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Aug 23 / admin

By contrast things such as holiday entitlement and health care benefits are

By contrast, things such as holiday entitlement and health care benefits are rigid. Most people get pretty much the same, certainly in the broad middle band of management. But if people were able to choose how long they worked and what benefits they received within wide limits (rather than today’s narrow ones) the job contract would change to something almost unrecognisable.For example, people could choose their level of job security At one extreme, people could choose a job for life That would be specified in their contract. Of course, no company can offer that on its own surety, nor would any employee accept it: you never know whether your employer is going to be taken over or indeed go under.But it would be possible to ensure, if not a job for life, certainly a guaranteed income until normal retirement age in the event of the employer having to downsize. The salary would be much lower, but people who said they wanted security above all would at least have a choice.At the other extreme, some people do not want a job but might be perfectly happy working as a day labourer, rather like the dock workers of a generation ago. The dockers were forced into that form of employment and no one would wish anything like that. But for many people, a loose association with a company – say with a guarantee of between one and four weeks’ work a month – might be preferable to a formal job.

And the pay on an hourly basis would be much higher.Now take this a stage further. One of the remarkable features of the internet is the ability to generate an online auction Companies are using this to crunch down costs of supplies. Thus the car companies are inviting tenders for components from a wide range of suppliers, rather than sticking to known firms with which they have annual price negotiations. Why should they not apply the same technique to getting jobs done?The obvious area to start would be tasks that could be standardised and performed over the wires.

There would have to be screening of applicants to ensure quality control, then a company could auction tasks to anyone on the list who wanted to bid for them. A market would emerge with different prices for different tasks at different times.You might say this is just outsourcing carried a stage further and, in a sense, it is. But from a worker’s point of view, this fluid relationship would give an abundance of choice to exploit his or her skills. It would, for many people, make self-employment more attractive vis-à-vis having a job, but it would also blur the boundary between the employed and the self-employed.This blurring of boundaries is more fitted to a world where demographic pressures will ensure a large proportion of the work-force will inevitably be either part-time or semi-retired.So the cafeteria style of benefits would become a cafeteria style of work. People would select the bits of work they wanted to do at the price the companies were prepared to offer, stick them on their tray and collect the payment from the company at the till.Some people, probably most of the workforce, would remain, in the author Charles Handy’s phrase, core workers rather than portfolio ones They would negotiate their benefits rather than their work. But as the capacity of the new technologies bounds up and our own ability to figure out better ways of using it also climbs, expect more and more people to choose freedom rather than security and bid for work rather than choose contractual employment.Freedom or a new form of slavery? Might the employed become non-wage slaves instead of wage slaves? It might appear to be freedom only for the winners, the people with the skills in demand; and it would only be freedom in a world of strong demand for labour in general. But surely more choice must be better than less choice, in work, as in so many other aspects of life.
More from Hamish McRae.

Mills and Boon, famous for producing romantic fiction for women, is now going to produce books for men with tough heroes and a nice lot of action. Mills and Boon, famous for producing romantic fiction for women, is now going to produce books for men with tough heroes and a nice lot of action.
Well, all I can say is that this column is way ahead. It was five years ago that we started our own publishing imprint, Mills and Bang, which puts out novels designed to appeal to both men and women by combining the best of war and love in a new genre called military romance. So don’t bother with the monosexual productions of Mills and Boon when you can get offerings from Mills and Bang’s autumn list to satisfy both men and women…With A Bang by Lavinia Grenade Colonel Ivor Grady knows more about bomb disposal than any man alive, though not more than his fiery star pupil Sergeant Sheila Stayforth, the headstrong lass who swore she would never talk to Grady again after not getting 100 per cent in her final exam. But when news comes through that there is an unexploded terrorist bomb in the House of Commons, it is Grady they send for. And when Grady finds himself baffled by the device someone has set ticking in the Labour members’ loo, it is Sheila he sends for.