the Gruppo Gramsci. From the start, in their perspective
there was a very strong Third Worldism and global perspective, which
was something that was not really there in the early operaismo. A
second difference is a much stronger combined theoretical and empirical
approach, as opposed to the more philosophical tendencies within much
of operaismo. One of the strong emphases in the Gruppo Gramsci was on
the actual, concrete study of empirical conditions on the ground as
they influenced the nature of workers’ bargaining power. In this sense
they were closer to Romano Alquati and Sergio Bologna than to Mario
Tronti and Toni Negri. Finally, whereas certain tendencies within
operaismo emphasized that the working class is strong, and getting
stronger and stronger all the time, in FoL there is the attempt to see
both the long term processes tending to strengthen labor, but also
countertendencies brought about by the various capitalist fixes in
response to the strength and militancy of labor.
On this last
point, we also have developed our thinking over time. If you compare a
piece that Arrighi and I published in 1984, “Labor Movements and
Capital Mobility”[3] to FoL, you can see that there is a little bit of
implicit self criticism in FoL and in later joint articles. The 1984
article emphasizes the growing strength of labor, the long term secular
trend toward growing strength of labor on a world scale. Our argument
was that the geographical relocation of capital in the 70s and early
80s had to some extent weakened labor where capital had moved out from,
but strengthened labor elsewhere, and that overall, seen as a global
tendency, the overall process was one of labor strengthening. Then the
depth of the crisis of labor in many parts of the world in the 90s was
not something that we were really prepared for. We began to say: okay,
what happened? In thinking this through, we began to look at the impact
of the financialization of capital (what I call in the book the
“financial fix”) as a key explanation behind the depth of the crisis
for labor. Up until the mid-80s capital had responded to labor’s
strength with a series of fixes (spatial, technological/organizational,
product), none of which were particularly effective in undermining the
overall strength of labor. The result was a deep crisis of capitalism.
Then the financialization of capital began to take-off; capital
withdrew heavily from trade and production (and from the purchase of
wage labor), turning the deep crisis of capital into a deep crisis for
labor.
Let me circle back to the differences with operaismo:
Another difference that I should mention has to do with - and I think
this is a fair critique - the question of whether workers’ struggles
are always good. This issue comes up in the development of the argument
about boundary drawing in FoL, and the questions raised there about
Marx’s and Engels’ interpretation of the homogenization process, of
proletarianization, as producing an inherent tendency toward unified
working class struggles. Workers’ struggles as localized defense are
always understandable, but how do the localized defenses add up to
something that leads toward greater global justice, global equality?
Q:
This kind of boundary drawing isn’t something that is put upon the
working-class by capital, it’s produced within the working class, is
that right?
BS: I distinguish three kinds of boundary
drawing. There is one that actually does come from the workers
themselves. It is workers themselves using non-class bases of identity
- citizenship, gender, race - in order to defend particular privileges.
Because there is an ongoing tendency of capitalism to continuously
bring workers into competition with each other through these various
fixes, this is an inherent reaction, it’s an endemic kind of reaction.
That doesn’t mean that the only boundary drawing is going on by workers
themselves, but it also goes on by capital in terms of segmenting labor
markets, and by states in terms of delimiting citizenship rights.
It’s
also not to say that workers are not also involved in breaking down
boundaries. What I suggest as a very broad conceptual apparatus to work
with, is that if we look historically that established working classes,
who are the beneficiaries of the last wave of struggles, attempt to
maintain boundary drawing against competition from newly formed
working-classes, whereas newly formed working-classes are more likely
to try to break down the boundaries. If we look at rural
migrant-workers that come into Chinese cities to work, the initial
reaction of the established urban workers was to keep them out. The
migrant workers themselves now are drawing on the language of
citizenship rights in the urban areas and are saying that these kinds
of distinctions between urban and rural workers and the rights of urban
and rural workers shouldn’t have any place. We recurrently see that
with struggles by immigrant workers; for example, both historically and
today in the US, immigrant workers have argued that the same rights
should apply to workers regardless of race, regardless of nationality.
Q: In
your book you mention three different types of labor power. In your
comparison of the struggles of the automobile workers and the textile
workers, you state that although textile workers were much more
militant, they lost most of their struggles. Does that apply to a kind
of hierarchy between the different types of power - sometimes I read it
like that, that those parts of the working-class building their
strength on the shopfloor, on the big factories for example, on
workplace bargaining power, that, although they might be not as
militant as others, their struggles are much more effective, they hurt
capital much more. Is that right, is there that kind of hierarchy?
BS:
What I argue is that there is actually a similarity between the first
round of successful struggles in Britain in the 19th century and in the
US in the 1930s, in the initial phase of the product cycle. In those
moments there is a certain amount of profits that are available that
provide the potential for some kind of stable, redistributive social
contract. In fact there was such an outcome in Britain in the late 19th
century in textiles, and in the US in the 1930s in the automobile
industry. In both cases, the wave of labor unrest led to a multi-decade
social contract, in which there were some redistributive processes
going on, where capitalists were forced to share part of the profits
with labor.
There is, however, a difference in the basis of the
strength of labor in the textile industry versus in the automobile
industry. In the automobile industry the highly centralized
organization of production means that a strike in, say, a part of the
assembly line in a single engine-plant can bring an entire cooperation
to a standstill; whereas this kind of structural workplace bargaining
power didn’t exist in the textile industry because of its decentralized
nature with many smaller and medium sized factories. Without this kind
of workplace bargaining power, then workers’ victories had to depend on
alternative sources of bargaining power. So I make the argument that
associational bargaining power was much more important in the case of
the initial textile industry victories.
If we look at the early
21st century, in some ways the bargaining power of workers within
services industries - with multiple worksites, multiple employers - has
much in common with the kind of situation faced by textile workers in
the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Thus, I suggest in FoL that
associational power is likely to be more central to effective workers’
struggles in the present situation than it had been for much of the
20th century. But we can also underestimate the amount of workplace
bargaining power that workers still have, even in the service sector
industries. The most effective struggles will probably find ways to
leverage a new combination of workplace and associational bargaining
power.
Q: There are voices that insist, all those workers in the precarious workplaces, they can’t fight, so we still have to concentrate on the factories and on the public sector with the large bureaus. Others say there aren’t any privileged places, everybody can fight wherever she/he is. What do you think about that?
BS:
Well, everybody can and often does fight wherever she or he is; but
there still are privileged places, in the sense that there are places
where workers have much stronger bargaining power; where their
struggles have a much greater impact on capital and on state power. In
part what I have argued is that, with each successive spatial fix, the
privileged site of strong workplace bargaining power has moved
successively to each new site of rapid industrialization. Thus, today a
key place to look is China, which has been experiencing very rapid
industrialization and proletarianization, including the creation of
industrial sites in the automobile industry with workers concentrated
in large factories, working on assembly lines, with workplace
bargaining power that can be leveraged; and that, I expect, will be
leveraged by Chinese workers.
With regard to the future of
workers’ movements in the core, I think we should be asking: what are
the new, main sites of working-class formation in the core countries?
And then look to: what are the forms of bargaining power within the
hands of these workers? It is useful to look at the existing struggles
by these workers - even if they are for now still marginal in their
impact - and the kinds of strategies they use. If you look for example
at the US, particularly in California you have this round of very
successful mobilizations by janitors, who were mostly immigrants,
working in the office buildings downtown. They don’t have the kind of
workplace bargaining power that comes from working in a complex
division of labor – if one janitor does not work, this does not stop
the whole thing, even if one building stops, this doesn’t stop the
other buildings. There is, however, bargaining power that comes from
the place-bound nature of the work. This ideology of globalization,
that everything can move, anything can move anywhere, is not true:
there are economies of agglomeration, there is tremendous sunken
investments in terms of fixed capital in the buildings, so that it
would be a huge loss of sunken capital to move. They can’t send the
buildings overnight somewhere else to be cleaned. The ability to have
successful struggles there comes from some elementary structural
bargaining power that shouldn’t just be ignored.
But at the same
time, it’s clear that there are capitalist organizational strategies in
this industry - for example, the use of multiple subcontracting firms
as the direct employer - that combined with the less complex division
of labor means that these workers certainly have less workplace
bargaining power than, say, automobile workers. So it is clear that the
success of the ‘justice for janitors’ campaign also depended on
developing and leveraging forms of associational bargaining power
including community organizations and the power of a central trade
union structure that played an important role in funnelling resources
to the campaign.
Q: Do you think that were the two main factors: a community based fight and the strength of the union?
BS:
Community organization was important, including networks that existed
within immigrant communities. The SEIU (Service Employees International
Union) played an important role, in that they provided significant
financial resources for the campaign. The campaign was very expensive
(legal and research costs) - which may be one of the limits of the
campaign strategy. To be sure, there were lots of problems with that
campaign (with the undemocratic, top-down nature of how things were
done), but they were able to do something very important; to show that
it was possible to mobilize and organize immigrant workers, and to win
struggles in precarious workplaces.
Q: In your book you write
a lot about the textile and the automobile industry as the main
industries of the 19th and 20th century. You try to identify certain
industries or sectors which might become similarly important in the
21st century, but you are very cautious.
BS: It is very difficult
to identify a sector that has the kind of economic and also cultural
weight that textiles had in the 19th and automobiles had in the 20th
century. It may be because it is too soon to tell; that is, these types
of transformations only become obvious to us post-facto. Or it may be
because we are living through a real substantive transformation in the
nature of capitalism. There is an argument to be made for
semiconductors as a new leading sector in the sense of the multiple
impacts that it has had, but at the same time it is not key in the
sense that the semiconductor industry itself is not producing large
working-classes - if anything its effect is to reduce total employment.
In different ways, I think we should also be keeping an eye on both
long-distance transportation and military-related industries. In a
different direction, it is interesting to note one clear trend that
came out of the World Labor Group data[4]: in the last decades of the
twentieth century, labor unrest in the education industry, among
teachers, showed a clear upward trend worldwide.
Q: I think that is a consequence of what you have called a socializing state: big expenses in the public sector, social work, education…
BS: Yes. So, the crude argument, ‘where capital goes, conflict goes’, is carried forward throughout the book – both as a geographical argument within industries (with each spatial fix), but also from industry to industry (with each product fix), including the movement of ‘capital’ into state sectors, with education understood as a key public sector industry.
Q: Another question concerning intellectual heritage in FoL: Yesterday[5] you talked about ‘making and re-making’ of the working-class. Was there any resemblance with E.P. Thompson[6] and that kind of thought?
BS: Certainly, understanding working class formation as a process is an important similarity. Clearly the strong emphasis in social history on grassroots struggles is an important source for this work. Also, the idea that consciousness often comes out of struggles, rather than being a pre-condition of struggles is implicit throughout the book – trying to problematize the assumption of a linear progression from proletarianization, to consciousness, to struggles to…
Q: The mechanistic understanding of classical Marxism, the social category called labor class…
BS: That’s right, that’s also an influence.
Q: I found very interesting, as I understood, that you have an understanding of class as a kind of process, developing, shaping and re-shaping. Would you think it is possible that the working class is completely atomized and, as a social formation, no longer an actor?
BS:
Let me offer a historical analogy. If you look at discussions about the
US labor movement in the 1920s, you see that the overwhelming consensus
was that Fordism itself was producing a hopelessly disaggregated, weak,
and atomized working-class: it was drawing in immigrant workers from
all over the place who didn’t share a common language or culture, whose
skill-based bargaining power was undermined by the new and alienating
technologies. It was only post-facto, when you start getting the
success of labor movements in the mass-production industries, that then
the whole frame for understanding things changed. Now the advance of
Fordism, instead of being seen as a labor-weakening process, was seen
as a process that was inherently labor strengthening. Now, also with
Postfordism everyone is going back to analogous types of argument to
those being made in the 1920s, in which the new ways of organizing
production and the new technologies are seen as clearly labor-weakening
processes. But it is likely that there is also a process now going on,
in which workers themselves are discovering where their bargaining
power is in the new situation, where their leverage is - it takes time
to figure it out. And once that kind of process of discovery is more
widespread and generalized, and also acted on – that then we will get
again another shift in the way that social sciences thinks about
Postfordism, seeing it as actually opening up all sorts of new
opportunities for struggles. But that will be a post-facto
understanding based on an analysis of the struggles that come up
themselves. The reason for a lot of the tentativeness in the discussion
of the early 21st century and Postfordism is precisely because this is
something that we as analysts can try to guess based on certain kinds
of conceptual frameworks, but ultimately we will see what comes up in
the struggles. And the basic argument just is that they - the struggles
- will come up.
Q: One argument that you stress in your book is that labor unrest not only forces capital to move around the world and that where capital goes, conflict goes, but that labor unrest is also shaping and re-shaping the national and international structure of politics. Yesterday you spoke about war and the new forms of war. What do you think about this war on terrorism, is that a kind of reaction on labor unrest? And what do you think how does this war on terrorism affect the working class?
BS: There is no doubt
that prior to 9/11 [2001] there was a feeling that immigrant based
labor movements were gaining strength rather quickly. And one effect of
the post 9/11 repression was that immigrants’ political organizing and
labor militancy has become much more problematic, difficult,
particularly for undocumented workers. In the US, the Department of
Immigration was moved into the Department for Homeland Security. There
are many more opportunities for the state to use Homeland Security
directly or indirectly as a way of weakening labor struggles,
particularly to the extent that they involve immigrants. However, a
central argument in FoL is that repression has its limits as a form of
rule, and moreover, that historically war itself has had radicalizing
effects on labor and other social movements. Yesterday, I showed a
figure from chapter 4 of FoL that charts the annual mentions of labor
unrest in the World Labor Group database for the twentieth century. One
striking feature of that figure is the impact of the two world wars:
you get dips in labor unrest in the initial years of wars themselves.
There is repression, there is the “rally around the flag” effect. But
in both cases these dips were short term, and were followed by major
explosions of labor and other forms of social unrest. The argument in
the book is that for most of the 20th century wars on the one hand were
an occasion for repression, but on the other hand they had a labor
strengthening effect, increased the bargaining power of labor in face
of the reliance of states on workers in the battlefield and in the
factories. So the question becomes whether these new forms of war also
have a labor strengthening effect or whether states have effectively
emancipated themselves from their reliance on mass public and workers’
support to successfully fight wars.
I think that there is a
conscious state strategy to reduce its dependence on the mass of the
population and the working class through various strategies including
the automation of warfare, privatization of a wide array of military
activities, the elimination of compulsory military service - but there
is a whole discussion to be had on whether this is actually working.
Coming
back to the first part of the question: I think the whole
counterrevolution of the 1980s, the combined counterrevolutions in the
military and in the economic sphere was in good part a reaction against
working class power.
Q: In Germany some say that in the Middle East there is a kind of blockade for capital accumulation and the war is seen as an instrument to break through this blockade.
BS:
I’m more inclined to think that this is a geopolitical struggle over
oil and the control of oil and that there was a rather misguided
attempt by the US to basically get control over the oil supplies as a
way of having leverage vis-à-vis Europe and particularly vis-à-vis
China, but that it didn’t succeeded. But the war probably wouldn’t have
gone forward if it didn’t also mesh with the interests of those seeking
opportunities for profitable capital accumulation: the direct interests
of the oil companies in profits, and military-industrial complex
interests like weapons producers, private security companies, etc.
Footnotes:
[1]
Beverly J. Silver. 2003. “Forces of Labor. Workers’ Movements and
Globalization since 1870”. New York: Cambridge University Press
[2]
See: Piven, Francis Fox and Richard A. Cloward. 1977. »Poor Peoples
Movements. Why they succeed, how they fail.« New York: Vintage Books
[3]
Arrighi, Giovanni and Beverly Silver. 1984. »Labor Movements and
Capital Migration: The US and Western Europe in World-Historical
Perspective.« In C. Bergquist, ed., Labor in the Capitalist
World-Economy, pp. 183-216. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage
[4] In the
mid-1980s the World Labor Group started the data base on world-wide
labor unrest from 1870 to 1996, starting point for the research that
lead to the book “Forces of Labor”.
[5] ‘Yesterday’ refers to a presentation on FoL in Berlin, Germany, in early June 2005.
[6] See: E.P. Thompson. 1966. The Making of the English Working Class. New York. Vintage Books.
[prol-position news #3, 8/2005]

