Anger is an emotion we’re rarely told to express. Passionate women and people of colour are often framed as overly outspoken, enraged, shrill or resentful. Their fights are discredited the second they raise their voice.
But regardless of how it’s framed, anger gets results. When directed in the right way, rage can inspire change. It pulls people out of their homes, it causes them to rally outside Parliament, call out bullshit and fight for what they believe in.
This week Crikey spoke with Alison Pennington, a senior economist with the Centre for Future Work, about what’s got her riled up this week — and how anger has worked in her favour.
Crikey: When has rage worked in your favour?
Alison Pennington: My analysis has force because I feel plenty of rage, and the immediacy of every moment. Being passionate is about giving a shit. “Giving a shit” suggests you have a moral code. I make no apologies for harnessed rage.
My rage is harnessed as a slow-burning force. I want to dismantle the logic of those creating harm and inequality and establish better systems and processes. That requires equal parts rage and optimism.
Have you ever been called out for being angry?
I have had years of experience of being belittled or seen as not serious, or as capable, because I give a shit.
I worked in budget at the Department of Finance. When policies hit my desk for review, I could envision how they impacted working Australia on the ground. I’d suggest additional assessments of clearly damaging, non-transparent government proposals. I was routinely told that caring was getting in the way of efficient rubber-stamping. “Just let it wash over you.” I was also told I was “a bit of a bogan”!
Most economists are men in corporate jobs who are actually paid to maintain this air of authority, objectivity and distance from emotion. Bringing your humanity to the table every day is much harder than hiding in silos of self-congratulatory authority, which is the way that economics is consistently being taught.
People don’t want to see impersonal suit-wearing economists as authorities and people telling them what their life is like and what it should be like. They want to see someone who talks like them, and thinks like them, or is as angry as them and as concerned as them.
What’s got you riled up this week?
There was an agricultural worker of 15 years. She provides 14 years of blemish free loyal service as a mushroom picker and then gets injured, and then suddenly, in the six months after that, there’s four disciplinary warnings against her. Finally, the employer finds “the evidence” that she can be sacked because she put her mushroom picking knife on the wrong hook.
The Morison government has gone about increasing the power of employers in our industrial nations laws to screw over workers in the workplace, and that was just a story that really highlighted the difference between rhetoric and reality.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison and the government can say that they care about women’s work opportunities and making sure women have opportunities to work and close the gender pay gap and all that but like this is what it looks like on the ground.
First – I have constantly wondered, what is an economist?
Secondly – great to see a policy worker who actually thinks about the consequences of a policy.
What a refreshing blast of straight talking and commonsense. I like people who give a shit….. I do too.
I like Pennington.
Always happy to listen to, and read, Alison Pennington. She always looks to me like she can be a bit irascible and lord knows, the inept and corrupt current government gives her and us plenty of shit to get angry about. For a good view of what is really happening in the economy, you could do worse than pay attention to Alison as well as Richard Denniss at the Australia Institute.
Good story, good person, but this is Australia: we have bums, not butts (see milkshake/consent video fiasco), and we have envisage, not envision. Death to US cultural imperialism.