Comprehension and Discussion Questions. 1. Do you really believe that the collapse of the Soviet Union brought a triumph to the West?



1. Do you really believe that the collapse of the Soviet Union brought a triumph to the West?

2. Can you prove that the market economy and democracy can be mutually reinforcing?

3. Do you really believe that under democracy people can choose where to live, what to buy and sell, and how to work and accumulate wealth?

4. What are the prerequisites for a robust market economy to be developed in Ukraine?

5. How do you estimate the development of the market economy and democracy in Ukraine? Are they both riddled with weakness and are increasingly likely to break down?

6. What might be the future of Western civilization?

7. Why can a developed international community true democracy jeopardize the interest of the West?

8. The auther of the article considers that applying the principles of the market economy both within and among nations is problematic and undesirable. Why then Ukraine is seeking the application of such principles within our country? Try and give your point of view.  

 

Text IV.  THE DEATH OF THE JOB

    Every day brings another story of “job losses”. We are told the recession is over, but the proportion of the workforce that is “jobless” has not fallen as it has after previous recessions. The government is trying to “create jobs” by easing taxes and regulations, but says it should intervene more. We hear that the only way to protect jobs is to increase productivity, yet the result seems to be to make the jobs redundant.

    When we were growing up, we used to read that by the year 2000 everyone would have to work only 30 hours a week and that the rest would be leisure time. But as we approach the year 2000, it seems more likely that half of us will work 60 hours a week and the rest of us will be unemployed. What is going wrong?

    The reality is that what is disappearing today is not just a certain number of jobs, of jobs in certain industries or in one country – or even jobs in the developed world as a whole. What is disappearing is the very thing itself: the job.

    The job a social artifact, though it is so deeply embedded in our consciousness that most of us have forgotten its artificiality, or the fact most societies since the beginning of time have done fine without jobs. In the pre-industrial past, people worked very hard, but they did not have jobs to frame and contain their activities. Then jobs became not only common but important: they were nothing less than the only widely-available path to security and success. Now they are disappearing. ….

    So what do people do without jobs? Some possibilities are obvious. You can start a business on your own; you can become an artist; you can become a consultant; you can do freelance work, or part-time work, or piecework in your own home. Under the pressure of dejobbing in organizations, more people than ever before are doing all of these things. But there is another answer. You can do what more and more people are doing: working within organizations, but under arrangements too fluid and idiosyncratic to be called jobs.

    “You won’t last at Microsoft if your job is just a job”. That is how Teresa Stowell, a software design engineer, describes what it is like to work at the Seattle software powerhouse. To begin with people work any time and all the time, with no one keeping track of their hours, but with everyone watching their output. They are accountable not to conventional managers but to the project teams of which they are a part. …

    When a project ends, Microsoft employees move on to a new one, taking with them the reputation they earned on the last project. There are no standard career routes. “If people want to change functions or they want to get different experiences, that’s not frowned on at all. … Employees drive their own development, and we need to design all of our management and our training programmes to support, augment and facilitate that development.” …

    Just as workers will need to be ready to shift from project to project within the same organization, they should expect that much more frequently than in the past they will have to move from one organization to another. Long-term employment is, for most workers, a thing of the past. The organization will try to minimize these shifts, recognizing that they are difficult and disruptive to the effectiveness of both the organization and the worker. But both parties will have to make their long-term plans with the likelihood of such shift in mind. … Unless we begin soon to re-educate our workforce in these new expectations and the economic realities that have shaped them, we are in for decades of economic chaos that will damage our organizations and devastate several generations of workers.

Vocabulary notes


leisure time –свободное время, досуг

to disappear –исчезать

to embed, embedded –внедрять, внушать

consciousness –сознание

artificiality –искусственность

widely-available –широко доступный

dejobbing –лишение работы

arrangement –договорённость

fluid –неустойчивый

idiosyncratic –болезненно воспринимающий

a software design engineer –инженер-программист

powerhouse –сильная группа

to earn –зарабатывать

to augment –увеличивать, прибавлять

to frown on –относится с неодобрением

to devastate, devastation –разрушать, опустошать

redundant –избыточный, лишний

disruptive –разрушительный


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