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Thursday 18 August 2011

JOBOCRACY PART I - Theories And Applications

“I do not believe we can repair the basic fabric of society until people who are willing to work have work. Work organizes life. It gives structure and discipline to life.”      -BILL CLINTON


Theories and Applications
The subject of Jobocracy will sound strange or alien to anyone who is an adept follower of world systems. Jobocracy will further awe many readers because the word is not entered into the English dictionary yet. It had no meaning hitherto and so could not be an adjective, synonym, antonym, verb, adjective or any figure of speech. Jobocracy could not be immediately derived from the original word job, whose origin, according to the online Etymology Dictionary, derives from the 1550s, in phrase jobbe of worke "piece of work" (contrasted with continuous labor), perhaps a variant of gobbe "mass, lump" (c.1400;). Sense of "work done for pay" first recorded as job in the 1650s. Slang meaning "specimen, thing, person" is from 1927. The verb is attested from 1660s. On the job "hard at work" is from 1882. Job lot is from obsolete sense of "cartload, lump," which might also ultimately be from gob. Jobber – "one who does odd jobs," 1706, agent noun from job. The new Webster English Dictionary of the English Origin defines job. n. as a specific piece of work, esp. done for pay; an occupation as a steady source of livelihood. You’d get other words like jobbed, jobber, jobbery, etc. in the same dictionary. But today, on this very day, all that will change. Jobocracy has come to stay with us, with meaning and definition for all of us that will embrace it. Jobocracy is not governance or any system of government. Jobocracy is a way of life.
Before I give this word the definition and meaning deserving of it, let me go down history for a better picture and understanding of this word that will soon become a culture. All through the ages, men have proposed systems that changed their societies politically and economically. All through the ages, men have practiced systems that had jobocracy as an ingredient to their successes. Utopianism, right from Plato’s discourse on the subject of Utopia around 380 BC to  the period of Plutarch, the Greek historian and biographer of the 1st century who dealt with the blissful and mythic past of the humanity down to Sir Thomas More’s 1516 book, Utopia,  describing a fictional Island in the Atlantic Ocean, has always been touted as a possible political or social-economic ingredient to man’s ultimate comfort, even though in a fictitious state.  In the Chinese culture, the Utopia dream had been extensively discussed by men like Yao Yuanming, in 421 about a chance discovery of an ethereal Utopia where the people lead an ideal existence in harmony with nature, unaware of the outside world for centuries. Then came Egalitarianism  as a trend of thought that favors equality of some sort among people: people should get the same, or be treated the same, or be treated as equals in some respect such as race, religion, ethnicity, sex, political affiliation, economic status, social status, and/or cultural heritage.
While most of these systems proposed since the beginning of time and at different era have never been without criticisms, it is also on record that whatever system is practiced is not without errors. For instance,  a study published in 2009 took into account data sets from major world economies and correlated them with inequality indices. The study found that the absolute wealth within a country had little effect on the citizens' well-being or social cohesion and that income inequality correlated strongly with social problems such as homicide, infant mortality, obesity, teenage pregnancies, emotional depression, prison population and unemployment. For example, countries such as Japan, Finland and Norway scored highly in social well-being and income equality, while countries such as the United States and United Kingdom scored low in both. Why is this the case that amidst the wealth of nations, citizens suffer in various forms?
Consider a possible answer from an excerpt from H.D. Henderson’s (M.A.; Fellow of Clare College, Cambridge; Lecturer in Economics; Secretary to the Cotton Control Board from 1917-1919) Essay on Liberalism, titled UNEMPLOYMENT, “It would, indeed, be a miracle, if it were not for the fact that those old economic laws, whose impersonal forces of supply and demand, whose existence some people nowadays are inclined to dispute, or to regard as being in extremely bad taste, really do work in a manner after all. They are our co-ordinators, the only ones we have; and they do their work with much friction and waste, only by correcting a maladjustment after it has taken place, by slow and often cruel devices, of which one of the most cruel is, precisely, unemployment and all the misery it entails.”

Men have always dreamt of such a state where comfort can be accorded the citizenry but the travail of our time have never allowed for that. H. G. Wells said this in his book, A Modern Utopia “Certain liberties, however, following the best Utopian precedents, we may take with existing fact. We assume that the tone of public thought may be entirely different from what it is in the present world. We permit ourselves a free hand with the mental conflict of life, within the possibilities of the human mind as we know it. We permit ourselves also a free hand with all the apparatus of existence that man has, so to speak, made for himself, with houses, roads, clothing, canals, machinery, with laws, boundaries, conventions, and traditions, with schools, with literature and religious organisation, with creeds and customs, with everything, in fact, that it lies within man's power to alter. That, indeed, is the cardinal assumption of all Utopian speculations old and new; the Republic and Laws of Plato, and More's Utopia, Howells' implicit Altruria, and Bellamy's future Boston, Comte's great Western Republic, Hertzka's Freeland, Cabet's Icaria, and Campanella's City of the Sun, are built, just as we shall build, upon that, upon the hypothesis of the complete emancipation of a community of men from tradition, from habits, from legal bonds, and that subtler servitude possessions entail. And much of the essential value of all such speculations lies in this assumption of emancipation, lies in that regard towards human freedom, in the undying interest of the human power of self-escape, the power to resist the causation of the past, and to evade, initiate, endeavour, and overcome.”
It is no wonder therefore that in a bid to find the solutions to economic problems, individuals have come together to form cooperative societies which currently also embraces institutions to the extent that the first cooperative principles were established by the Rochdale Pioneers in England in 1844 and observed consistently by successful societies since that time till date. At the back of the minds of members is a society that would create equality and allow members to live in a perceived Utopian-styled setting amongst themselves but with just slight variations from the perceived Utopian society as propounded by Plato.
Co-ops have flourished against the uneven and conflicting economic policy prescriptions from policy makers, an inconsistency that has tenaciously and dangerously eroded social and economic structures to the extent that Africa has become the experimental ground for world economic powers to profligate their future economic ideas and practices. Individuals in rural communities can achieve economic and social objectives as a group that they could not achieve as sole producers, workers or consumers (C. D. meret and N. Walzer, 2004). At the beginning of the twenty-first century, co-ops still have an enormous impact on the North American and Global economy, even though the contributions that co-ops make have changed in quantitative and qualitative ways over the past two centuries. Proponents of the cooperative enterprise approach justify its continuing importance by pointing to the significant and community development it has played over the last two centuries (Cheney 1999; Fitch 1996;Wilkinson and Quarter 1996). These roles can be readily seen by looking at how the co-op as a formal business entity emerged in the nineteenth century industrial revolution (Melnyk 1985). Today, co-ops have emerged stronger than ever providing millions of jobs for the world’s population, protecting the common interests of members while doing billions of Dollars businesses. The most interesting aspect of this concept is that people (the private sector) are coming together to form these co-ops, to cater for their needs as a people. At no time did Government at any level impose the memberships into co-ops on citizens, it is usually a voluntary gesture on the part of the individual (even the Government worker) that believes in the ideals of the co-op to meet his/her personal and economic needs.
In reality we have always practiced jobocracy through such co-ops and other like institutions that engage their members for the common good irrespective of Government economic and political policies . Today modern jobocracy is here and to be become a jobocrat, one must realize that the long touted principles and theories of Self-Help and Mutual Aid as core aspects of man’s social and economic evolution (Kropotkin 1902) must be imbibed and embraced at all levels of our development. All nations have been made what they are by the thinking and the working of many generations of men.  Patient and persevering labourers in all ranks and conditions of life, cultivators of the soil and explorers of the mine, inventors and discoverers, manufacturers, mechanics and artisans, poets, philosophers, and politicians, all have contributed towards the grand result, one generation building upon another’s labours, and carrying them forward to still higher stages.  This constant succession of noble workers—the artisans of civilisation—has served to create order out of chaos in industry, science, and art; and the living race has thus, in the course of nature, become the inheritor of the rich estate provided by the skill and industry of our forefathers, which is placed in our hands to cultivate, and to hand down, not only unimpaired but improved, to our successors. (Smiles 1859). This is been eroded in several cultures and societies by the short-cut approach to wealth in many societies, absence of skill training in schools, bad governance, loss of societal tenets and values,  over-dependence on Government for jobs, wrong economic policies and massive unemployment especially amongst the youths and so many other factors too numerous to mention.
Jobocracy is the principle of adopting self-help, mutual aid and co-operative ideologies that have been proven to work over time to create a culture and a lifestyle that can bring some sanity into the system while allowing for the progress of the nations. Jobocracy is that simple art of bringing together all the unemployed, or intending entrepreneurs and Intrapreneurs and even those that are desirous of new jobs  together to create the jobs they each desire, not demeaning jobs, but jobs that each will be proud of and in accordance to their skills. A Jobocrat works with the unemployed in a semi-co-operative styled arrangement and the jobber is further encouraged to generate ideas for the start-up of his/her own business to further the cause. The beauty of been a Jobocrat is that unlike in capitalism, you are building the competition who would not actually be in competition with you per say, because you are working for the common good and are like branches from the same tree. In Jobocracy, the ownership is by both the founding  or master Jobocrat who takes majority of the stock or profit and by the other workers who take a lower percentage of the enterprise. Unlike in an ideal Utopian society, the worker in a Jobocracy is remunerated in accordance with his performance but he is assured of the percentage of ownership due him from the pioneer or master Jobocrat. So if anyone out there is practicing this style of business, he is simply a Jobocrat. We have had minor Jobocracies in the past when companies give stock options to their personnel. Can we take a look at all the organizations and co-ops that have bestowed the feeling of ownership on personnel? Record shows that average performance is better than in  Insitutions where only wage is paid out to the personnel with no sense of belonging. Jobocracy should not be mistaken for or compared with stock options, it is completely different because the Jobocrat from onset encourages the worker to start his/her own enterprise and funds are made available for such startup and workers drawn from a pool of unemployed and encouraged to do same so that more people can be employed.
Jobocracy. n. (1) is defined as creating jobs by the unemployed people, for the people and managed by the people. Everyone is a stakeholder and everyone is a potential Jobocrat. n., a person that practices Jobocracy. (2) It is the free and equal right of every person to join a work platform irrespective of educational attainment, literacy or skill level where talents are discovered, encouraged and promoted in every form. Everyone is allowed membership or participation into any Jobocracy movement. EMPLOYER as initiated by UNINET Africa, is one of her formidable carriers of change aimed at creating massive employment in the African continent by developing this concept and movement of Jobocracy and is setting up businesses for the unemployed and encouraging the unemployed drafted into these businesses to work hard enough to get enough of their equity in these businesses to either start new businesses on their own or come forth with business ideas to EMPLOYER to fund it for them under the simple principles of Jobocracy. Like everything beautiful, simplicity as seen in practices over the centuries,  is the way to go to generate massive employment opportunities and new businesses especially at the micro and micro finance level. I encourage all who wish to practice this all new system to generate more employment in their areas to contact me for us to work together through EMPLOYER to reduce poverty in the African continent and the world by generating massive employment opportunities. Become a jobocrat!











Thursday 11 August 2011

This event is so cool!

This event is so cool!

Saturday 6 August 2011

THE UNEMPLOYMENT PALAVER AND THE NEW HOPE FOR A NEW AFRICA

Many years ago, we never thought that simple ideas could change entire structures…we always wanted them to be complex before they could gain acceptability. Most African Governments that are facing the problem of unemployment have resorted to setting up one committee after another in search of answers to job creation with little or no success. For instance, in Nigeria, several job creation committees have been created at the Federal and State Government levels. The enormous number of the unemployed awaiting civil service absorption is equally frightening with more and more people applying to the Civil Service Commission on a daily basis. Yet, Government has failed to go back to the drawing board to find where they missed it. In other African countries, the experience is the same with recent uprisings and youth restiveness witnessed in several African countries. The issue is that this situation directly hampers Africa’s economic development and is indeed a headache for all African states. The singular approach of Governments in depending on Committees is wrong as there are so many concerned groups and individuals out there that have, for years, dived headlong into the problem to proffer practical solutions to the situation. These individuals and groups should be made to be stake-holders in this fight and encouraged as well as monitored by Government. The situation would have been different if Government had not failed the citizenry and so their committees are suspect even if they be made up of private sector individuals. The plan is to look out for these people who have track records…years of toiling and providing practical trainings and mentoring as well as provision of employment, not  as a business for their gain, but for poverty alleviation and a better society. Government should then investigate and assess their achievements with a view to encourage their concepts and fund their programs on a larger scale. The issue of unemployment needs a multi-pronged approach if we are to come even close to the ideals of the MDGs and the visions of most African states.

All through school, from Kindergarten, through Primary school to the University, all we’ve ever been thought is to finish school and get a job. I can’t remember been told to finish school and start a business or a trade….my parents wouldn’t have that….no parent would hear of it. Its not the practice. Its not our ways, we’re told. Government will provide you the jobs we’re further reassured. Now that Government has done the best they can, isn’t it time for us to take on the situation…take the bull by the horn. But then Government can play some other roles for us while we sort ourselves out creating our own jobs. Government can make facilities work better and concentrate on other things we’d need to get us properly employed. The pressure on Governments is unbearable and we need to help them. You and I need to make the efforts. The education system needs to be completely revamped to be more skill oriented end entrepreneurship driven. They can setup all their committees and act on all the recommendations of the committees but you and I that are unemployed actually know what we face and have ideas on how to solve the problems based on our daily experience and suffering on the streets in search of jobs. Imagine that after all the years of walking the streets without jobs, you finally see one that you should be qualified for and it says you must have the years of experience you’ve been on the streets searching for the same job. Imagine that after four years of joblessness, the Government makes you an Intern in an organization for two to three years and you don’t get paid or retained by the organization, just so that the issue of experience can be solved. This is the state of confusion and colossal nature of the problem at hand. The only way out of this is that on graduation, you’d have had almost a life-time of practical and skill oriented education that should make you match the demands of any employer.
I think enough has been said about Government. Let’s move forward now…but wait a minute. I’ve come to understand that University graduates are the main concerns of some of these job creation committees. That is where the mistake will be made. If the job is to be provided, it should cut across all cadres as it is a well-known fact that it is the idle, illiterate and semi-literate citizens that are usually more easily convinced into hooliganism, armed robbery, arson and other social vices to mention but a few. I really admire what The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), The Council of Trade Unions (NACTU), and The Federation of Unions of South Africa (FEDUSA) did to curb South Africa’s huge unemployment problem when they collectively founded the Job Creation Trust at the Presidential Job Summit of 1998, by asking workers to donate one day’s wage and companies’ one day’s profit. It was an attempt by organized labour to contribute and fight against unemployment in South Africa, which stood at the time at 37%, and other social ills such as rime, disease and poverty. The Trust was able to raise R89 million mainly from members. This is admirable and we would encourage other African states to learn from this effort and make it a reality in their countries. EMPLOYER, when established in at least 1/3 of all African countries would push for the Africa Job Trust or Africa Employment Trust that will use our trusted model to further create jobs in their millions for Africa. We would encourage any group or individuals who have the power to do this now before we get there to go ahead as we must move Africa forward at this crucial time and we would lend our support by giving all the blue print on the EMPLOYER project to such a trust.
The plight of the African continent is more fundamentally reflected in the state of its labour force in that the majority continues to be primarily underemployed with low or survival incomes. Indeed, the state of the labour market very much reflects the nature of the African economic crisis. A crisis caused by several factors that are natural, political and economic in nature. Africa’s high population of three quarters of a billion places a lot of pressure on Governments to maintain adequate earning opportunities for their citizens if their per capita income were to remain stable.
It is obvious that various unstable and volatile economic policies in Africa are not in tandem with the practices of globalization as Africa’s problems abound amidst globalization. We believe that the approach is for African states is to  encourage policies and programs that would increase micro, macro and small and medium Enterprises. This is as a result of the population structure of most African countries. Youth, which make up well over 45% of the population of Africa is either grossly underemployed or unemployed. I believe that regulation of labour as is seen in the formal sector should be moderate d or slightly diluted to allow for a wider reach especially amongst the youths.
EMPLOYER, created out of necessity, anger, empathy, hunger and trudging on the streets of Africa has come as an answer and like all UNINET programs, is a new hope for an envisaged new Africa – that Africa that will know no hunger, whose youths shall be made employers of labour and whose economy shall thrive like never before seen. Once more, the practice of jobocracy as shall be explained in the near furfure will be the main element of our success. Join us! 

Monday 1 August 2011

Africa's Unemployment problems and the Solution-The birth of a new System

Africa, the second-largest and second-most populous continent in the world after Asia, accounts for about 15% of the world population. Although Africa is very high in natural resources it remains to be the poorest and most underdeveloped continent in the world with poverty, malnutrition, illiteracy, poor health and unemployment issue.Its also on record that African countries top the chat of the world's list of countries by Unemployment rate with Zimbabwe having over 90% of her population unemployed. Amidst this is the proliferation of head hunters and employment agencies all over Africa that force job seekers to purchase forms and in some cases part with their 1st month remunerations. Most saddening is the fact that Government Policies in Africa are not encouraging Entrepreneurship and make it very difficult for bright Entrepreneurs to access loans from banks as they usually don't posses the requisite collateral for such loans. I have witnessed over 5 thousand candidates vying for just 2 positions in a job Interview...you can see many such examples in a bank interview session. Also disheartening is the rate of increase in the number of Universities, which is a good thing anyway, I'm all for more universities, but the problem really is that thousands of graduates are churned out every year into the already saturated labor market without making proper arrangements for their absorption into the society, hence the frustration amongst youths and restiveness. Employer, a UNINET Africa Initiative has designed systems that are aimed at solving some of these problems while creating jobs for the skilled and professional labor.

Since 2009, I have been networking with fellow Africans in over 30 African countries on this issue of unemployment and as EMPLOYER launches in Nigeria, the base and starting point, other Countries will follow quickly, forging transformative and life changing partnerships in our society. The concept is very simple indeed, more like a Jobocracy, we have the problem, we share it amongst ourselves, we create the jobs for ourselves...not jobs that are de-meaning but jobs that we all shall be proud of. This is a cause you will never regret being a part of and I encourage you to take up the challenge and donate your time to this program. Please feel free to like the EMPLOYER page on facebook for news on the cause as events unfold.

 I therefore call on all Africans at home and in diaspora, I call on friends of Africa who wish to put a smile on the faces of all unemployed to join me in this cause as we unfold very simple systems and methods of providing empowerment to all. I'd be glad to have you as my partner in the progress we make on this epoch making journey. Please stay connected to continue to get information and to contribute to the beginning of a new era, JOBOCRACY-The ideal state of employment, the creation of jobs by the people who need them, for themselves and with themselves; a complete state of allowing the state of joblessness be decided by individuals who are affected, enabling them to move into new directions, by themselves...Jobocracy has over the centuries been cloaked with several names and adopted by various societies as communal or collective efforts at providing for the people, it has equally seen the formation of thrift and co-operative societies...but today, Jobocracy has and will come to stay in its fully metamorphosed form and I encourage all partners towards this fight against unemployment and joblessness to walk with me as i gradually unfold systems and practices towards reducing or completely eliminating unemployment, especially in the African continent.