07 2004 Fuzzy Production Logics. Experience and Reflection in the Laboratory of InsecurityTranslated by Aileen Derieg Since the 1970s a topos relating to the economic and political situation of Italy has enjoyed particular popularity: this has to do with a laboratory, a field of experimentation for the most different forces, interests and currents. The particular diversity of protest forms and differentiations of the non-parliamentary public sphere from the late 1960s to the turning point of 1977 seems to be especially susceptible to sparking romantic notions with respect to the strength of a "counter-power", a constitutive movement that does not allow itself to be coopted by representative structures. However, in the shadow
of the antagonistic movement, so to speak, a series
of intellectuals soon began to dismantle the "molar"
discourses of mass laborers, of class struggles, of
the integration of the working class[1]
through the workers' statute that was developed in the
wake of the wild battles in autumn 1969, and of other
discourses about possible institutional or non-institutional
goals. On the basis of a strange link between exploring
and accompanying social groups and movements, the proponents
of the so-called "conricerca" soon found themselves
faced with a differentiated image of labor forms that
could not be reduced to identities of class struggle.
This work commenced as early as the 1960s, as Raniero
Panzieri and other authors in the "Quaderni Rossi"
analyzed union strategies, and a group affiliated with
Mario Tronti (to which Toni Negri also belonged) developed
the so-called "operaismo". The "Quaderni
Piacentini" (Bellocchio, Fortini), who took on
a reflection on the political-cultural field, also had
an important function in the transition to the social
movements of the 1970s and the new political subjects
(feminist movement, autonomy, "postoperaismo",
free media, youth movement, ...). The theses on "independent
work" that is not subsumed in the dialectic of
the class struggle, were formulated much later as it
became more and more evident in light of the increasing
precariousness of working situations that the exemplary
law for the protection of workers from 1970 was less
and less capable of reflecting the reality of working
people.[2]
The temptation of a "molar" response to the
progressive deregulation of the labor market is still
there. In 2003, one of the successor parties to the
Communist Party, the Rifondazione Comunista, called
for participation in a referendum demanding an extension
of the efficient protection against dismissal as provided
by the "Statuto del Lavoro"[3].
25% of the registered voters took part in the referendum.
To pass the measure, twice that many people would have
had to go to the polls. The drop in productivity
that the Italian economy has seen in recent years is
due, among other things, to the fact that the demand
for labor power comes mostly from small and micro businesses,
which are not able to invest in expensive technologies
or research and development. This could be regarded
as an indication that the largest portion of the increase
in productivity, which has occurred through developments
primarily in the area of information technology, has
gone quite one-sidedly to private companies in recent
years. Outside the realm of regulated labor, which has
to bear the main burden of the socialization of risks
through the model of additional wage costs, a collective
experiment is consequently taking place, which does
not so much serve to "increase efficiency"
as to discipline the forces that are dependent on production.
All the forms and circumstances of work are found within
this "laboratory" that are meanwhile associated
with the term precariousness: limited term contracts,
no right to worker participation in the business, hardly
any pension plan or none at all, no unemployment insurance
and only rudimentary health insurance[8].
A precariously employed person therefore asks: What
can I want? What should I do? What is behind this is naturally more than an attempt to carry on the Situationist Internationale to its completion. In fact, the production process constantly makes use of social, collective, public achievements, goods and forms to create a value from them. The real question is ultimately the concept of production itself. It is not only a matter of contesting the denial of rights associated with integration in the production process, but also the lack of time periods for a public sphere grounded in experience. In this sense, the demand for a basic income remains in the balance[10], in between the possibility of creating free spaces outside the realm of compulsive employment and the harassment of the repressive institutions of the social state, of imagining an ecologically, socially and economically sustainable order of production, and the danger of newly becoming an instrument of the exclusion of groups located outside the normality defined by the social order on which production is founded. [1]The Communist Party impelled the primarily male workers movement through legal initiatives and the successive integration of the unions in the institutional structures of becoming representative. In addition to a moral discourse that assailed the corruption of the institutions (the slogan mani pulite from the 1974 election campaign became especially famous), the Italian Communist Party under its charismatic General Secretary Enrico Berlinguer attempted to achieve a stabilization of wages. The molar solution in terms of wage policies was called scala mobile and guaranteed the adjustment of nominal wages to the inflation rate. [2]Cf.: S. Bologna / A. Fumagalli: Il lavoro autonomo di seconda generazione. Scenari del posfordismo in Italia. Milano: Feltrinelli 1997. The topic of self-employment is largely ignored by the parliamentary left wing, which still focuses on the "normal" waged labor situation. [3]It was specifically a question of expanding Article 18 of the aforementioned law, which prohibits dismissal "without reasonable grounds" for businesses with more than 15 employees. A large portion of businesses in Italy are substantially smaller and can therefore not be prosecuted in this sense by the labor courts. [4]Inchiesta autoferrotranvieri: "Su la testa". In: Posse. Politica Filosofia Moltidudini. Nuovi animali politici. Giugno 2004.Roma: Manifestolibri, p. 166-171. [5]Amoroso, Pulejo Trasciani: "Dossier Alitalia." In: Posse. Politica Filosofia Moltidudini. Nuovi animali politici. Giugno 2004.Roma: Manifestolibri, p. 148-165. [6]Cristina Morini: "Di culla in computer." In: Posse. Politica Filosofia Moltidudini. Nuovi animali politici. Giugno 2004.Roma: Manifestolibri, p. 101-108. [7]See for example: M. Piore/C. Sabel: Das Ende der Massenproduktion. Frankfurt a. M.: Fischer 1985, C. Marazzi: Der Stammplatz der Socken, Zürich: Seismo 1996, and ibid.: Fetisch Geld, Zürich: Rotpunkt Verlag, 1999, or Lorenzo Cillario: L’economia degli spettri, Roma: Manifestolibri 1996. [8]It is estimated that in the region of Milan meanwhile 70% of all the young people entering professional life do not have an unlimited job situation. [9]John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money, first published: Macmillan Cambridge University Press, for Royal Economic Society in 1936 [10]Andrea Fumagalli: "Misure contro la precarietà esistenziale e distribuzione sociale del reddito". In: Posse. Politica Filosofia Moltidudini. Nuovi animali politici. Giugno 2004.Roma: Manifestolibri, p. 28-43. |
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