Choosing the path less familiarNick Land / text
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Choosing the path less familiar
It is usually accepted without much argument that economic growth is a good thing to have, but it is
always dislocating. If people are to become more productive, which is the only sustainable way they can
improve their living standards, then they have to change the way they work and, quite often, the kind of
work they do.
In a stagnant or near-stagnant society, the shape of careers remains
unchanged across working lives and even across generations. In a
fast-growing society, one's own career path becomes unpredictable,
while the employment opportunities available to one's children are
simply unimaginable. It can be stated as a reliable rule, therefore, that
the more dynamic a society becomes, the greater the uncertainty
clouding its future and the higher the potential for anxiety about the
paths life might take.
China's growth rate since the beginning of its reform and opening up in
1979 has been historically unprecedented, so it is not surprising that for
many millions of people, life-patterns have been disrupted
unexpectedly and often shockingly. Predictable (and comparatively menial) labor in vast nurturing work
units has steadily given way to the wide - and wild - horizons of the market economy, where the
distribution of risks and rewards is unfamiliar and, to many, disconcerting.
Yet, on balance, the rewards clearly outweigh the risks, as China's rapidly rising living standards
demonstrate. Old jobs are disappearing, but those replacing them tend to be safer, more stimulating and
better compensated, offering employees greater freedom to select and shape careers, develop
capabilities, express creativity and deploy social skills. Social uncertainty can often be uncomfortable, and
in some unfortunate cases close to tragic, but in the final analysis it is an inextricable part of development
and for that reason far preferable to the alternative.
Dr Nick Land, a professor at Warwick University, has worked in China since 2000.
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