http://evonomics.com/toward-an-economics-of-common-sense/

Towards an Economics of Common Sense

By Chris Cook

The first examination I ever failed was an Economics paper I took as part of an 
accountancy qualification. I could not understand the subject at all, as it 
seemed to bear no relationship to Reality as I experienced it. But since I 
needed a Pass, I learnt it all parrot-fashion, regurgitated it, duly passed, 
and mentally filed the subject in the bin.

However, in recent years, my work in that space where markets and the internet 
converge has led me to take a good look at the financial system, and to the 
subject of the Economics which provides a conceptual framework – and 
justification – for it.

Get Evonomics in your inbox

I have come to realise that the problem lies in the metaphysical and 
epistemological basis of Economics – in other words, its relationship with the 
Reality which we experience. The assumptions, and definitions used are not only 
couched in language which might almost be designed to confuse, but are also 
crafted to suit the purposes of those who actually fund the academic 
development of the subject.

Factors of Production
Neo-Classical Economists in particular define Labour and Capital as the only 
Factors of Production, and take the anthropocentric view that the Sun of 
Capital orbits the Earth of Labour. From this we get the rhetoric of 
productivity and the assumption that when a factory is automated the sole 
remaining individual whose job it is to turn the factory on and off has 
magically become infinitely productive.

This is complete self serving bollocks, of course, the sole purpose of which is 
to justify taxation of Labour rather than Capital. Alternative Economics, such 
as the Binary Economics advocated by Kelso, Kurland and Shakespeare assume that 
both Capital and Labour are productive, but they have been largely ignored and 
otherwise ridiculed by mainstream academics and their cheer-leaders in the 
Fourth Estate.

However, if we go back into Economic History, we will see that there were 
previously three Factors of Production posited: Land, Labour and Capital. The 
reason for the conflation of Land and Capital – which Mason Gaffney describes 
as the Corruption of Economics – was the imperative need of the rich and 
privileged to discredit the ideas of the great US political economist Henry 
George.

Gaffney makes a very convincing case for Neo-Classical Economics as a Strategem 
against Henry George and the strategem was indeed successful in airbrushing 
both George -and his concept of a Single Tax on the use value of Land/Location 
– from Economic History.

The result of the development of Economics in the last 100 years or so has been 
to develop a bastard strain of Economics one of the principal purposes of which 
has been to justify the taxation of earned income – Labour, rather than the 
unearned income arising out of economic rents derived purely from the unearned 
privilege of private property in Commons such as Land.

The other principal purpose of Economics has been to rationalise the current 
system of Finance Capital, consisting of the Twin Peaks of Debt and Equity. 
Firstly, a monetary system based upon the creation of credit by credit 
institutions aka banks which has virtually no basis on the productive economy, 
and secondly, a system of absolute property rights – in particular the form of 
financial capital consisting of shares in a Joint Stock Limited Liability 
Corporation.

As Professor Michael Hudson has brilliantly demonstrated, the combination of 
compound interest on debt, and private property in land, has for thousands of 
years concentrated wealth in the hands of the few to the exclusion of the many. 
We are in the process of learning once again that this combination is simply 
unsustainable, and the brilliance of Alan Greenspan’s recent tenure at the US 
Federal Reserve Bank has been to bring forward this collapse by perhaps ten 
years.

Cleansing the Augean Stables
The cleansing of our Economic Augean Stables might begin with a new set of 
Factors of Production.

Location – three dimensional spatial location.

Energy – in the form of electricity, the energy value of fuels, and from other 
sources.

Knowledge – the accumulated knowledge, experience and talent of a human during 
his lifetime, or the imperishable and timeless patterns of recorded knowledge 
and cultural artifacts he leaves behind.

Each of these Factors of Production has a value in use, and each of them is 
independent of the other two, although all three must necessarily be deployed 
together when humans act individually, or collectively via a protocol as an 
enterprise.

Many would agree that each of these Factors (with the exception of an 
individual’s lifetime knowledge) is in fact a Commons – owned by and available 
to all – and I agree with Henry George that those who have exclusive rights of 
use of a Commons should compensate those they exclude.

The current economic crisis results from the fact that wealth has once again 
become concentrated in the hands of the privileged. We are now seeing massive 
government intervention, and on the face of it, there is now no shortage of 
credit available in our existing system. The insuperable problem – which may 
shortly be recognised as the next wave of defaults commences – is that there 
are no longer enough credit-worthy projects and individuals to whom to lend.

It will shortly become clear that the necessity is for some kind of systemic 
fiscal reform. I argue that this is impossible within a paradigm of money 
created as interest-bearing debt, and the current distribution of Wealth.

The Systemic Fiscal Reform I advocate is neither a revolutionary appropriation 
by the State nor a redistribution of income. Instead I advocate a transition 
from the taxation of earned income (since there is no longer enough earned 
income left to tax) to the taxation of the privilege of exclusive use of 
Factors of Production.

(a) Location – a Land Value Tax, levied on the use value of location

(b) Energy – Taxation of the use of the Resource Commons, particularly a Carbon 
Tax; and

(c) Knowledge – a Limited Liability Tax levied on the gross revenues of the 
Corporation used to “enclose” Knowledge, through employment contracts and 
Intellectual Property.

There is no way that such systemic fiscal reform would ever be implemented by 
the institutions which currently exist. Turkeys do not vote for Christmas, and 
the privileged in control of the Institutions will not give up their privileges.

So what happens now? Will it be default, money destruction and Depression; or 
money creation, quantitative easing of the Rich, and Inflation?

I argue that it will not be either. The emergence of the direct Peer to Peer 
connections of the Internet are now enabling the veto of the Institutions to be 
by-passed through a process I refer to as Napsterisation – after the disruptive 
software which has changed the music industry for ever. To paraphrase John 
Gilmore once again…“The Internet interprets privilege as damage and routes 
around it.”

The architecture of a rational and consensual 21st Century Peer to Peer 
financial architecture -and a new Economics of Common Sense – may perhaps be 
based upon a new set of assumptions and definitions, and a new generation of 
partnership-based protocols linking together a networked society.

2016 April 20

Originally published here.

BE INVOLVED

We welcome you to take part in the next evolution of economics. Sign up now to 
be kept in the loop!



Sent from my iPhone

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to