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Title: Punching the Clock
Author: David Graeber
Date: June 2018
Language: en
Topics: bullshit jobs, anti-work
Source: Retrieved on 28th November 2021 from https://harpers.org/archive/2018/06/punching-the-clock/
Notes: Excerpt from Bullshit Jobs.

David Graeber

Punching the Clock

Everyone is familiar with the sorts of jobs whose purpose is difficult

to discern: HR consultants, PR researchers, communications coordinators,

financial strategists, logistics managers. The list is endless.

This is how Kurt, a subcontractor for the German military, describes his

job:

ā€œThe German military has a subcontractor that does its IT work. The IT

firm has a subcontractor that does its logistics. The logistics firm has

a subcontractor that does its personnel management. I work for that

company.

ā€œLetā€™s say a soldier moves to an office two rooms down the hall. Instead

of carrying his computer over, he fills out a form. The IT subcontractor

reads and approves it and forwards it to the logistics firm. The

logistics firm approves the move and requests personnel from us. I get

an email to travel to the barracks. The barracks are up to three hundred

miles away from my home, so I rent a car. I drive to the barracks, fill

out a form, unhook the computer, load it into a box, and seal the box. A

guy from the logistics firm carries the box to the new office. There, I

unseal the box, fill out another form, hook up the computer, get a few

signatures, drive back home, send a letter with the paperwork, and then

I get paid.ā€

In 2015, YouGov, a polling agency, asked Britons whether they believed

their job made a ā€œmeaningful contribution to the world.ā€ More than a

thirdā€”37 percentā€”believed it did not. (Only 50 percent said that it did;

13 percent were uncertain.) A more recent poll conducted in the

Netherlands found that 40 percent of Dutch workers felt their job had no

good reason to exist.

Our society values work. We expect a job to serve a purpose and to have

a larger meaning. For workers who have internalized this value system,

there is little that is more demoralizing than waking up five days a

week to perform a task that one believes is a waste of time.

Itā€™s not obvious, however, why having a pointless job makes people quite

so miserable. After all, a large portion of the workforce is being

paidā€”often very good moneyā€”to do nothing. They might consider themselves

fortunate. Instead, many feel worthless and depressed.

In 1901, the German psychologist Karl Groos discovered that infants

express extraordinary happiness when they first discover their ability

to cause predictable effects in the world. For example, they might

scribble with a pencil by randomly moving their arms and hands. When

they realize that they can achieve the same result by retracing the same

pattern, they respond with expressions of utter joy. Groos called this

ā€œthe pleasure at being the cause,ā€ and suggested that it was the basis

for play.

Before Groos, most Western political philosophers, economists, and

social scientists assumed that humans seek power out of either a desire

for conquest and domination or a practical need to guarantee physical

gratification and reproductive success. Groosā€™s insight had powerful

implications for our understanding of the formation of the self, and of

human motivation more generally. Children come to see that they exist as

distinct individuals who are separate from the world around them by

observing that they can cause something to happen, and happen again.

Crucially, the realization brings a delight, the pleasure at being the

cause, that is the very foundation of our being.

Experiments have shown that if a child is allowed to experience this

delight but then is suddenly denied it, he will become enraged, refuse

to engage, or even withdraw from the world entirely. The psychiatrist

and psychoanalyst Francis Broucek suspected that such traumatic

experiences can cause many mental health issues later in life.

Groosā€™s research led him to devise a theory of play as make-believe:

Adults invent games and diversions for the same reason that an infant

delights in his ability to move a pencil. We wish to exercise our powers

as an end in themselves. This, Groos suggested, is what freedom isā€”the

ability to make things up for the sake of being able to do so.

The make-believe aspect of the work is precisely what performers of

bullshit jobs find the most infuriating. Just about anyone in a

supervised wage-labor job finds it maddening to pretend to be busy.

Working is meant to serve a purposeā€”if make-believe play is an

expression of human freedom, then make-believe work imposed by others

represents a total lack of freedom. Itā€™s unsurprising, then, that the

first historical occurrence of the notion that some people ought to be

working at all times, or that work should be made up to fill their time

even in the absence of things that need doing, concerns workers who are

not free: prisoners and slaves.

Historically, human work patterns have taken the form of intense bursts

of energy followed by rest. Farming, for instance, is generally an

all-hands-on-deck mobilization around planting and harvest, with the

off-seasons occupied by minor projects. Large projects such as building

a house or preparing for a feast tend to take the same form. This is

typical of how human beings have always worked. There is no reason to

believe that acting otherwise would result in greater efficiency or

productivity. Often it has precisely the opposite effect.

One reason that work was historically irregular is because it was

largely unsupervised. This is true of medieval feudalism and of most

labor arrangements until relatively recent times, even if the

relationship between worker and boss was strikingly unequal. If those at

the bottom produced what was required of them, those at the top couldnā€™t

be bothered to know how the time was spent.

Most societies throughout history would never have imagined that a

personā€™s time could belong to his employer. But today it is considered

perfectly natural for free citizens of democratic countries to rent out

a third or more of their day. ā€œIā€™m not paying you to lounge around,ā€

reprimands the modern boss, with the outrage of a man who feels heā€™s

being robbed. How did we get here?

By the fourteenth century, the common understanding of what time was had

changed; it became a grid against which work was measured, rather than

the work itself being the measure. Clock towers funded by local merchant

guilds were erected throughout Europe. These same merchants placed human

skulls on their desks as memento mori, to remind themselves that they

should make quick use of their time. The proliferation of domestic

clocks and pocket watches that coincided with the advent of the

Industrial Revolution in the late eighteenth century allowed for a

similar attitude toward time to spread among the middle class. Time came

to be widely seen as a finite property to be budgeted and spent, much

like money. And these new time-telling devices allowed a workerā€™s time

to be chopped up into uniform units that could be bought and sold.

Factories started to require workers to punch the time clock upon

entering and leaving.

The change was moral as well as technological. One began to speak of

spending time rather than just passing it, and also of wasting time,

killing time, saving time, losing time, racing against time, and so

forth. Over the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, an

episodic style of working was increasingly treated as a social problem.

Methodist preachers exhorted ā€œthe husbandry of timeā€; time management

became the essence of morality. The poor were blamed for spending their

time recklessly, for being as irresponsible with their time as they were

with their money.

Workers protesting oppressive conditions, meanwhile, adopted the same

notions of time. Many of the first factories didnā€™t allow workers to

bring in their own timepieces, because the owner played fast and loose

with the factory clock. Labor activists negotiated higher hourly rates,

demanded fixed-hour contracts, overtime, time and a half, twelve- and

then eight-hour work shifts. The act of demanding ā€œfree time,ā€ though

understandable, reinforced the notion that a workerā€™s time really did

belong to the person who had bought it.

The idea that workers have a moral obligation to allow their working

time to be dictated has become so normalized that members of the public

feel indignant if they see, say, transit workers lounging on the job.

Thus busywork was invented: to ameliorate the supposed problem of

workers not having enough to do to fill an eight-hour day. Take the

experience of a woman named Wendy, who sent me a long history of

pointless jobs she had worked:

ā€œAs a receptionist for a small trade magazine, I was often given tasks

to perform while waiting for the phone to ring. Once, one of the

ad-sales people dumped thousands of paper clips on my desk and asked me

to sort them by color. She then used them interchangeably.

ā€œAnother example: my grandmother lived independently in an apartment in

New York City into her early nineties, but she did need some help. We

hired a very nice woman to live with her, help her do shopping and

laundry, and keep an eye out in case she fell or needed help. So, if all

went well, there was nothing for this woman to do. This drove my

grandmother crazy. ā€˜Sheā€™s just sitting there!ā€™ she would complain.

Ultimately, the woman quit.ā€

This sense of obligation is common across the world. Ramadan, for

example, is a young Egyptian engineer working for a public enterprise in

Cairo.

The company needed a team of engineers to come in every morning and

check whether the air conditioners were working, then hang around in

case something broke. Of course, management couldnā€™t admit that;

instead, the firm invented forms, drills, and box-ticking rituals

calculated to keep the team busy for eight hours a day. ā€œI discovered

immediately that I hadnā€™t been hired as an engineer at all but really as

some kind of technical bureaucrat,ā€ Ramadan explained. ā€œAll we do here

is paperwork, filling out checklists and forms.ā€ Fortunately, Ramadan

gradually figured out which ones nobody would notice if he ignored and

used the time to indulge a growing interest in film and literature.

Still, the process left him feeling hollow. ā€œGoing every workday to a

job that I considered pointless was psychologically exhausting and left

me depressed.ā€

The end result, however exasperating, doesnā€™t seem all that bad,

especially since Ramadan had figured out how to game the system. Why

couldnā€™t he see it, then, as stealing back time that heā€™d sold to the

corporation? Why did the pretense and lack of purpose grind him down?

A bullshit jobā€”where one is treated as if one were usefully employed and

forced to play along with the pretenseā€”is inherently demoralizing

because it is a game of make-believe not of oneā€™s own making. Of course

the soul cries out. It is an assault on the very foundations of self. A

human being unable to have a meaningful impact on the world ceases to

exist.