A bit ranty at the end, but still a beautiful vision. 


Optimizing for Human Well-Being - Evonomics
http://evonomics.com/optimizing-human-well-being-rushkoff/
(via Instapaper)

The economy needn’t be a war; it can be a commons. To get there, we must 
retrieve our innate good will.

The commons is a conscious implementation of reciprocal altruism. Reciprocal 
altruists, whether human or ape, reward those who cooperate with others and 
punish those who defect. A commons works the same way. A resource such as a 
lake or a field, or a monetary system, is understood as a shared asset. The 
pastures of medieval England were treated as a commons. It wasn’t a 
free-for-all, but a carefully negotiated and enforced system. People brought 
their flocks to graze in mutually agreed- upon schedules. Violation of the 
rules was punished, either with penalties or exclusion.

The commons is not a winner-takes-all economy, but an all-take-the-winnings 
economy. Shared ownership encourages shared responsibility, which in turn 
engenders a longer-term perspective on business practices. Nothing can be 
externalized to some “other” player, because everyone is part of the same 
trust, drinking from the same well.

If one’s business activities hurt any other market participant, they undermine 
the integrity of the marketplace itself. For those entranced by the myth of 
capitalism, this can be hard to grasp. They’re still stuck thinking of the 
economy as a two-column ledger, where every credit is someone’s else’s debit. 
This zero-sum mentality is an artifact of monopoly central currency. If money 
has to be borrowed into existence from a single, private treasury and paid back 
with interest, then this sad, competitive, scarcity model makes sense. I need 
to pay back more than I borrowed, so I need to get that extra money from 
someone else. That’s the very premise of zero-sum. But that’s not how an 
economy has to work.

The destructive power of debt-based finance is older than central currency—so 
old that even the Bible warns against it. It was Joseph who taught Pharaoh how 
to store grain in good times so that he would be able to dole it out in lean 
years. Those indentured to the pharaoh eventually became his slaves, and four 
hundred years passed before they figured out how to free themselves from 
captivity as well as this debtor’s mindset. Even after they escaped, it took 
the Israelites a whole generation in the desert to learn not to hoard the manna 
that rained on them, but to share what came and trust that they would get more 
in the future.

If we act like there’s a shortage, there will be a shortage.

Advocates of the commons seek to optimize the economy for human beings, rather 
than the other way around.

Get Evonomics in your inbox

One economic concept that grew out of the commons was called distributism. The 
idea, born in the 1800s, holds that instead of trying to redistribute the 
spoils of capitalism after the fact through heavy taxation, we should simply 
predistribute the means of production to the workers. In other words, workers 
should collectively own the tools and factories they use to create value. 
Today, we might call such an arrangement a co-op—and, from the current 
examples, cooperative businesses are giving even established US corporations a 
run for their money.

The same sorts of structures are being employed in digital businesses. In these 
“platform cooperatives,” participants own the platform they’re using, instead 
of working for a “platform monopoly” taxi app or giving away their life data to 
a social media app. A taxi app is not a complicated thing; it’s just a dating 
app combined with a mapping app combined with a credit card app. The app 
doesn’t deserve the lion’s share of the revenue. Besides, if the drivers are 
going to be replaced by robots someday, anyway, at least they should own the 
company for which they’ve been doing the research and development. Similarly, a 
user-owned social media platform would allow participants to sell (or not sell) 
their own data, instead of having it extracted for free.

Another commons-derived idea, “subsidiarity,” holds that a business should 
never grow for growth’s sake. It should only grow as big as it needs to in 
order to accomplish its purpose. Then, instead of expanding to the next town or 
another industry, it should just let someone else replicate the model. Joe’s 
pizzeria should sell to Joe’s customers. If they need a pizzeria in the next 
town, Joe can share his recipe and let Samantha do it.

This is not bad business—especially if Joe likes making pizza. He gets to stay 
in the kitchen doing what he loves instead of becoming the administrator of a 
pizza chain. Samantha may develop a new technique that helps Joe; they can even 
federate and share resources. Besides, it’s fun to have someone else to talk 
with about the pizza business. They can begin to develop their collaborative 
abilities instead of their competitive ones.

Bigger isn’t necessarily better. Things in nature grow to a certain point and 
then stop. They become full-grown adults, forests, or coral reefs. This doesn’t 
mean they’re dead. If anything, it’s the stability of adulthood that lets them 
become participating members of larger, mutually supportive networks.

If Joe has to grow his business bigger just in order to keep up with his rising 
rent and expenses, it’s only because the underlying economy has been rigged to 
demand growth and promote scarcity. It is this artificially competitive 
landscape that convinces us we have no common interests.

We know that nothing in nature can sustain an exponential rate of growth, but 
this doesn’t stop many of our leading economists and scientists from 
perpetuating this myth. They cherry-pick evidence that supports the endless 
acceleration of our markets and our technologies, as if to confirm that growth- 
based corporate capitalism is keeping us on track for the next stage of human 
evolution.

To suggest we slow down, think, consider—or content our- selves with steady 
profits and incremental progress—is to cast oneself as an enemy of our 
civilization’s necessary acceleration forward. By the market’s logic, human 
intervention in the machine will only prevent it from growing us out of our 
current mess. In this read of the situation, corporations may be using 
extractive, scorched-earth tactics, but they are also our last best hope of 
solving the world’s biggest problems, such as hunger and disease. Questioning 
the proliferation of patented, genetically modified seeds or an upgraded 
arsenal of pesticides just impedes the necessary progress. Adherents of this 
worldview say that it’s already too late to go back. There are already too many 
people, too much damage, and too much dependence on energy. The only way out is 
through. Regulating a market just slows it down, preventing it from reaching 
the necessary level of turbulence for the “invisible hand” to do its work.

According to their curated history of humanity, whenever things look 
irredeemably awful, people come up with a new technology, unimaginable until 
then. They like to tell the story of the great horse manure crisis of 1894, 
when people in England and the United States were being overwhelmed by the 
manure produced by the horses they used for transportation. Luckily, according 
to this narrative, the automobile provided a safe, relatively clean 
alternative, and the streets were spared hip-deep manure. And just as the 
automobile saved us from the problems of horse-drawn carriages, a new 
technological innovation will arise to save us from automobiles.

The problem with the story is that it’s not true. Horses were employed for 
commercial transport, but people rode in electric streetcars and disliked 
sharing the roads with the new, intrusive, privately owned vehicles. It took 
half a century of public relations, lobbying, and urban replanning to get 
people to drive automobiles. Plus, we now understand that if cars did make the 
streets cleaner in some respects, it was only by externalizing the costs of 
environmental damage and the bloody struggle to secure oil reserves.

Too many scientists—often funded by growth-obsessed corporations—exalt an 
entirely quantified understanding of social progress. They measure improvement 
as a function of life expectancy or reduction in the number of violent deaths. 
Those are great improvements on their own, but they give false cover for the 
crimes of modern capitalism—as if the relative peace and longevity enjoyed by 
some inhabitants of the West were proof of the superiority of its model and the 
unquestionable benefit of pursuing growth.

These arguments never acknowledge the outsourced slavery, toxic dumping, or 
geopolitical strife on which this same model depends. So while one can pluck a 
reassuring statistic to support the notion that the world has grown less 
violent— such as the decreasing probability of an American soldier dying on the 
battle field—we also live with continual military conflict, terrorism, 
cyber-attacks, covert war, drone strikes, state- sanctioned rape, and millions 
of refugees. Isn’t starving a people and destroying their topsoil, or 
imprisoning a nation’s young black men, a form of violence?

Capitalism no more reduced violence than automobiles saved us from manure- 
filled cities. We may be less likely to be assaulted randomly in the street 
than we were in medieval times, but that doesn’t mean humanity is less violent, 
or that the blind pursuit of continued economic growth and technological 
progress is consonant with the increase of human welfare—no matter how well 
such proclamations do on the business best- seller lists or speaking circuit. 
(Businesspeople don’t want to pay to be told that they’re making things worse.)

So with the blessings of much of the science industry and its collaborating 
futurists, corporations press on, accelerating civilization under the false 
premise that because things are looking better for the wealthiest 
beneficiaries, they must be better for everyone. Progress is good, they say. 
Any potential impediment to the frictionless ascent of technological and 
economic scale— such as the cost of labor, the limits of a particular market, 
the constraints of the planet, ethical misgivings, or human frailty— must be 
eliminated.

The models would all work if only there weren’t people in the way. That’s why 
capitalism’s true believers are seeking some- one or, better, something to do 
their bidding with greater intelligence and less empathy than humans.


Excerpted with permission from Team Human by Douglas Rushkoff, Copyright © 2019 
by W. W. Norton & Company.

Donating = Changing Economics. And Changing the World.

Evonomics is free, it’s a labor of love, and it's an expense. We spend hundreds 
of hours and lots of dollars each month creating, curating, and promoting 
content that drives the next evolution of economics. If you're like us — if you 
think there’s a key leverage point here for making the world a better place — 
please consider donating. We’ll use your donation to deliver even more 
game-changing content, and to spread the word about that content to influential 
thinkers far and wide.

MONTHLY DONATION 
$3 / month
$7 / month
$10 / month
$25 / month

ONE-TIME DONATION 
You can also become a one-time patron with a single donation in any amount. 
If you liked this article, you'll also like these other Evonomics articles...


How the Postal System and the Printing Press Transformed European Markets
What Monopolies and King Kong Have in Common
Nobel Economist Says Inequality is Destroying Democratic Capitalism
Can We Fix Capitalism in the Age of Trump and Brexit?

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].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/RadicalCentrism/F918294F-D166-4372-B834-BE47C88E0D52%40radicalcentrism.org.

Reply via email to