I can find no objection to this. It sounds like a wonderful, practical guide to bringing about the beginnings of a 'good' society.
Selma ----- Original Message ----- From: "Barry Brooks" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Sunday, July 06, 2003 2:52 PM Subject: [Futurework] Engineering the economy > > Barry, > > This is somewhat related to your "Why men succeed at work." > > The question, then, becomes whether it is possible to engineer a society > in which people are rewarded for non-capitalist and/or non-power seeking > (referring specifically to negative forms of power) behaviors. And, if > so, what would such a reward structure look like? > > Below is my view of what such a reward structure would look like. > > Barry > > > Good engineering uses evolution. Consider the Japanese > car designs that are improved, not replaced, whenever better designs are > available. It's not one or the other. In fact no clear lines can be drawn between > evolution and engineering. > > Or, maybe I should have said, we can't wait for nature to guide us; planning is required. > Yet, we should take advantage of the good things we already have. But, which features of > our present economy should we keep? > > Here's an outline of goals and policies that I advocate. We have the components of a successful > economy, as I define it below, already in place. Thus, no revolution will be needed. > > In my humble opinion we want our economy to provide sustainability, an abundance of goods and services, economic security for everyone, and leisure. These goals are synergistic and are hard to separate or rank. > > Various economic arrangements could provide those wants, and the economic designers, who ever they are, must choose between those alternative arrangements. That is the hardest part of the design process. > > The easy part is knowing the things that can not work. To be sustainable an economy must not need growth in scale, because any rate of growth in scale will finally make that economy un-sustainable. All the sustainable alternative economies will not need to grow in scale. > > Also, leisure will require the acceptance of automation into every possible part of the economy. Economic arrangements that don't use technology can't meet the want for leisure. All the alternative economies will use technology, and they will not need to grow in scale. > > Economic security requires some arrangement to provide basic food and shelter to everyone without qualification. Pure market capitalism, private charity, and "opportunity" will not provide that. Some form of transfer payments will be part of any economic arrangement that provides economic security. All the alternative economies will use technology, they will not need to grow in scale, and they will care for the poor. > > Caring for the poor in an economy that values leisure will not focus on making jobs for them. Wage dependence leads to the need to make jobs, the need to compensate for automation, and the need for growth in scale. Unearned income is basic to capitalism, but it's not democratic capitalism when most people are dependant on wages. A guaranteed income could be adjusted to stabilize wages in an economy that doesn't need its full productive capacity. > > The need for growth and waste of our consumer economy will finally make providing an abundance of goods and services impossible. When we make jobs and tolerate waste to be busy, or to avoid the need to provide welfare, we are in denial about the power of today's automation to replace human labor, and where we going. The waste of the consumer economy will not provide abundance, security, or leisure; not for long. > > If it weren't for politics even today's economic arrangements could work, for a while. We could stimulate demand so effectively that our wants for abundance and security, at least for workers, could be meet. That's why our want for sustainability is important. It's not enough to nurture the market, to end corruptions, to implement the most advanced policies in pursuit of unsustainable levels of hyper-activity. The short-term fix is not a long-term fix, but any long-term fix applies now. For sustainability the long-term fix is to cut resource consumption, not to increase it. > > When we combine the known requirements of our engineered economy we get something that would seem unworkable without consideration of additional details. For example, an economy that doesn't grow requires a stable population, and an economy that is sustainable avoids waste. So, if we make all products long lasting many goods can be provided by inheritance. Long-lasting houses combined with population stability will provide houses without much labor, without economic growth, without excessive resource consumption, and without a need for large income. Security, abundance and leisure are all supported by such arrangements. > > Last time I checked no revolution will be needed to institute inheritance, or family planning, or automation, or even transfer payments. We already have those things in our society. It may take a revolution to get the message out about how those things can be used to provide the things we really want. > > Barry Brooks > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Futurework mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework > _______________________________________________ Futurework mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
