You might have asked your doc whether he feels as satisfied with his life's accomplishments as you. He may be cash rich but you seem to be experience and accomplishment rich. Different kind of wealth, something he may not understand.
arthur From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ray Harrell Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 12:53 PM To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'; 'Keith Hudson' Subject: Re: [Futurework] The new transition Interesting discussion from both of you. I'm from the latter camp that Mike alludes to. An example of this was pointed out yesterday when I went to my doctor for my check on "old people" medication. We were talking and he was discussion where I live. It's a good area and we have a small 2 room apartment with piano, music library and six thousand books. Every spec of wall is covered with books and memories. The doctor asked if I owned the apartment and I said no that I've always rented. He said "What a shame, you would be sitting pretty now." He knows that we are cash poor but I have also recently come to an awareness about my choices around paper money and things. Capital and all of that. The Doc is always fishing for information because of my profession and culture. "What a shame" he said. To which I said: "No, I've made millions of dollars in my fifty years of work in the Arts. I also went through a small inheritance. I can't tell you how many significant events I have been a part of or an observer. I've supported and developed American Music all of my life and the other Arts. I have an accomplished daughter, I've funded festivals of American classical music with my teaching. I'm in the upper 2% of my profession. My edifice is my students, my capital is my continuing technique and my history is to have known the shapers of the conservative era in America from the ground up and to have survived them both as an Artist and an Indian. I am also the keeper of a whole tradition of religious knowledge. My capital is not money or property but competence and accomplishment. I expect to die broke and that's not a complaint. " Last night I read about the life of a prominent Billionaire who came from the same part of the country as I. The URL is here: http://www.squidoo.com/jeffersonwine The difference is obvious. There are the people of the ownership and collector societies and there are the people of the competence and development of human capital societies. Having composed or performed a great symphony that disappears once you've done it is the meaning of life because it cannot be taken from you stored in your brain. It also develops others by virtue of it's existence. Keith labeled "Hunter/Gatherers" correctly in my opinion. The "New World" had very few hunter/gatherers. They were Gardeners, Foresters, shapers of the landscape and urban planners and developers of great balanced eco-systems. The Hunter/Gatherers came here and are still. That's the "ownership" society. You own, own, own, own and then you die and everyone fights over what you collected in your life. Koch owned Jesse James, Custer and Sitting Bulls guns but would never fire them. He is an own, not a do. But if someone fools around with his "own" he becomes the Hunter to put them behind bars. Once he found out his wine was fake, it seems the real fun and games began for him. REH From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Gurstein Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 6:34 AM To: 'Keith Hudson'; 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION' Subject: Re: [Futurework] The new transition Keith, Your argument is an interesting one (a "pull" theory of social evolution rather than a "push" one... although I think a wee bit lacking in nuance--ideas of normatively valuable goods (one's based on social norms such as say diamonds) vs. tangibly valuable ones (one's based on tangible contributions to life/lifestyles such as say washing machines) and a lot in between (like t.v. and arguably computers/cell phones which can fall into either camp or even create a third one... But I think it is very questionable that we have reached the "end" of that particular "history"... (and we discussed this several years ago... The new consumer desirables would seem to be "experiences" hence, the "experience economy" and the basis for mass tourism, mass spectacles of various kinds, sports, and so on and so on. The argument here (not mine) is that the "market" for experiences is infinite, the only limitation being time and money... So since money is now a problem for many, the purchase is down but not as a result of a lack of "pull". Best, M -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson Sent: Tuesday, July 20, 2010 10:53 AM To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, ,EDUCATION Subject: [Futurework] The new transition Most economists today are just like revivalist preachers. Each of them has his own patter of abstract ideas, can write or talk about them for thousands of words at a time and can point to whatever biblical text (in this case economic data) that happens to be convenient to them. Almost any one of them can be convincing when in full spate but few of them actually explain how economic growth actually comes about -- and thus could be safely stimulated in times of depression. Once the iniquitous Corn Laws were repealed in 1846 and the working man of England was able to eat cheaply from imported grain, economic growth became increasingly taken over by a motivation stronger than mere physical survival and baby-making. He not only desired smaller and smaller families but he also started to join the world of the previous land-owning aristocracy, the merchant, the lawyer and the banker where status was principally denoted by the possessions they could display -- their grand houses, their estates, the objects of beauty in their houses, the number of personal servants they could employ. For the working man, the status objects were modest to start with -- curtains for the windows or a Wedgewood pot for the shelf, even an additional suit, hat or dress for Sunday best -- but, as innovation continued apace, a whole chain of consumer goods opened and lengthened in front of him and his wife. Each new consumer good as it appeared -- the week's holiday at the seaside, the family photograph album, the bicycle -- was extremely costly. They were first snaffled by the new rising middle class, more directly aping the previous elite class. But the profit margins of these goods were such that they could be re-invested in the next set of consumer goods and, increasingly, all these status goods could be mass produced and become cheaper from year to year, working their way down the social ranks of society. Gradually, the proportion of the weekly wage spent on non-necessary, status goods, rose . . . and rose . . . and rose. And still the chain of status goods extended -- the radio, the telephone, electric lighting, even a little house of one's own. Status competition by means of possessions was taking place from the top to the bottom of society and according to varying degrees of ambition. Most were not highly ambitious but still felt they had to justify their place in their local society -- "keeping up with the Joneses". Peer pressure, in other words. It's the very rare individual who can hold out against this, particularly when pecking order is so strongly embedded in the genes of all social mammals. Of course, not all of the new household or personal possessions were status objects. Some were labour-saving, some were for entertainment (though there was room for status competition within these also) and some (e.g. the car -- of different status grades, however!) became necessities in due course as the new highly stratified urban society of work and habitations adjusted itself to where we are now. However, the great chain of new consumer goods largely came to a halt about 20 or 30 years ago. The last one was the personal computer. This didn't quite make the grade as a mass status product (only about 50% penetration), though it's likely to in the coming years in the guise of a much beefed up mobile phone. There are all sorts of apparently wonderful things coming along, such as 3D television, but this, like flat screen TV, is only an embellishment. Consumers are not going to save up for years to buy it, as they did for their original purchase. Pretty well every consumer product of the 20 or 30 years have been marginal improvements or embellishment or fashionable variations of pre-1980 ones. Besides, most of us haven't the sensory equipment, or the time or energy or space to use or possess any more than we have already. It's no wonder therefore that, for the last 20 or 30 years, the retail sector of the economy -- and banks and governments -- have become increasingly desperate to keep economic growth going by means of increasing our personal credit. How to emerge from the Western credit-crunch? It won't be by throwing yet more money into the economy. Keynesian methods might have worked in the 1930s because there was still a whole slew of status goods which the middle-class were buying but which the ordinary working people had not yet saved up for and bought. But Keynesianism -- quantitative easing -- money-printing -- hasn't worked so far since the disaster of 2008/9. It has been captured by the banks in order to repair their balance sheets (far from restored so far) and none of it has emerged into the general economy. But even if it had done, there's no guarantee that there's anything like the chain of status goods which so motivated the masses for 200 years. Besides, most mass status goods are so very very cheap these days due to automation and hyper-mass production mainly. Manufacturing profit margins for all consumer goods are only a fraction of what they used to be for most of the 1780-1980 period. The mass of money that was constantly rolling forward for re-investment into the next tranche of consumer goods previously no longer exists. There can be no guarantee that any more money-printing by governments will solve anything at all. Either very little will happen, and the money will continue to be captured by the banks, or it will spill over into the economy and cause inflation. This is why some governments are going down the austerity path and others want to resume money-printing. At the moment the Western world as a whole is paralyzed with indecision. Whether the West will experience long-term depression or hyperinflation, it seems clear to me that the impetus for the industrial-consumer revolution is now at the very earliest stages of major re-adjustment. In due course, this will be quite as powerful and radical as that of the changes from the agricultural era of only about 300 years ago and now. If time, energy or our sensory apparatus have no margin left over for yet another tranche of quite new -- and presently inconceivable -- consumer goods that will pacify the status requirements of the masses, then how will the new era be motivated? It can only be the development of, and competition between, producer goods. In view of the decline of oil and natural gas (and the exhorbitant cost of coal in future years) there can only be one answer and that is to continue to follow our scientific nose into quite new areas. The new scientific area is genetics. This is fully the equivalent of the work of hundreds of brilliant scientists who took steam power into turbines and into electricity and thence factory production. And, in view of the energy crisis, the particular technology that must be developed initially, is that of manufacturing basic energy, particularly hydrogen. We already know in outline how this can be done -- neo-bacteria -- and, furthermore, we already know that DNA methods could produce organic equivalents of anything that we make today. (The use of DNA to replace present computer memory chips is already being seriously advocated by some!) DNA, being as versatile and sophisticated as it is, will require, not just hundreds of genetic scientists but tens of thousands -- nay hundreds of thousands -- of teams of scientists, able to live and work closely to one another, each team specializing in a particular DNA molecule that will produce a particular consumer or producer good (and able to produce competitive variants). Instead of trading physical goods with one another we will be able to trade DNA formulae. As a byproduct, this will almost undoubtedly cause the formation of much smaller communities than the grossly large cities we have now. Status within scientific communities does not depend on an incessant purchase of new consumer goods. It depends on the talents and reputation of individuals. Status will take care of itself in the new world. We will, in fact, resume much the same pattern of life of our hunter-gatherer ancestors for which our genes are still best fitted. Unfortunately, although we can already see the signs of the progressive collapse of this era, and the few faint signs of the next (many research teams are close to the hydrogen-producing bacterium), 99.99% of the population have little idea of genetics or the new ideas that will energize the new process. It will be laughed out of court for a long time to come. Like the last transition, the new economic era will take a few centuries to realize. Keith Keith Hudson, Saltford, England
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