The outrage surrounding Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters describing workers as “lower-value human capital” was never really about one badly phrased sentence. It struck a nerve because it exposed, with unusual honesty, the underlying logic of modern capitalism where labour is valuable only insofar as it produces returns. When returns can be improved through automation, labour becomes expendable. Winters later apologised for his wording, but the apology did little to change the economic reality behind the statement.
What happened at Standard Chartered is not an anomaly. It is the
continuation of a centuries-old economic philosophy dating back to Adam Smith and the Industrial Revolution, where
labour was fundamentally treated as an input of production, no different from
land or machinery. The terminology has evolved over time. “Labour” became
“Human Resources,” and later “Human Capital,” a more sophisticated corporate
expression designed to sound empowering while preserving the same economic
relationship beneath it. The language modernised, but the structure did not.
Workers are still measured through productivity metrics, cost efficiency, and
shareholder value.
This is precisely what Karl Marx warned
about in Das Kapital. Marx never claimed capitalism would collapse
simply because it was morally wrong. His argument was structural. Capitalism,
left unchecked, contains internal contradictions that eventually destabilise
society itself. One of those contradictions is that the system relentlessly
seeks efficiency by reducing labour costs, yet labourers themselves are also
consumers. Remove purchasing power from enough people, and eventually the
market begins to cannibalise its own demand.
That contradiction feels increasingly visible today. The same corporations
pursuing automation and AI-driven efficiency also depend on a population
capable of consuming the goods and services being produced. Standard Chartered
plans to eliminate thousands of back-office jobs as part of its AI
transformation strategy. Similar trends are unfolding across technology,
logistics, media, and retail industries. The corporate narrative insists that
displaced workers will “reskill” and move into higher-value roles. But there is
little serious discussion about whether economies can realistically absorb
millions of displaced workers quickly enough, especially when AI itself is
increasingly capable of replacing not only repetitive labour, but cognitive and
administrative work once considered uniquely human.
The deeper issue is not merely unemployment. It is alienation. György Lukács described this through the concept
of reification, the process where human beings begin seeing one another as
objects, functions, or commodities rather than people. That idea feels
disturbingly contemporary. Workers today are evaluated through dashboards,
KPIs, performance algorithms, and optimisation software. Even social
interaction has been absorbed into economic logic. Networking replaces
friendship. Personal branding replaces identity. Human value becomes
transactional.
Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer extended this critique further by
arguing that capitalism commodified culture itself through mass media and
entertainment. Their “culture industry” thesis now feels prophetic in the age
of algorithmic feeds and platform capitalism. Digital life increasingly
fragments collective consciousness rather than strengthening it. Workers once
organised physically in factories, unions, and communities. Today, labour is
atomised. Gig workers rarely meet colleagues. Remote employees compete silently
across continents. Social media encourages outrage but weakens sustained
solidarity.
This fragmentation benefits capital immensely. The modern gig economy
exemplifies this shift. Companies maintain the economic benefits of labour
while offloading the social responsibilities historically associated with
employment, such as pensions, healthcare, stability, and long-term security.
Flexibility is celebrated publicly, while precarity expands quietly underneath
it. The worker becomes permanently temporary.
The irony is that technology itself is not the problem. Technological
advancement has historically improved human life when paired with social
safeguards and ethical direction. The problem emerges when technological
development is subordinated entirely to market logic. AI is evolving not
according to collective human need, but according to competitive pressure,
profit incentives, and shareholder expectations. Humans are increasingly
expected to adapt themselves around technology rather than technology adapting
around humanity.
That inversion matters. A civilisation obsessed with speed, convenience, and
optimisation eventually begins treating human beings the same way it treats
software systems, as variables to streamline. Consumer culture intensifies this
dynamic. Modern societies reward immediacy, efficiency, and individual
self-preservation. Questions of communal justice, labour dignity, or social
preservation become secondary because survival itself feels increasingly
individualised. People are exhausted, economically insecure, and
psychologically fragmented. Under such conditions, collective resistance
becomes difficult.
This is why thinkers like Frantz Fanon
remain relevant. Fanon argued that capitalism and domination rarely operate
alone, they intertwine with structures of race, empire, and hierarchy. Global
capitalism does not distribute sacrifice equally. Wealthier societies often
preserve comfort through invisible labour systems elsewhere, outsourced
manufacturing, migrant labour, digital exploitation, and economic dependency.
AI and automation may intensify these inequalities rather than reduce them.
Meanwhile, contemporary Marxist scholars such as David Harvey and Michael
Roberts continue to argue that capitalism survives by constantly
searching for new spaces of expansion, such as property markets, debt
economies, technological revolutions, and data extraction, while simultaneously
undermining its own foundations. Roberts, in particular, argues that automation
may actually worsen capitalism’s long-term instability because replacing labour
with technology reduces the very source of surplus value and profit generation
over time.
Whether one fully accepts Marxist economics or not, the social anxiety
surrounding AI reveals that many people instinctively sense something is deeply
unbalanced. The fear is not simply about losing jobs. It is about losing
meaning, dignity, and economic relevance in a system that increasingly defines
human worth through productivity alone.
And this is the contradiction modern capitalism cannot easily escape. If
enough people lose stable employment, purchasing power collapses. Without
purchasing power, demand weakens. Without demand, businesses themselves become
unsustainable. Endless efficiency eventually reaches a point where the system
begins consuming the social foundations that allow it to function in the first
place.
The warning signs are already visible, for instance, rising inequality,
declining social trust, loneliness, political polarisation, burnout, and
economic insecurity, despite unprecedented technological progress. Civilisation
is advancing rapidly, yet many people feel less secure, less connected, and
more disposable than before.
Technology should elevate humanity, not diminish it. Progress should not
merely mean faster systems or larger profits; it should mean greater human
flourishing. Otherwise, society risks arriving at a future where machines
become more efficient, corporations become more profitable, yet human beings
themselves become increasingly alienated from work, from one another, and
ultimately from their own sense of worth.
A profoundly fitting Thirukkural that
captures my thought,
“அருளொடும்
அன்பொடும்
வாராப்
பொருளாக்கம்
புல்லார் புரள விடல்.” — குறள் 755
“Discard and renounce the wealth that is acquired without compassion and
love.” kural 755
This couplet is remarkably relevant to my contentions on modern capitalism,
AI-driven disposability, and the reduction of human beings into “human
capital.” Thiruvalluvar is not condemning wealth itself but rather, he condemns
wealth accumulation divorced from அருள்
(compassion) and அன்பு
(human love). The Kural anticipates the moral contradiction of a system that
pursues efficiency while eroding dignity, solidarity, and compassion.
So, in the end when a system begins treating people as expendable long
enough, eventually people stop believing the system exists for them at all.
If civilisation continues to measure progress only through efficiency,
automation, and profit, it may eventually discover that it has engineered
prosperity while impoverishing the human spirit. Thiruvalluvar
warned eons ago that wealth without compassion and love is not true wealth at
all. In an age where humans are increasingly reduced to data, productivity, and
“human capital,” perhaps the real question is no longer whether technology is
advancing, but whether humanity itself still is.
Cheers.
ravivarmmankkanniappan@1957250520263°2'37.8'' N 101°34.837' E
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