David Korten says:
    
       "The relationship of capitalism to a market economy
       is that of a cancer to a healthy body."

 He then explains that the cure is within our grasp.


 Published quarterly
 by the Positive Futures Network
 by David C. Korten 


 Over the nearly 600 years since the onset of the Commercial Revolution,
 we have as a species learned a great deal about the making of money and
 we have created powerful institutions and technologies dedicated to its
 accumulation.

 But in our quest for money, we forgot how to live.

 Now, on the threshold of the third millennium we find our planet beset
 by growing climatic instability, disappearing species, collapsing
 fisheries, shrinking forests, and eroding soils, while the institutions
 of family, community, and the nation-state disintegrate around us and
 the gap between rich and poor becomes more unconscionable by the day.

 Our obsession with money has led us to create an economic system that
 values life only for its contribution to making money. With the
 survival of civilization and perhaps even our species now at risk, we
 have begun to awaken to the fact that our living planet is the source
 of all real wealth and the foundation of our own existence. We must now
 look to living systems as our teacher, for our survival depends on
 discovering new ways of living -- and making our living -- that embody
 life's wisdom.


 Living Economies

 Since the dawn of the scientific revolution, we have been so busy
 subduing nature that we have given little thought to the possibility
 that living systems might embody wisdom essential to our own lives.

 This is beginning to change. Industrial ecology, for example, draws on
 life as a model for the design of closed-loop production processes in
 which all products and by-products are eventually used and reused, just
 as they are in nature. Likewise, a number of organizations are drawing
 from living systems models to enhance the creativity and effectiveness
 of employees. However, aside from social Darwinists who use only a
 narrow spectrum of natural processes to justify an ideology of
 unrestrained economic competition, there have been few serious efforts
 to distill principles from nature's economies for the design of human
 economies as a whole. Since the economy's incentive systems and
 feedback loops are so central in determining how we produce and for
 whose benefit, and who pays the costs, this area clearly holds enormous
 promise.

 All living systems, from individual cells to biological communities,
 are complex self-organizing economies in which many individual entities
 cooperate to sustain themselves and the life of the whole -- as when
 plants produce food and oxygen needed by animals, which in turn produce
 fertilizers and carbon dioxide that feed pllant life. As Willis Harman
 and Elisabet Sahtouris write in Biology Revisioned, "Trees shelter birds
 and insects, bees pollinate flowers, mammals package seeds in fertilizer
 and distribute them, fungi and plants exchange materials, sapotrophs,
 whether microbes or vultures, recycle, birds warn of predators, etc."
 The species that survive and prosper are those that find a niche in
 which they meet their own needs in ways that simultaneously serve
 others.

 Life, then, consists of countless individuals self-organized into
 "holarchies" -- nested sets of cells, multi-celled organisms, and
 multi-species communities or ecosystems with ever greater complexity
 and capacity. Each individual functions both as a whole and a part of
 a greater whole.

 Take our own bodies as an example. Each of us is a composite of more
 than 30 trillion individual living cells. Yet even these cells
 constitute less than half of our dry weight. The remainder consists of
 microorganisms, such as the enteric bacteria and yeasts of our gut that
 manufacture vitamins and help metabolize our food. These symbiotic
 creatures are as necessary to our survival and healthful function as our
 own cells. Each cell and microorganism in our body is an individual,
 self-directing entity, yet by joining together they are able as well to
 function as a single being with abilities far beyond those of its parts.

 Throughout its life span, each organism constantly renews its physical
 structures through cell death and replacement. Ninety-eight percent of
 the atoms in our bodies are replaced each year. Yet the identity,
 function, and coherence of the body and its individual organs are
 self-maintained -- suggesting that each cell, organ, and body possesses
 some degree of inner knowledge and awareness of both self and the
 larger whole of which it is a part.


 Life's Lessons

 Life creates economies for living. We, in contrast, have created an
 economy for making money at life's expense. What if we were to retool
 our economy according to the principles of a living economy? What
 might be its major features? From our observations of living systems,
 we may distill a number of principles helpful both in understanding
 why our existing economy is destroying life and how we might redesign
 it to serve life.

 Living systems are, for example:

 �Self-Organizing and Cooperative -
 - Though we once assumed that cells are centrally controlled by their
 DNA and the body by the brain through the nervous systeem, science is
 discovering that the body's control processes are actually highly
 decentralized and involve a substantial element of self-regulation at
 the cellular level.

 The regulatory processes of biological communities are even more
 radically self-organizing, with no functional equivalent of a
 centralized planning or control system.

 Yet living economies do have mechanisms to control or eliminate rogue
 elements that do not serve the whole. For example, our immune system is
 comprised of cells that specialize in identifying and immobilizing or
 destroying harmful cells and viruses that pose a threat to the whole.
 In a cancer, when a genetic malfunction causes cells to forget they are
 a part of the larger whole of the body and unleashes the pursuit of
 their unlimited growth, the healthy cells attempt to destroy the
 defective cells by cutting off their blood supply.

 This has potential implications for how we think about our human
 economies. The global corporation, which is programmed by its internal
 structures to respond to the incessant demand of financial markets to
 seek its own unlimited growth, behaves much like a cancerous tumor.
 Furthermore, the economy internal to a corporation is centrally planned
 and directed by top management, not to serve the whole of the society
 on which its existence depends, but rather to maximize the capture and
 flow of money to its top managers and shareholders. These
 characteristics -- growth at the expense of the whole and centralized
 planning -- represent serious violations of the principle of
 cooperative self-organization in the service of life. Given that the
 econoomies internal to the largest corporations are larger than the
 economies of most states, this is cause for serious concern.

 Many large corporations do organize their operations around smaller
 operating units and worker teams. But because the rights and powers of
 ownership flow downward from absentee shareholders whose only interests
 in the firm are financial, the corporation's singular goal remains
 profit, and any authority delegated to subordinate units can be
 withdrawn at any time.

 A good first step in creating self-organizing economies that honor the
 freedom and responsibility of the individual in economic as well as in
 political life would be to sell off those decentralized units to their
 stakeholders -- people such as workers, customers, suppliers, and
 community members. Doing so would make managers accountable to those who
 have a living interest in the firm and the health of the community and
 natural setting in which it is located.

 
 � Localized and Adapted to Place -
 - Each bio-community creates its home on a particular place on Earth.
 Its members organize themselves into numerous, multi-sppecies
 sub-communities where, through a process of progressive experimentation
 and adaptation, they learn to optimize the capture, sharing, use, and
 storage of the resources available. As each living community adapts
 itself to the most intricate details of its particular physical locale,
 it, in turn, modifies the physical landscape, creating soil and holding
 it in place, holding and releasing water, creating micro-climates --
 creating the conditions for the further evolution of the eco-system.

 The global human economy likewise could be comprised of a holarchy of
 self-reliant, place-based economies that each adapt to the conditions
 of its physical place by becoming proficient at the collection and
 conservation of energy and the recycling of materials. Each could be
 organized to offer all who reside within its borders a means of
 livelihood consistent with their full and free development.

 Our existing global economy, by contrast, is dominated by financial
 markets and corporations programmed to reorient the purpose of local
 economies from meeting local needs to meeting the financial interests
 of distant institutions. They do this by imposing cultural and genetic
 monocultures and by extracting as much wealth as possible while
 contributing as little as possible in return. As corporate control over
 markets, technology, land, and other resources becomes more pervasive,
 people and communities become less able to adapt their local economies
 to local needs and conditions.

 Humanity has a long history of achieving sustainable, long-term
 relationship to place. A small farmer who knows the land and its
 characteristics learns to adapt her crops and methods to local micro
 environments to get high yields without chemicals, energy subsidies,
 and wastage. So too an economy comprised of many decision makers can
 adapt efficiently to the opportunities of a locality, and to the needs
 and preferences of each of its members, in a way that is impossible
 when critical decisions are made by distant corporate managers.

 Furthermore, the need to manage the business firm in service to more
 than purely financial values becomes self-evident to decision makers
 who must live with the social and environmental consequences of their
 decisions. They are unlikely to sacrifice schools, the environment,
 product safety, suppliers, employment security, wages, worker health,
 and other aspects of a healthy community for short-term, shareholder
 gain when they are the workers, customers, suppliers and community
 members as well as the owners.


 � Bounded by Managed, Permeable Borders -
 - To sustain itself, life must be open to exchange with its
 environment. Yet to maintain its internal coherence, it must be able
 to manage these exchanges. It thus depends on boundaries that are both
 managed and permeable -- neither totally open nor totally closed. If
 the cell had no wall, its matter and energy would mix with the matter
 and energy of its environment and it would die. Multi-celled organisms
 must have a skin or other protective covering.  Bio-communities are
 bounded by oceans, mountains, and climatic zones. Even our planet
 isolates itself from the rest of the universe -- its gravitational
 field holds in place an atmosphere and ozone layer that control the
 exchange of radiation with the largerr universe.

 Human economies similarly require permeable -- but managed -- borders
 at each level of organization from the household and community to the
 region and nation that allow tthem to maintain the integrity,
 coherence, and resource efficiency of their internal processes and to
 protect themselves from predators.

 Political and economic borders define a community of shared interests,
 identity, and trust -- what we call social capital, which is a form of
 embodied energy that makes a community far more than a collection of
 individuals and physical structures. Without borders, this energy
 dissipates, much as the cell's energy dissipates if its cell wall is
 removed. On the other hand, impermeable boundaries result in stagnation
 and a loss of opportunity for the exchange of useful information,
 knowledge, and culture essential to continuing innovation. As with all
 living beings, living economies need permeable and managed boundaries.

 The institutions of money have been using international trade and
 investment agreements to remove the political borders essential to
 maintaining the economic integrity of communities and nations. This
 process leaves economic resources exposed to predatory extraction,
 leading to a breakdown of the trust and cooperation essential to any
 community.

 The real agenda of those promoting these trade agreements is not to
 eliminate borders, but rather to redraw them so as to establish that
 what once belonged to the community to be shared among its members now
 belongs to private corporations for the benefit of their managers and
 shareholders.  Thus, in the name of property rights, corporations draw
 heavily defended borders around their lands, factories, offices,
 shopping centers, broadcast facilities, publications, technologies,
 and intellectual property. With the protection of private guards and
 lawyers backed by the public�s police and military forces, they thus
 assure that all uses of these assets benefit their private corporate
 interest and they silence voices of protest.


 � Frugal and Sharing -
 - Biological communities are highly efficient in energy capture and
 recycling, living exemplars of the motto, "Waste not, want not."
 Energy and materials are continuously recycled for use and reuse
 within and between cells, organisms, and species with a minimum of
 loss, as the wastes of one become the resources of another. Frugality
 and sharing are the secret of life's rich abundance, a product of its
 ability to capture, use, store, and share available material and
 energy with extraordinary efficiency.

 Human economies can be similarly organized to contribute to life's
 abundance through the conservation, frugal use, equitable sharing, and
 continuous recycling of available energy, information, and material
 resources to the end of meeting the needs of all that lives within
 their borders.

 Our existing global economy creates islands of power and privilege in
 a large sea of poverty. The fortunate hoard and squander resources on
 frivolous consumption, while others are denied a basic means of living.
 Furthermore, those who control the creation and allocation of money use
 this power to generate speculative profits. These profits increase the
 claims of the speculators to the wealth created through the labor and
 creative effort of others -- while contributing nothing in return to
 the wealth creation process.
 [For elaboration of this argument see David C. Korten,, Money versus.
 Wealth YES! Spring 1997. Or see "Money as a Social Disease," in the
 PCDForum Website archives.]

 In our present economy unemployment, hoarding, and speculation are
 endemic, resulting in a grossly inefficient use of life's resources.
 In nature, unemployment and hoarding beyond one's own need are rare,
 and there is no equivalent to financial speculation.


 � Diverse and Creative -- Life exhibits an extraordinary drive to
 learn, innovate, and freely share knowledge toward the realization
 of new potentialls. The result is a rich diversity of species and
 cultures that give the bio-community resilience in times of crisis
 and provide the building blocks for future innovation.

 History provides ample evidence that the same drive is inherent in
 humans as well. Our most brilliant scientists, innovators, and
 teachers have been those driven not by the promise of financial
 rewards, but by an inner compulsion to learn, to know, and to share
 their knowledge.

 In our present global economy, corporate controlled mass media create
 monocultures of the mind that portray greed and exclusion as the
 dominant human characteristics. Intellectual property rights are used
 to preclude the free sharing of information, technology, and culture
 essential to creative innovation in the community interest.

 We live at a time when our very survival depends on rapid innovation
 toward the creation of living economies and societies. Such innovation
 depends on vigorous community level experimentation supported by the
 creative energies of individuals everywhere. It is far more likely to
 come from diverse self-directed democratic communities that control
 their economic resources and freely share information and technology
 than from communities whose material and knowledge resources are
 controlled by distant corporate bureaucracies intent on appropriating
 wealth to enrich their shareholders.


 From Global Capitalism to Mindful Markets

 In my newly released book, The Post-Corporate World: Life After
 Capitalism, I call economies with these life-affirming
 characteristics "mindful market economies," because they combine
 mindful ethical cultures with self-organizing economic relationships
 that bear a remarkable resemblance to the market economy described
 more than 200 years ago by British moral philosopher Adam Smith in
 The Wealth of Nations. Smith wrote about place-based economies
 comprised of small, locally owned enterprises that function within a
 community-supported ethical culture to engage people in producing for
 the needs of the community and its members. The economy Smith
 envisioned is nearly the mirror opposite of our existing global
 economy, which is best described by the term capitalism.

 The term capitalism was coined by European philosophers of the
 mid-1800s to describe an economic regime in which the benefits of
 productive assets are monopolized by the few to the exclusion of the
 many who through their labor make those assets productive.

 The relationship of capitalism to a market economy is that of a
 cancer to a healthy body. Much as the cancer kills its host -- and
 itself -- by expropriating and consuming the host's energy, the
 institutions of capitalism are expropriating and consuming the living
 energies of people, communities, and the planet. And like a cancer,
 the institutions of capitalism lack the foresight to anticipate and
 avoid the inevitable deathly outcome.

 We have a collective cancer, and our survival depends on depriving it
 of its power by restructuring our economic rules and institutions to
 end absentee ownership, rights without accountability, corporate
 welfare, and financial speculation. Specific measures to these ends
 are elaborated in The Post-Corporate World.

 At the same time, we can direct the energy we reclaim from the
 institutions of capitalism toward the institutions of the mindful
 market. These institutions exist today, quite likely in your
 community. They include values-based family, community, and
 worker-owned businesses, consumer cooperatives, community banks and
 credit unions, organic farmers, independent health food shops, print
 shops specializing in recycled papers and soy-based inks, farmers
 markets, local restaurants featuring local organic produce, local
 water and power utilities, holistic health practitioners, fair traded
 coffee shops, and organic wineries.

 Mindful businesses are being matched by the mindful consumption choices
 fostered by the rapidly growing voluntary simplicity movement. Tens of
 thousands of socially responsible investors are making mindful
 investment choices.

 These and countless other positive initiatives are creating the
 outlines for self-organizing, life-sustaining economies that are:

 � radically democratic
 � rooted in place
 � comprised of human-scale firms, owned by and accountable to people
   with a stake in their function and impacts
 � frugal with energy and resources, allocating them efficiently to
   meet needs, recycling the "wastes"
 � culturally, socially, and economically diverse, supportive of
   innovation and the free sharing of knowledge
 � mindful of responsibility to self and community
 � bounded by permeable borders, that allow democratic self-regulation.

 In such an economy, enterprises would be owned by community members who
 work in them, depend on their products, and supply their inputs -- with
 each entitled to a fair return to their labor and their investment.

 Community economies would be self-organized by community members
 according to their self-determined priorities and mutually agreed
 rules. They would have their own speculation-proof currencies to
 facilitate local exchange.

 The Earth and its resources would be managed as the common property of
 posterity, a sacred trust whose principal is to be maintained as its
 product is equitably shared.

 The design of production-consumption processes would give high
 priority to working in balance with the natural productive processes
 of the ecosystem, using local renewable material and energy resources,
 and generating zero waste. Each community economy would have its
 distinctive features and culture reflecting its history, the
 circumstances of its place, and the preferences of its members. All
 would engage in mutually beneficial trade with their neighbors on
 their own terms, while freely sharing useful information and
 technology.

 If enough of us decide we value life more than money, we have the
 means and the right to create an economy that nurtures life and
 restores money to its proper role as life's servant. Moreover, the
 actions involved are familiar and give expression to principles that
 underlie millions of years of evolution, along with more recent human
 values of democracy, community, and freedom. Curing a cancer is
 rarely easy, but once we become clear that the task centers on
 reclaiming our life energies to live fully and well, this cure might
 actually be fun.

 This issue of YES! is filled with examples of positive initiatives
 and ideas for what you can do to cure the cancer and nurture the
 mindful market.

 ________________________________

 David C. Korten is board chair of the Positive Futures Network,
 president of the People-Centered Development Forum, and author of
 When Corporations Rule the World. This article is based on his newly
 released book The Post-Corporate World: Life After Capitalism,
 co-published by Kumarian Press and Berrett-Koehler Publishers. The
 author gratefully acknowledges Dr. Mae-Wan Ho and Elisabet Sahtouris
 for their insights into living systems on which this article draws.

 The People-Centered Development Forum site maintained by the
 International Institute for Sustainable Development, Winnipeg, Canada






   .............................................
   Bob Olsen, Toronto      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
   .............................................



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