This week’s instalment of Labour & Pop
Culture explores the issue of discretionary effort and the wage-effort bargain.
Basically, every job has components that are voluntary—where workers go above
and beyond what is required because they are intrinsically motivated to do a
good job.
Discretionary effort is one part of the
wage-effort bargaining—how hard employees will work given prevailing wages and
working conditions. When employers change wages or working conditions, this
often violates the psychological contract employees have with their boss.
The clip above (from Christmas Vacation)
humorously illustrates how workers view such violations. A violation, in turn, can
trigger a re-evaluation of the wage-effort bargain and perhaps a reduction in
discretionary effort.
Which brings us to today. Athabasca
University is being pretty terrible to its faculty members at the bargaining
table. There isn’t much individual workers can do in terms of withdrawing their
labour without engaging in an illegal strike. But we can individually withdraw
voluntary services.
For me, that is the Labour & Pop
Culture component of this blog. These posts have always been something I did on
my lunch hours to add some levity to the more serious posts I make about labour
issue (which stream into my courses for pedagogical purposes).
I just can’t justify doing extra work for
an employer that talks about respect and then advances proposals like company doctors. So I've decided to start actually taking my lunch hour. I hope you’ve enjoyed this series as much as I have enjoyed offering
it.
-- Bob Barnetson
1 comment:
There is a long-standing tradition in the labour force (unionized or not) that entail work-to-rule. In many ways, such "unofficial" job action is more detrimental to the employer than an official strike.
Perhaps, this is what the faculty should consider.
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