Taylorism, or "scientific management" by Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856-1915), is not just a historical curiosity, but a fundamental paradigm of labor organization, whose principles, although in modified form, continue to influence modern work processes. Its critical analysis today reveals not only the limitations of the system but also its unexpected resurgence in the digital environment.
Taylor, an engineer by education, proposed a revolutionary approach for the beginning of the 20th century, based on four principles:
Replacement of practical methods with scientifically based ones. Each labor operation should be studied by timing and broken down into the simplest movements.
Scientific selection and training of workers. Selection of a person for a specific, maximally simplified task.
Strict division of mental and physical labor. Managers ("planning department") think, design, and control; workers only execute instructions.
Material incentives (piece-rate payment). Fulfillment and exceeding of the scientifically calculated norm ("lesson") should be generously rewarded.
The goal was to eliminate "soldiering" work and radically increase productivity. A classic example is the experiment with loading cast iron ingots at the Bethlehem Steel plant. Taylor, having studied the movements, selected a "first-class worker" Schmidt, trained him in the "scientific" method, and increased the daily norm from 12.5 to 47.5 tons, increasing his salary by 60%. This was considered a triumph of efficiency.
Contemporaries of Taylor already saw deep flaws in his system:
Humanistic criticism (Elton Mayo, Hawthorne experiments, 1920-30s). Mayo proved that social and psychological factors (attention to the worker, group norms, a sense of belonging) have a greater impact on productivity than purely physical conditions and material incentives. Taylorism, reducing man to "an appendage of the machine," ignored these aspects, causing alienation.
Quality criticism (W. Edwards Deming). In post-war Japan, Deming showed that the Taylorian division of "mind and hands" is harmful to quality. A worker, deprived of the right to think and make suggestions, cannot be responsible for defects. This led to the philosophy of "kaizen" (continuous improvement) and the involvement of ordinary employees in quality control.
Sociological and Marxist criticism. The system was considered an instrument for strengthening control and de-skilling labor. The worker lost his comprehensive skill, becoming an executor of primitive operations, which increased the power of management and reduced the negotiating power of the worker. Harry Braverman in his work "Labor and Monopoly Capital" (1974) detailed how the Taylorist logic of degradations of labor had penetrated into both the office and the service sectors.
Today, classical Taylorism is rare in its pure form, but its logic has been reborn in new forms:
Algorithmic management (Digital Taylorism). In the platform economy (Uber, Deliveroo, Яндекс.Еда), the algorithm performs the role of the "planning department" in an exaggerated form:
The task is broken down to the atomic level ("a trip from A to B," "one order delivery").
The worker is deprived of information about the whole process and control over it.
Continuous monitoring and evaluation through ratings and metrics replace the supervisor with a stopwatch.
Incentives are provided through dynamic pricing and bonuses for fulfilling quotas. This is Taylorism turned inside out: external freedom of schedule is combined with total internal control.
Cognitive Taylorism in office work. Time tracking systems (time trackers, screenshots every 5 minutes), strict scripts in call centers, KPIs, breaking creative work into measurable but meaningless metrics — all this is the continuation of Taylor's logic of standardization and control over non-standard labor.
Criticism from the perspective of the creative economy and psychology. For creative, intellectual, and innovative tasks, Taylorism is fatal. It kills:
Internal motivation (Ryan and Deci's self-determination theory), replacing it with external incentives that are not effective for complex tasks.
The state of flow (Csikszentmihalyi), requiring autonomy and complex challenges.
Psychological safety, necessary for experimentation and recognition of mistakes.
Ethical and social criticism. Taylorism (and its digital descendants) contribute to:
Precarization of labor and the growth of inequality.
Burnout due to constant pressure for optimization and the loss of meaning.
De-professionalization of even highly qualified fields.
Total rejection of Taylorism would be a mistake. Its principles retain limited value:
In high-risk, routine, repetitive processes where failure costs lives or huge money (aviation, nuclear energy, surgical checklists). Here standardization and clear protocols save.
As a method of process analysis (but not people) to eliminate obvious inefficiencies at the initial stages of optimization.
The idea of measurement and data, although today the emphasis is shifted from controlling people to analyzing the system as a whole.
A paradoxical fact: The largest technology companies (Google, Microsoft), criticized for elements of digital Taylorism, cultivate the exact opposite in their R&D departments — an environment built on autonomy, trust, and freedom of research, which proves that Taylorism is useless for creating innovations.
The criticism of Taylorism today is not a dispute with the ghost of the past, but an ongoing battle for the future of work. It shows that attempts to apply the logic of mechanistic optimization to complex human systems, especially in the age of knowledge and services, are counterproductive and dehumanizing.
The lesson of modernity is that efficiency in the 21st century is achieved not through increased control and simplification of tasks, but through the opposite: empowering employees, developing their skills, creating meaning, and fostering psychological safety. Modern successful models (from Agile methodologies to self-managed teams) are a direct antithesis to Taylorism.
Thus, Taylor's legacy today serves not as a guide to action, but as an important warning: when we design work, we must decide whether we are creating a system for machines controlled by people or an environment for people enhanced by technology. Choosing the latter requires a rejection of Taylor's paradigm in its deepest essence — in relation to man as a resource to be optimized.
New publications: |
Popular with readers: |
News from other countries: |
![]() |
Editorial Contacts |
About · News · For Advertisers |
Serbian Digital Library ® All rights reserved.
2014-2026, LIBRARY.RS is a part of Libmonster, international library network (open map) Keeping the heritage of Serbia |
US-Great Britain
Sweden
Serbia
Russia
Belarus
Ukraine
Kazakhstan
Moldova
Tajikistan
Estonia
Russia-2
Belarus-2