{"id":3914,"date":"1991-03-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1991-03-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-72-no-2-march-april-1991-whats-become-of-loyalty\/"},"modified":"2022-11-27T02:26:13","modified_gmt":"2022-11-27T02:26:13","slug":"vol-72-no-2-march-april-1991-whats-become-of-loyalty","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-72-no-2-march-april-1991-whats-become-of-loyalty\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 72 No. 2 &#8211; March\/April 1991 &#8211; What&#8217;s Become of Loyalty?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The loyalty of people to other                     people, to institutions and ideals, has always been crucial                     to the conduct of an orderly society. Is it dying? No, the                     desire to be loyal is just as strong as ever, but loyalty                     will never again be blind&#8230;<\/p>\n<p> The audience at the seminar was made up of managers and                     professionals in human resources. The speaker was a well-known                     industrial psychologist from the United States. The subject                     was the new breed of North American worker. The mood was sober,                     if not downright grim.<\/p>\n<p>The speaker reported: &#8220;It is more difficult [than in the                     past] for companies to motivate employees to identify with                     corporate goals because they have no feelings of attachment                     to the employer.&#8221; He went on to cite research findings which                     indicated that similar attitudes were prevalent among young                     people in their relationships outside of their work.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, he said, they tend to shy away from lasting attachments                     of any kind, regarding their most intimate ties as being subject                     to severance unilaterally and without notice. How, he asked,                     could people with so little sense of permanence be expected                     to dedicate themselves to a job they may easily leave?<\/p>\n<p>In discussing this phenomenon, the psychologist made liberal                     use of the jargon of his profession, referring to detachment,                     alienation, and disassociation. A less expert and more old-fashioned                     person might simply have said that these people lacked loyalty.<\/p>\n<p>But then, that same old-fashioned person might wonder whether                     anyone under the age of 35 had ever heard the word, let alone                     grasped its full meaning. Looking around our society, it often                     seems as though loyalty has become obsolete, surviving only                     as a quaint reminder of a more innocent age.<\/p>\n<p>Even the terms used to describe it have an anachronistic                     ring. The primary definition of &#8220;loyal&#8221; in the Oxford Concise                     Dictionary is &#8221; true, faithful, to duty, love, obligation                     &#8230;&#8221; It has been a long time since people have spoken of &#8220;being                     true&#8221; in the sense of standing steadfastly by an ideal or                     a leader. It has been equally long since &#8220;duty&#8221; has figured                     prominently in the civilian vocabulary of the western world.<\/p>\n<p>Webster&#8217;s New Collegiate Dictionary reaches even further                     into the past for its interpretation of what it means to be                     loyal. Its leading definition of loyalty is &#8220;unswerving in                     allegiance.&#8221; Derived from Middle French, allegiance originally                     meant the obligation of a vassal to his &#8220;liege lord&#8221; under                     the feudal system. In medieval times, that system was the                     dominant form of social organization for countless millions                     of people in Europe, India, China and Japan.<\/p>\n<p>Feudalism owed its very existence to loyalty. The higher                     nobles pledged their fealty to the top ruler, the lower nobles                     to their overlords, and so on down to level of the serf. In                     its purest form, feudal loyalty was an exchange of commitments.                     According to one historical account, when a fief or grant                     of an estate was formally conferred, &#8220;The vassal, kneeling                     before the overlord, put his hands in those of the lord and                     declared himself his man, and the overlord bound himself by                     kissing the vassal and raising him to his feet.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>What the overlord &#8220;bound himself&#8221; to do was protect and                     generally look after the underling. The underling, in turn,                     bound himself to pay rent in money or kind to the estate,                     and serve in the overlord&#8217;s cause in time of war. It was all                     based on the theory that loyalty is a reciprocal affair.<\/p>\n<p>No doubt the theory of feudalism all too commonly differed                     from the practice. The loyalty of vassal to lord could be                     secured under brutal duress. Yet the system could not have                     been without its sincere practitioners among the barons who                     held the power. Feudalism was widespread, and it lasted for                     many centuries. If it had proved a bad bargain for the mass                     of the people it covered, more major revolutions presumably                     would have occurred.<\/p>\n<h3>Not blind, but not good at seeing the                   other                   fellow&#8217;s point of view<\/h3>\n<p>In any case, the concept of political loyalty which evolved                     under feudalism did not disappear along with the system. Today,                     in countries around the world, people continue to swear allegiance                     in the age-old manner to the symbol of supreme authority,                     whether a monarch, a president, a constitution, or a flag.<\/p>\n<p>In the armed services and other uniformed organizations,                     allegiances are displayed in emblems and ceremonies of gothic                     provenance.<\/p>\n<p>To a practical person, all this may seem irrelevant and                     not to make much sense; but it does, because loyalties are                     crucial to the conduct of civilized society. They perpetuate                     the most important of all human relationships, among couples,                     relatives, colleagues and friends. They serve as the guarantors                     of civil order. In countries where oaths to constituted authority                     are not taken seriously, constant power struggles occur.<\/p>\n<p>Flags, uniforms and the like are the visible expressions                     of the pride people take in their associations. Human beings                     have always drawn a good part of their identities from the                     institutions to which they adhere: their country, religion,                     etc.<\/p>\n<p>Usually our institutional loyalties are to the representative                     agencies of others of &#8220;our kind&#8221; &#8211; our compatriots, co-religionists                     , people with a common ethnic background or compatible political                     opinions. The drawback to such common causes is that those                     who are <em> not <\/em> of our kind stand to be despised, dreaded or hated                     in the course of forming faithful relationships with our associates.                     Loyalty has often been described as being &#8220;blind;&#8221; if it is                     not, it certainly tends to be incapable of seeing the other                     fellow&#8217;s point of view.<\/p>\n<p>Nothing so seals the loyalty of one person to another as                     a common enemy. In time of war for a good cause or bad, loyalty                     becomes the stuff of valour. Unfortunately, it is also the                     stuff of the bigotry that so often causes wars in the first                     place. Short of actual hostilities, it is an ingredient in                     the poisonous racial and religious rivalries that wrack so                     much of the world.<\/p>\n<p>The belligerence associated with loyalty is in keeping with                     the theory that it has its roots in the family. In prehistoric                     times, every family group had to protect itself against hostile                     marauders, if they were not actually marauders themselves.<\/p>\n<p>In circumstances of mortal peril, it was imperative to be                     able to trust absolutely in the others in the group. So it                     was tacitly agreed that as head of the family, the father                     or grandfather must enforce that trust by punishment of those                     who were disloyal or who were deemed to be. The usual punishment                     for treason was death, which shows how seriously loyalty was                     taken. Next to that was banishment, which drew its deterrent                     effect from a natural horror of being ostracized as a traitor                     to one&#8217;s kind.<\/p>\n<p>When people transferred their familial ties to political,                     economic or spiritual authorities, the role of the patriarch                     as law-giver and enforcer was carried over into the broader                     society. Thus the king became the surrogate &#8220;father of his                     people,&#8221; the priest dispensed parental blessings, and the                     company proprietor saw himself as the head of one big happy                     family. Because these father figures were seen to be responsible                     for keeping the order that was necessary to the survival of                     the community, the common folk bowed to their will.<\/p>\n<p>The trouble with patriarchal authority is that not all fathers                     are good fathers. Fallible men are likely to extort obedience                     by force and betray their trust. An example of this was once                     found in the Scottish Highlands, where the people were intensely                     loyal to their clan chiefs. An English observer in the early                     18th century wrote: &#8221; The ordinary Highlanders esteem it the                     most high degree of virtue to love their chief and pay him                     blind obedience although it be in opposition to the government,                     the laws of the kingdom, or even the law of God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Originally, all the clan&#8217;s lands were held in common, but                     later they became the property of its head, whose particular                     family had risen to dominance out of the ranks of his relatives.                     An implicit understanding existed between him and the clansmen.                     As John Prebble explained it in his 1961 book <em> Culloden<\/em>                     , &#8220;If he had the right of life and death over his people,                     he was equally responsible for their welfare, and most chiefs                     honoured this obligation. As landlord , father-figure, judge                     and general-at-arms his power was great, but it was not always                     absolute, and on occasions he would debate major issues with                     the leading members of his family and clan.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>By the time of which Prebble writes &#8211; 1746, when the clans                     made their forlorn last stand against the English crown at                     Culloden &#8211; many of the chiefs had come to abuse their kinsmen&#8217;s                     fealty. No longer did they consult on policy. For their part,                     men were no longer necessarily willing to die for the chiefs                     in battle. Many who fell for the Jacobite cause at Culloden                     had been forced into service under the threat of having their                     houses burned.<\/p>\n<p>The final betrayal of Highland loyalty came gradually over                     the next century, as described in Prebble&#8217;s subsequent volume,                     <em> The Highland Clearances<\/em> . One after another, the chiefs                     rudely evicted their kinsmen from their ancestral lands and                     replaced with them with more profitable sheep.<\/p>\n<h3>The end of paternalism, but not of                   ideology<\/h3>\n<p>What makes the Highland Scots&#8217; story relevant today is that                     they never lost their famous capacity for loyalty. Though                     persecuted, impoverished and dispersed, they went on to form                     some of the greatest regiments in the British Army; their                     descendants also formed some of the finest fighting units                     in the Canadian Army. They transferred their loyalty from                     their clan chiefs to their regiments . In so doing, they gave                     their highest loyalty to each other as mutually dependent                     comrades in arms.<\/p>\n<p>If nothing else, their bitter experience shows that human                     beings have a need to be loyal. The eminent psychologist Erik                     Erikson believed that what he called &#8220;fidelity&#8221; is a necessary                     stage in psychological growth. &#8220;Fidelity,&#8221; explained Erikson,                     &#8220;is the ability to sustain loyalties freely pledged in spite                     of the inevitable contradictions and confusions of value systems.&#8221;                     It comes when the narcissism of adolescence has passed.<\/p>\n<p>Loyalty is connected with maturity because it requires the                     kind of unselfish sacrifice of personal autonomy that can                     only be made by a self-confident adult. A mature person sees                     no conflict and no threat in giving loyalty to someone else,                     providing it is earned. That proviso also applies to institutions.                     If people today seem apathetic towards governments and other                     organizations, perhaps it is because those bodies cannot demonstrate                     that anyone really owes them loyalty.<\/p>\n<p>In Eastern Europe, the strong loyalties to the former Communist                     establishment have been destroyed by abuse, suggesting that                     we may be witnessing what the sociologist Daniel Bell called,                     in a 1960 book, <em> The End of Ideology<\/em> . But Bell, too,                     believes that human beings have an irrepressible need for                     attachments, and hence loyalties.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;I did not say that all ideological thinking was finished,&#8221;                     he later wrote. &#8220;In fact, I argued that the exhaustion of                     the old ideologies inevitably led to a hunger for new ones.&#8221;                     This raises the point that even rebels have a desire to be                     loyal. They simply replace a loyalty to the old order with                     a loyalty to the new.<\/p>\n<p>Like every generation before them, people today want to                     cling to something. The difference now is that it must demonstrably                     be worth clinging to. The old blind loyalty which once impelled                     otherwise sane individuals to shout &#8220;my country right or wrong&#8221;                     is obviously dead in places where there are effective mass                     communications and high educational standards. Political parties                     lately have been learning this. No longer will citizens vote                     out of sheer staunch support for a party, as their forebears                     once did.<\/p>\n<p>Shrewd political tacticians are well aware that the least                     likely way to appeal to potential followers these days is                     to tell them to leave everything to you; you will take care                     of it all; you know better than they do. Paternalism is a                     spent force, permanently discredited by individuals in various                     positions of respect who have been exposed as betrayers of                     trust.<\/p>\n<p>A deep scepticism has overtaken the public mind which has                     serious implications not only for politicians, but for business                     people both as marketers and employers. In marketing circles,                     they now talk about the new breed of &#8220;tough customers&#8221; who                     will stick to a brand for only so long as it is clearly superior                     in its class.<\/p>\n<p>The readiness to jump among an ever-broadening array of                     choices is not confined to buying. Speaking in support of                     his contention that North American society has entered the                     &#8220;postmodern&#8221; era, futurist Jay Ogilvy recently commented:                     &#8220;Postmodern man and woman are all dressed up with everywhere                     to go. They have costumes for every occasion, but no truly                     compelling reason to prefer one occasion over another, one                     career over another, one life over another.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For management in North America, postmodernism means having                     to deal with workers whose commitment to an employer can never                     be taken for granted. This does not, however, mean that they                     have no emotional investment in their employment. According                     to attitudinal research, they feel angry and guilty when the                     organization they work for violates their personal values.                     They are no longer willing to let management unilaterally                     dictate policy on external issues such as ecology. If they                     feel strongly about their employer&#8217;s negative actions, they                     feel just as strongly when it does things which they perceive                     as positive. Thus a company that makes its people feel they                     are engaged in doing something socially worthwhile can be                     the beneficiary of a degree of motivation money can&#8217;t buy.<\/p>\n<p>But unquestioning loyalty to the firm is history, and nowhere                     more so than in corporations that have had to trim their payrolls                     in the interests of productivity or simple survival. The assumption                     behind old-fashioned dedication was that there was a more                     or less permanent pact between employees and employers. They                     would throw themselves body and soul into their jobs in return                     for (nearly) life -long employment. In the present atmosphere                     of intense competition and financial stringency, no North                     American company is in a position to make that sort of guarantee.<\/p>\n<p>According to Toronto lawyer Brian Grosman, &#8220;Traditional                     concepts of loyalty will not survive. Loyalty &#8211; like business                     itself &#8211; will change, adhering to leaders whose actions, not                     doublespeak, command respect and commitment.&#8221; The &#8220;doublespeak&#8221;                     he mentioned includes cosmetic language which misrepresents                     the increasingly tough corporate reality &#8211; the kind of language                     that speaks of a firing as a &#8220;dehiring,&#8221; and the like. &#8220;In                     a corporate world that softens every blow with. positive rhetoric                     about employees being members of the family, both the employer                     and the employee feel failure and guilt when the need arises                     to make decisions in the corporate interest, contrary to the                     employee&#8217;s interest,&#8221; Grosman said.<\/p>\n<p>If corporate loyalty has to be redefined to contend with                     the hard new facts of life, it must be done from the employee&#8217;s                     point of view , not from that of an employer who expects heroic                     efforts from people in return for a pay cheque which might                     not be forthcoming in the near future. It may seem a difficult                     task to elicit dedicated efforts from people whose future                     is insecure, but the fact is that they basically want to think                     well of the company they work for, because it means thinking                     well of themselves, their friends and colleagues. They will                     recognize the need for retrenchment, technological change                     and bigger individual workloads as long as it is honestly                     explained to them.<\/p>\n<p>A major Canadian corporation recently conducted an attitudinal                     survey among its hourly-rated employees. In it, the employees                     consistently talked about restoring a sense of pride and team                     spirit to the operation, which had been considerably &#8220;down-sized.&#8221;                     They urged management to trust them to do a good job without                     heavy- handed supervision. Above all, they said, they wanted                     to be treated with respect.<\/p>\n<p>When thinking about corporate loyalty, it is hard not to                     think of Japan, where the workers&#8217; wholehearted commitment                     to their firms is legendary. Watching television clips of                     Japanese workers starting the day by singing the company song,                     people in the West may be inclined to think of their dedication                     as a carry-over from Japan&#8217;s feudal past. But if vestigial                     feudalism exists in Japanese business life, it reflects the                     pure idea of the system, in which reciprocal commitments between                     the superior and subordinate are solemnly made and cheerfully                     fulfilled.<\/p>\n<p>In a 1989 article in <em> Harvard Business Review<\/em> , business                     scholars Gary Hamel and C. K. Prahalad noted that all of the                     Japanese companies that have come from the back of the pack                     to dominate markets in the past 20 years &#8220;created an obsession                     with winning <em> at all levels of the organization <\/em> [our                     italics] and sustained that obsession over the 10-to-20-year                     quest for global leadership.&#8221; They did so by &#8220;motivating people                     by communicating the value of the target&#8221; and leaving room                     for individual team contributions. &#8220;Japanese companies win                     not because they have smarter managers, but because they have                     developed ways to harness the &#8216;wisdom of the anthill,'&#8221; the                     authors wrote.<\/p>\n<p>While Japanese workers are kept fully engaged in carrying                     out company strategy, their American rivals are often kept                     in the dark. In one case the authors studied, &#8220;the only time                     the work force heard about the company&#8217;s competitiveness problems                     was during wage negotiations when problems were used to extract                     concessions. Unfortunately, a threat that everyone perceives                     but no one talks about creates more anxiety than a threat                     that has been clearly identified and made the focal point                     for the problem-solving efforts of the entire company. That                     is one reason honesty and humility on the part of top management                     may be the first prerequisite of revitalization. Another reason                     is to make participation more than a buzzword.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This brings us full circle back to Erick Erikson&#8217;s theory                     of fidelity. In Japan, corporate loyalty has become a matter                     of mature adults &#8220;freely pledging&#8221; commitments in an atmosphere                     of mutual trust in which they know that their abilities are                     respected and their work is prized. It is no accident that                     the outstanding corporate performers in North America and                     Europe in recent years have developed the same type of working                     atmosphere.<\/p>\n<p>Although there are many brilliant exceptions, it seems that                     we in the West have yet to make the complete transition from                     the old authoritarian <em> demand <\/em> for loyalty to the                     new egalitarian <em> appeal <\/em> for loyalty among interdependent                     parties who have something to offer each other. We would be                     wise to re-examine what loyalty really means to the well-informed                     and well-educated people of today.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[78],"class_list":["post-3914","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-78"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 72 No. 2 - March\/April 1991 - What&#039;s Become of Loyalty? - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-72-no-2-march-april-1991-whats-become-of-loyalty\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 72 No. 2 - March\/April 1991 - What&#039;s Become of Loyalty? - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The loyalty of people to other people, to institutions and ideals, has always been crucial to the conduct of an orderly society. 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Is it dying? 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