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Making an ethical living can be difficult,
there’s no question about it, and the pressure to have a ‘career’
is immense, both from a social perspective (it is seen as one of the
chief means to measure people’s worth) and economically. As student
debt rises and advertising takes over the world, an instant career seems
necessary in order to get out of debt and live comfortably. Many people
plan to take an unethical job for a couple of years to get some money
together and enable them to do what they really want to do after that.
Yet others decide that the best method is to try to reform company behaviour
from within. But is this the best way forward? Perhaps not…
The corporate hierarchy - is this really what you
want?
Improving Corporations?
Many people are currently trying to improve corporations from
within, but in order to decide whether this route is for you, it seems
wise to ask whether it is actually possible, and if it is, whether it’s
the best use of your energy. Some questions which might be useful for
approaching this question include: What is meant by improving corporations?
What does an improved corporation look like? Have you ever seen one?
What steps must it follow to be improved in your eyes? What actions
can you take to ensure that this happens in the way you intend? Does
this involve working from the inside or the outside? At what point will
you be satisfied that your work is done? Is the amount of trouble that
you cause in the company going to outweigh all the valuable work you
do for it?
Corporations have been stopped from carrying out
harmful projects by consumer, activist and shareholder action, but we
have found no examples of projects being stopped by young recruits,
and if this is the kind of change you seek, then you should examine
whether taking a job with the company is the best way to tackle the
problem.
Whatever you do should be consistent with your own
beliefs, and it is this point that is most difficult to follow through
completely. You have to ask yourself some questions about your economic/political
beliefs, and then make your choices accordingly.
Examples include:
- Do you believe that economic growth is inherently
unsustainable? If so, it doesn’t make much sense to work for
a for-profit company, especially a large one which relies on infinite
expansion to continue to provide increased shareholder returns.
- Do you believe that medium/large companies can
change? If not, why sell your labour to them in vain? If yes, does
the change come spontaneously from within or only as a result of pressure
from outside?
- Are there such things as bad corporations/good
corporations? If you see the concentration of wealth as inherently
detrimental to people and the environment then there is no point in
just avoiding the most notorious companies, particularly bearing in
mind that companies do not work in isolated competition but rather
in concert with one another. The logical conclusion is to avoid large
companies altogether, as well as smaller companies which support them.
- Do you prefer money to be kept in local economies?
If so, working for any kind of chain is out of the question, and even
more so if it’s a Public Limited Company accumulating money
for shareholders.
- Do you prefer competition or co-operation as an
organising principle?
- Do you feel that governments are having trouble
controlling Transnational Corporations (TNCs)? If so, do you think
that you, as a junior member of staff, will manage it?
Think You’re The First?
If you’ve pondered the above and decided that capitalism
is harmless, and just needs a little tweaking, then you may have come
to the conclusion that you could indeed work from within to effect the
changes you wish to see. In theory this could be possible, but whatever
happened to all the other people who thought the same thing? I have
come across a couple of them recently. One of them now works for BP
and was recently (unsuccessfully) defending BP’s Baku-Ceyhan oil
and gas pipeline project at a public meeting - working from within
changed the employee not the company - oops! Another, a friend of mine,
began to work for a textiles company. Concerned (rightly), that the
company might be exploiting low-paid sweatshop labour overseas, she
asked a manager what the company’s policy on such issues was.
Faced with the answer that “What’s good enough for Marks
and Spencers’ is good enough for me”, she didn’t know
what to do next - so she did nothing. It’s easy to say that she
should have carried on pushing, but realistically what could she have
done which would have been really effective? How much power did she
have within the company? None. They could fire her almost at will.
Change within companies, as far as it happens, comes
from consumer, shareholder, and occasionally government pressure, rather
than from young recruits, and as one makes one’s way up the corporate
ladder, it’s too easy to get used to a job, and to become accustomed
to the level of income it provides. It’s also hard to be in a
business environment every day without taking on the language and mindset
which comes with it. Slowly but surely you become absorbed. You begin
to see the business justification for everything, your will for change
is sapped, and you become just another cog in the machine. In the worst
case scenario you become a very successful cog, and end up facing those
who campaign against your company, defending your company’s destruction
and greed, and patronising them with tales about how ‘I was an
activist when I was your age…’
What Are You Missing?
A particularly compelling reason not to work from within is
that you may well have a dull life. You will be expected to give your
devotion to the company, work long hours, have short holidays, and mix
with two-dimensional people. Just as important as the fact that overall,
you will most likely help rather than hinder the company in plundering
wealth and natural resources, is the fact that you only have a finite
amount of energy and will therefore miss out on doing something worthwhile
and fun.
Whatever promises you make to yourself that you will
support all those organisations you could never afford to support before,
the chances are that either you won’t, or that the social and
environmental costs of the work you do will outweigh any benefits derived
from supporting good causes. Besides, giving someone else money to do
things is a disempowering substitute for doing it yourself.
So What should I do?
Pressure for change comes in two main forms: negative pressure,
to stop harmful things from being perpetrated, and positive steps to
create alternatives. Negative pressure does not generally come from
within companies, it comes from outside. Similarly, alternatives must
be real alternatives, not just sticking-plaster measures regarding single
issues. Some alternatives are out there already; some will have to be
made. If you’re the kind of person who has had enough initiative
to inform yourself about the state of the world, then you are probably
also the kind of person who could manage to set up an entirely new project
with a bit of help. A few suggestions for personally sustainable lifestyles
avoiding TNCs are:
- Not-for-profit/Co-operative companies -
anything from food production to law firms; from campaigning organisations
to bike workshops; from low-impact construction firms to public transport
companies (Please somebody form a not-for-profit company to bid for
running the trains!).
- Self-employment - carrying out ecological versions
of professions such as carpentry, electrical work, plumbing, brewing
or printing.
- Community facility provision - such as recycling
and composting.
- Public sector work - such as health, social
care and education work.
- NGOs - although watch out - working for
some is little better than working for TNCs.
- Alternative healthcare - although some areas
are becoming saturated.
- Community living - carrying out activities such
as food production, sustainable forestry and small-scale tourism.
These lifestyles should all be sustainable in the
long term. If you haven’t got family commitments or debts which
you intend to pay off, then there’s no reason why you shouldn’t
be able to live on even less, doing volunteering, and lingering a while
between jobs. Different people have different needs, but it’s
hard to see that anyone needs to work from within: Have a little confidence
and imagination, and you can do more than you ever thought possible. |