By Saswat Pattanayak
Women are the face of the business
today. If that’s some claim the West is making to
advance capitalism ethos, folks better watch out. The
internal contradiction is here to stay: women stay as
the face, whereas the men rule as the rest (muscle
and the money).
One of the popular and reformatory feminist arguments
made against the Third World nations and the former
socialist block was that women are relegated to
non-existence in matters of decision-making, unlike
in the West where women have known to have posed for
Playboy and have decided whom to go out with on an
evening date.
The cultural contrasts have always been made whenever
any other justification has failed. For example, if
the religious fanaticism has matched (Islam Afghan,
Christian Europe, Hindu India), then the proverbial
burden on the white man has shifted towards cultural
differences and the normative contrasts in terms of
“women development”. Despite being religious, and at
times because of the difference in their religions,
the women have suffered so much (look at all stories
on Iranian women suffering), the mainstream argument
has run.
I though of looking at women in capitalism and the
myth of women progress, just to see if the world at
another hemisphere was indeed such fair to the fifty
percent of population in terms of gender. Although
there can be no comparison among the countries on
basis of economic parity (remember the world is
divided in two parts economically: self-proclaimed
wealth accumulator group of 8 versus destined to doom
group of rest 185), we need to see the attitudes of
wealthy societies just to measure the yardstick. US
as the citadel of capitalism tops the list, of
course.
Only in August last year an assistant warehouse
manager filed a class-action (yes classes do
exist!!!) suit against Costco Wholesale Corp (that
chain of warehouses from which Americans take pride
in purchasing bulk after becoming elite members).
Costco operates approximately 324 warehouses in the
United States employing over less than 1 in 6 women
as its senior store managers)! Yet all those faces at
the counters in Costco who make us celebrate
diversity at workplace are incidentally women,
because the corporation employs more than 50% women!
Women are 50% cheap labor and only 16% of them work
at managerial positions!
Just for information, if that’s the case with United
States, how does Costco employ women in the UK,
Canada, Mexico, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and
Puerto Rico, where it has businesses?
The worse news is
Costco claims proudly that it metes better treatment
than its rivals Wal-mart (yes that company whose
owners are four of the ten richest billionaires of
the planet), Sam’s or BJ’s. So where does the largest
retail store in the world, the Wal-Mart, stand?
Wal-Mart representing 1.6 million women, is facing
the largest class-action sexual discrimination suit
in history. The faces of Wal-Mart, its beautiful
women, some of whom were picked by Playboy to pose
nude recently, comprise more than 70% of its total
workforce! That’s the parameter of feminist success,
some claim, because what is overlooked is that
Wal-Mart hires them for hourly jobs, only less than a
third of them being in any store management position!
Wal-Mart has more than 3,500 stores in US alone,
having sales of more than $250 billion dollars
annually!
Sex discrimination cases are also filed against most
other giant companies, including Merrill Lynch and
Home Depot. Among few cases that have been settled
yet,
aircraft
manufacturer Boeing Co. paid off $72.5 million to
settle its case. Major investment bank Morgan
Stanley paid off $54 million to settle claims that it
underpaid and did not promote women.
Of course majority cases never get to see the trial
and the systematic patterns of discriminations are
never discussed in favor of individual cases.
The issue at hand is the problem. The continuing saga
of discrimination that goes on even to the year 2005.
If the cracks are evident with the biggest firms that
hold the torch of capitalism, then one can only
imagine the plights at the numerous sweatshops that
have been opened at the behest of free market
expansions. The myth has to be revisited, only if it
will mean that we will eventually end up condemning
the system that perpetuates the gaps and calls for
class-actions. The least folks can do is not to get
solely fascinated by the neon lights and pretend not
to live the heat of oppression that the workers
experience while building the lights and the
buildings, the roads, the locomotives. It’s not
enough to see the pretty women anchors on the
television channels in order to assume advancements,
its needed for us to see if they call the shots of
their visual representations and decision making
abilities as news editors.
Capitalism thrives on the show business. Massive
consumptions, huge productions, giant media houses,
lavish use of glamour, red carpets and the women,
profit indexes and billionaires lists, the supermalls
and blockbuster movies.
What it leaves out systematically is a narrative
about the countless workers who make these take
shape, and the systematic oppression they inflict on
the working class in terms of wages, treatments and
attitudes.
Tags: Saswat, Feminism, USA, Media, Capitalism