Care and Capitalism. Kathleen Lynch

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Care and Capitalism - Kathleen Lynch


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of attending to the ongoing corporeal and emotional needs of dependent others. As men do not tend to carry the family care-map around in their heads every day, this impacts on their decision-making. Their underlying paradigmatic assumptions are framed by their own relatively, and sometimes entirely, care-free experiences. Nowhere was this more evident than during the Covid-19 pandemic when male-dominated governments closed crèches and primary schools in many countries with no plan for childcare, forgetting that someone had to care for children if people (especially health care staff) were to work. The net effect of this was a drop in employment rates for women in seventeen of the twenty-four Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries that reported a drop in employment due to the pandemic; care-work commitments contributed greatly to women withdrawing from the labour market during the pandemic of 2020–21.12

      While power may not now be entirely in male hands in the twenty-first century in all countries, or in all organizations, men exercise a controlling interest in all the major organizational centres of power. Men have claimed organizational power for themselves at senior levels, be it in business, culture, sport, the arts or the media (Kanter 1977; Collinson and Hearn 1996). Even when some women are present at senior levels, men, being in the majority, exercise the power of veto in most political, cultural and economic institutions.

      Even a cursory glance at the leaders of the G20 or the EU 27 highlights the hegemony of White male political power. Outside of politics, men are twice as likely to be managers as women within the European Union: only 6.3 per cent of CEO positions in major publicly listed companies were held by women in 2019 (European Commission 2019: 5). Women’s lower status is reflected in their earnings: around 25 per cent of the top one per cent of wage earners in the EU are women, though in some countries it is lower, with just 17 per cent of the top one percent of earners being women in the UK (European Commission 2019: 20). Men’s dominance of senior posts and their higher earnings are likely to continue, especially with the rise of globalized corporations where geographical mobility and 24/7 availability are expected (Vahter and Masso 2019). A long-hours’ work culture is not conducive to good caring, simply because it takes time from care.

      Kate Millett’s assertion some fifty years ago regarding the persistence of men’s patriarchal power remains largely true organizationally today:

      the military, industry, technology, universities, science, political offices, finances – in short, every avenue of power within the society, including the coercive force of the police, is [almost]13 entirely in male hands. … What lingers of supernatural deity, the Deity, ‘His’ ministry, together with ethics and values, the philosophy and art of our culture – its very civilization – as T.S. Eliot once observed, is of male manufacture. (Millett 1971: 25)

      While there are developments in Europe promoting a caring masculinity model to replace the hegemonic ideal of male dominance, especially in the academic field (Ruby and Scholz 2018), how and when that will translate into familial, organizational and state politics remains to be seen. Whatever the outcome, unless caring and hegemonic concepts of masculinity are better aligned, it is hard to see how a caring world order can be part of a new political imaginary.

      To date, the overlap between the constituencies of capitalist and patriarchal interests, not just in maintaining the hegemony of men in heterosexual families, but in the developing of hegemonic constructs of competitive, controlling masculinity in employment and within the machinery of the state, means that capitalism and patriarchy are inextricably linked. And the same can be said of the relationship of capitalism and racism; the success of the capitalist project globally is not only deeply classed and gendered; it is also deeply racialized and tied to a long history of colonialism (Patel and Moore 2018).

      As noted in chapter 6, the Cartesian philosophical distinction between mind and body, between thinking things and extended things, had important implications for women and indigenous people. Within that paradigm, not all humans were defined as fully human thinking beings, and this included slaves, women and indigenous peoples; they became part of the non-human, so-called extended things, part of nature rather than society. Thus, Cartesian logic was built on and legitimated the exploitation and domination of nature, and of those things equated with nature, among them women (Patel and Moore 2018: 45–55).


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