Idler said:
no, you misunderstood.
i didnt say that money exists FOR these reasons.
My misunderstanding...sorry.
it continues to exist because people THINK that it IS the perfect system for encouraging efficient production, and that it DOES exist for the betterment of all.
and if you compare it to a hypothetical situation, involving no currency,
most people would agree this is true (relatively).
I don't think that people usually think of there being any alternatives. Asking about life without capitalism is often appears akin to asking about life without mitochondria.
for example, please explain how we could produce PCs, or the right amount of ball point pens or the little S shaped bits of metal in the back of bras,
without money.
when you explain the mechanics of some other, "better" system of production,
then we can discuss the inevitability of money.
Okay. Something like a gift economy would be easiest to conceptualize. First-off, I think that the economy would need involve more localized networks than we have now for this to be workable. First, all of the firms involved in turning rocks and petroleum into computers, for example, would need to communicate to one another about how many parts they need from one another. Firms in our economy do this. Next, the finalized computers would need be delivered to a depot where people and organizations who need computers get them. In sum, people freely produce and share the fruits of their labor.
Now, we need institutional mechanisms to calibrate production and consumption. An economic community would need to distribute information about which firms lack sufficient labor, failing to meet demand for their products. Conversely, firms who are too bloated, producing unused goods would need to inform other economic actors too. Individuals within this economic community would need to try to pick jobs that need more people. For particularly undesirable jobs, the community can decide to provide special rewards, like fewer working hours, access to greater consumption, etc. That, or undesirable jobs could be rationed out equally (such jobs tend not to require much training). Goods that remain scarce (in the coloquial sense, not the neoclassical economic sense) could be rationed.
All of this would need to be decided upon by the 'community', including social norms about consumption-levels, hours of work, etc. Free riders would need be 'kept in line' through completely diffuse, decentralized social pressure. People would also need to tolerate a certain level of free-riding, if they're going to be happy. To the extent that such social pressure is insufficient, this type of system would not work.
I see something like this developing only out of extremely protracted social revolution, involving struggles and transformations from numerous angles, through numerous tactics. There would need be fundamental cultural changes if this is to work. I also see some sort of 'transitional' period of market socialism as likely.
If there was something that much better,
why aren't there governments implementing it right now?
I believe that this is because:
1. Governments work primarily to benefit elite classes and internal bureaucrats.
2. Social revolution entails chaos, uncertainty, and suffering. People tend not to be willing to wage revolution unless they're pushed against a 'wall'.
3. The status-quo arrangement before us appears natural, making alternatives more counter-intuitive to think about and just plain less likely to occupy our minds.
Where would your teachers be? What would be the state of science, the arts, pretty much EVERYTHING? The people I'm going to school to learn from have been swinging a mattock for the last five years.
They'd be. . .teaching, researching, etc. the majority of their time, participating in some subsistence labor for the minority of their lives. This sounds fairer to me than assigning some talented individuals unskilled, rote work.
obyron said:
Isn't it a funny coincidence how, in every single country that's taken over by RADICAL socialists-- not your basically agreeable, European-style social democrats-- but truly radical socialists like what's being advocated here, the purges always follow?
This says more about autocratic leadership and the dynamics of government as such than it does about socialism itself.
ebola