Thank you Roberto. I agree that to brush over the distinction between the 
household and the wider social economy will miss qualitative differences, and 
particularly the one you mention.

Kevin emphasises the recent nature of the nuclear family, but the quality you 
point to is a characteristic of more extended households. 

> "The basic difference is that members of the household do not put a high 
> priority, if they consider it important at all, to keep track of values 
> created and exchanged within the household."

It is that quality, which is not based on reciprocity, which, I maintain, is 
the foundation of every sustainable society. It emanates from the mother child 
relationship, (seen as archetype rather than in the particular ways it 
manifests), which prioritises care and love above exchange values. It is this 
factor which has been confined as Kevin points out, to the smallest possible 
unit, because it challenges the very nature of the economy based on scarcity 
and objectifying people and nature, and which the Commons needs to acknowledge 
as the ultimate basis of any wholesome relationship. 

Anna

> On 15 Oct 2017, at 07:16, Roberto Verzola <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I will argue that the household (whether it is a nuclear family or a 
> multi-generational one) is qualitatively different from the other three 
> (govt, market, commons) and therefore deserves to be treated separately.
> 
> The basic difference is that members of the household do not put a high 
> priority, if they consider it important at all, to keep track of values 
> created and exchanged within the household. Governments and markets keep very 
> close track. Those who share common resources presumably want some accounting 
> and tracking too, if not as detailed as the other two, to guard against 
> free-riders and to reward to some extent those who contribute most to the 
> common resource pool.
> 
> In our work on energy, for instance, we consider it important that a 
> microgrid operated as a commons have a bidirectional electric meter (the old 
> analog meter is enough) installed per household, to keep track of imports and 
> exports of electricity. We have, by the way, concluded that net metering is 
> the simplest way to do so, making it a long-term solution to the problem of 
> accounting for the P2P exchanges that will increasingly occur in a grid. 
> (Unlike the feed-in-tariff system successfully pioneered by Germany, which 
> seems to be approaching the end of its useful life.)
> 
> Greetings to all,
> 
> Roberto
> 
> 
> On Sun, 15 Oct 2017 12:13:15 +0700
> Michel Bauwens <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> thanks Kevin, good point,
>> 
>> Michel
>> 
>> Message: 1
>> Date: Sat, 14 Oct 2017 14:13:47 -0500
>> From: Kevin Carson <[email protected]>
>> To: P2P Foundation mailing list <[email protected]>
>> Subject: Re: [P2P-F] thinking true meta-governance and the gaps in p2p
>>       theory regarding the household economy
>> Message-ID:
>>       <caneteez58drdsyabc9bnak18z5jnfzhun102qtdqbxj13vf...@mail.gmail.com>
>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>> 
>> IMO the boundary between the household and the larger informal/social
>> economy is very permeable. The nuclear family household is relatively
>> recent and artificial, and to a considerable extent encouraged by 20th
>> century capitalism's promotion of social atomization which reduced the
>> household to the smallest possible size which would still socialize
>> the costs of reproducing labor-power and the culture of obedience
>> without providing a potential base for cost-, income- and risk-pooling
>> which might increase the bargaining power of labor. It's quite likely
>> that as total labor hours decline and precarity increases, we'll see a
>> lot more not only of multi-generational houses but of multi-family
>> cohousing, micro-villages and the like that internalize an increasing
>> share of direct production for use.
>> -- 
>> Check out the Commons Transition Plan here at: http://commonstransition.org
>> 
>> 
>> P2P Foundation: http://p2pfoundation.net  - http://blog.p2pfoundation.net
>> 
>> <http://lists.ourproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/p2p-foundation>Updates:
>> http://twitter.com/mbauwens; http://www.facebook.com/mbauwens
>> 
>> #82 on the (En)Rich list: http://enrichlist.org/the-complete-list/
> 
> 
> -- 
> Roberto Verzola <[email protected]>
> 
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