A Big Issue reader says Covid offered an opportunity for rethinking our economic model.
Covid questions
The even bigger question, for me at least, is why have we collectively gone straight back to business as usual so soon after the Covid pandemic? It’s almost like we’re doing the same things all over again but trying harder. It’s still all maximum profit for minimum costs or outlay, trying to get perpetual economic growth out of finite resources, and trying to make trickle-down work despite knowing that it always fails. People are off work sick more because increasingly they’re measured against productivity and output and expected to work harder and longer.
This is nuts. First and foremost, work is a social activity. Secondly, all human relationships are variable. There are no absolute human relationships. But it seems that all our economic models are absolute, rigid and inflexible. So if you keep pushing people to be productive and keep pushing, and pushing, and pushing, eventually some people will crack and start developing health issues.
We talk about people who are economically inactive and not working, and many are sick, but how many of these people are actually burnt out through years of being pushed to be productive and hard working? How many people in the benefits system, sick or not, are actually burnt out and unable to work at the same level of productivity as they were before?
Why is there such opposition to working from home? I thought that this was one of the benefits of the Covid lockdowns, people discovering that they could work from home. I know it doesn’t sit well with our domination culture and the widespread control freakery that goes on in many workplaces, but it does have significant environmental benefits.
u/ElvishMystical, Reddit