Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta DEGROWTH MATTERS. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta DEGROWTH MATTERS. Mostrar todas as mensagens

sábado, 24 de março de 2012

Gus Speth : This is the moment of democratic possibility


How to build a new system that will deal with the many economic, environment and societal challenges we now face.

Pursuing reform within a system can help, but what is now desperately needed is transformative change in the system itself. To deal successfully with the many challenges we now face, we must complement attempts at reform with at least equal efforts aimed at transformative change to create a new operating system, one that routinely delivers good results for people and planet.

At the core of this new operating system must be a sustaining economy based on new economic thinking and driven forward by new politics. The purpose and goal of a sustaining economy is to provide broadly shared prosperity that meets human needs while preserving the earth's ecological integrity and resilience – in short, a flourishing people and a flourishing nature. That is the paradigm shift we must now seek.

I believe this paradigm shift in the nature and operation of America’s political economy can be best approached through a series of interacting, mutually reinforcing transformations – transformations that attack and undermine the key motivational structures of the current system. Transformations that replace these old structures with new arrangements needed for a sustaining economy and a successful democracy.

  • The following transformations hold the key to moving to a new political economy. Consider each as a transition from today to tomorrow:
  • Economic growth: from growth fetish to post-growth society, from mere GDP growth to growth in human welfare and democratically determined priorities.
  • The market: from near laissez-faire to powerful market governance in the public interest.
  • The corporation: from shareholder primacy to stakeholder primacy, from one ownership and motivation model to new business models and the democratization of capital.
  • Money and finance: from Wall Street to Main Street, from money created through bank debt to money created by government.
  • Social conditions: from economic insecurity to security, from vast inequities to fundamental fairness.
  • Indicators: from GDP (‘grossly distorted picture’) to accurate measures of social and environmental health and quality of life.
  • Consumerism: from consumerism and affluenza to sufficiency and mindful consumption, from more to enough.
  • Communities: from runaway enterprise and throwaway communities to vital local economies, from social rootlessness to rootedness and solidarity.
  • Dominant cultural values: from having to being, from getting to giving, from richer to better, from separate to connected, from apart from nature to part of nature, from transcendent to interdependent, from today to tomorrow.
  • Politics: from weak democracy to strong, from creeping corporatocracy and plutocracy to true popular sovereignty.
  • Foreign policy and the military: from American exceptionalism to America as a normal nation, from hard power to soft, from military prowess to real security.

We know that systemic, transformative change along these dimensions will require a great struggle, and it will not come quickly. The new values, priorities, policies, and institutions that would constitute a new political economy capable of regularly delivering good results are not at hand and won’t be for many years.

The truth is we are still in the design stage of building a new operating system. That system won’t be yesterday's socialism, by the way, but it won’t be today's American capitalism either.

This blog is excerpted from "America the Possible: A Manifesto, Part I" by Gus Speth, published by Orion Magazine.

Source: http://www.neweconomics.org/blog/2012/03/23/this-is-the-moment-of-democratic-possibility

sábado, 17 de março de 2012

Infographic: How Long Will It Last?

http://intercontinentalcry.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/axHu1.jpg
Infographic by Armin Reller of the University of Augsburg and Tom Graedel of Yale University.

What happens when the world's supply of zinc runs out, followed by gold, copper, chromium, platinum, nickle and lead?

This 2009 infographic shows the consumption rate of these and other minerals and how much time before those supplies run out. It also shows how long those same minerals would last if the world’s per capita consumption rate was just half that of the United States.

This environmental infographic shows consumption levels of various materials and relative timelines until we run out of them. It also shows the impact of American consumption, in particular, and makes the point by showing the even worse spot we’d be in if the world’s per capita consumption rate was just half that of the United States.

Source: http://intercontinentalcry.org/infographic-how-long-will-it-last/

terça-feira, 22 de novembro de 2011

Where is future growth in GDP going to come from? THE GROWTH CONUNDRUM

Most forecasts for the world economy, world energy supply and demand, climate change and the economy and so on assume that economic growth will march on.  The Stern report on climate change and the economy said it would “not be unreasonable” to assume the world economy will grow by 2% to 3% annually this century, based on historical growth.  So, what does this growth look like?

The first graph at the top of the page shows the projection of Gross World Product to 2100 at 2% or 3% annual growth, with 2009 indicated.  The second graph shows world ecological footprint: we started using up the biocapacity of the planet faster than it can regenerate by the 1980s. But footprint and GDP (or GWP) correlate very closely: the bigger GDP is, the more energy and material we put through the economy - for food, transportation, the amenities of home and workplace, basically everything we consume.  We’re getting more efficient, but not fast enough.

The top graph to the right shows growth in GDP up to 2009 - a sharply rising exponential growth curve.  In the past 50 years, growth in GWP has averaged about 4% per year.  The last graph shows what this growth has done to the biosphere and how clearly economic growth correlates with exponential increase in human use of natural resources - paper consumption, fish consumption, use of freshwater and soil resources, extinction of species, fertilizer use, and so on (thank you Gus Speth!!). 

So, if the economy is going to go from $61 trillion in GWP in 2009 to somewhere between $450 and $1100 trillion in GWP in 2100, what kind of energy and material throughput are we talking about?  What kind of ecological footprint, if we are already overconsuming the Earth by 20%?  For anyone who thinks runaway banks and credit derivative swaps are the major problem facing the world (and that kind of financial shenaniganism is a HUGE problem, yes), take a close look at these graphs.  They tell the story of the real long-term crisis we are facing.

For a PDF with these graphs, click here:  Growth presentation PDF.pdf

terça-feira, 1 de novembro de 2011

Invitation to the International Conference on Degrowth in the Americas, Montreal 2012

http://montreal.degrowth.org/
Dear friends,

We are pleased to invite proposals for workshops, panels, papers, posters, artistic presentations, symposia and special sessions for the Montreal International Conference on Degrowth in the Americas from May 13-19, 2012.

A voice is rising among those who are deeply concerned with global environmental degradation and escalating poverty and inequality. A root of the problem lies in an unrelenting priority given to economic growth. Degrowth is a new social and economic paradigm that challenges the growth–driven economic model on which existing policies are based. To build on the emergent international discussion on degrowth, the Montreal International Conference on Degrowth in the Americas will articulate the needs and aspirations of the Americas for a post-growth, more equitable and better world.

Nineteen years after the Earth Summit in Rio the growth-driven “sustainable development discourse” has failed. It has not offered a convincing solution to one of the most dramatic crises in history: how to avert ecological collapse while enhancing social justice. A degrowth perspective will help us visualize and build towards a post-growth world.

Drawing from previous degrowth conferences in Paris and Barcelona, the Montreal conference, a co-operative effort of four Montreal Universities, will focus on the particular situations and dynamics of the Americas. What does degrowth mean for our Hemisphere with its rich geographical, cultural, social and economic diversity? How can degrowth models apply to different contexts from the Arctic to Tierra del Fuego? What does degrowth mean for the indigenous peoples of the Americas and their aspirations for their lands and peoples?

In the spirit of seeking alternative societies, the conference will bring together a diversity of social actors to share a deeper understanding of the degrowth paradigm, and build networks and relationships over six days. It will also include a convivial degrowth fair, with exhibits, art/video/cultural events, opportunities for international participants to exchange beyond that possible in most formal academic conferences. Tours and interaction with Montreal, Quebec and regional social movements and local, alternative food, housing and cooperative experiences are planned. Every effort is being made to reduce the ecological footprint of the event and to maximize its benefits in relation to the ecological and carbon impacts of traditional travel and research activities. Trilingual translation will be available for larger sessions and a cadre of volunteer personal translators for French, Spanish and English speakers is being recruited.

For more information, please visit our website at: http://montreal.degrowth.org/

Our proposal guidelines can be viewed at: http://montreal.degrowth.org/downloads/call_for_proposals.pdf
Our proposal submission form can be viewed at: http://montreal.degrowth.org/call_form.html

We look forward to your participation.

Yves-Marie Abraham, HEC, Université de Montréal
Julie Anne Ames, McGill University
Peter G Brown, McGill University
Chantal Forgues, David O’Brien Centre for Sustainable Enterprise, Concordia University
Nicolas Kosoy, McGill University
Olga Navarro-Flores, UQAM
Hervé Phillipe, Université de Montréal
François Schneider, Research & Degrowth, Autonomous University of Barcelona
Shannon Scott, McGill School of Environment, McGill University
Paul Shrivastava, David O’Brien Centre for Sustainable Enterprise, Concordia University
Bob Thomson, Ottawa

Source: http://peakoil.com/generalideas/invitation-to-the-international-conference-on-degrowth-in-the-americas-montreal-2012/

terça-feira, 6 de setembro de 2011

Life After Growth - Economics for Everyone



Directed, Written, Shot, and Edited by Leah Temper and Claudia Medina

IT'S TIME TO RECLAIM THE ECONOMY

The economic crash of 2008 revealed not only the frailty and vulnerability of the economic system, it also showed the false basis that the growth economy is built on – the financial bubble grows bigger and crashes bigger, but we don't seem to be getting any happier. To the contrary, we suffer from greater job insecurity and environmental chaos threatens.

The prescription from the mainstream economists is more growth – but is this just taking more of what ails us?

Has growth become uneconomic?

Is there another way?

This film is part of an ongoing project to document the rise of a new movement – calling not for more economic growth, but LESS. The degrowth movement, or "mouvement por le decroissance", argues that through a voluntary reduction of the economy we can work less, consume less and live better, fuller lives.

Many have been pointing out that our current economic system is leading us to an environmental
and social catastrophe. "Life After Growth" begins to point to the people and communities who are looking for ways out. These are the pioneers who are rethinking the role of economics in our lives, and are engaging in different types of economic activity, right now.

The D word is still taboo in many circles – politicians are loath to go against the growth orthodoxy that our society is based on. But everywhere people are engaging in degrowth type activity - the beginning of a wave that is laying the groundwork for a post-capitalist future...

Because it's not the size of the economy that counts, it's how you use it!

contact: lifeaftergrowth@gmail.com

This film was made with the support of the Fundació Autònoma Solidària,
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

domingo, 4 de setembro de 2011

The Economics of Enough


http://www.thersa.org/events/video

Economist Diane Coyle proposes first steps towards creating a sustainable economy - but can we have enough to be happy without cheating the future?

GROWTH FETISH by CLIVE HAMILTON



At last a coherent new set of ideas for critics of economic rationalism and globalization. Hamilton argues that an obsession with economic growth lies at the heart of our current political, social and environmental ills - and offers a thought-provoking alternative.
'Right on target, and badly needed' Noam Chomsky

'Every now and then a book that is perfect in timing and tone hits my desk. Growth Fetish is that book. It is powerful and potentially transformative.' Rev. Tim Costello

'This book reveals the undelivered reality of economic growth and the hollow mantras of the Third Way. Growth Fetish provides a much needed road map to a new politics in a post-growth world.' Senator Natasha Stott Despoja

For decades our political leaders and opinion makers have touted higher incomes as the way to a better future. Economic growth means better lives for us all.

But after many years of sustained economic growth and increased personal incomes we must confront an awful fact: we aren't any happier. This is the great contradiction of modern politics.

In this provocative new book, Clive Hamilton argues that, far from being the answer to our problems, growth fetishism and the marketing society lie at the heart of our social ills. They have corrupted our social priorities and political structures, and have created a profound sense of alienation among young and old.

Growth Fetish is the first serious attempt at a politics of change for rich countries dominated by the sicknesses of affluence, where the real yearning is not for more money but for authentic identity, and where the future lies in a new relationship with the natural environment.

quinta-feira, 25 de agosto de 2011

New Dream Mini-Views: Visualizing a Plenitude Economy



This fun animation provides a vision of what a post-consumer society could look like, with people working fewer hours and pursuing re-skilling, homesteading, and small-scale enterprises that can help reduce the overall size and impact of the consumer economy. Narrated by economist and best-selling author Juliet Schor (julietschor.org).

sábado, 11 de junho de 2011

12 lines of flight for just degrowth


Now, our stirring paper for the debate of Attac Germany about degrowth is available in English – here.

1.) Our goal: Social rights – global and concrete

What is our goal in criticising growth, and why do we think it necessary in principle to sketch lines of flight for a degrowth economy at this juncture? Our goal is to establish social rights globally, such that a good life is possible for everybody. Our alternative of a just degrowth economy is not simply focused on an abstract „survival of humanity“ or „saving nature,“ as are many varieties of growth criticism. This kind of perspective is in danger of obscuring the concrete social rights of individuals and groups. Instead, it aims at meeting the demand for social justice and equality in the here and now, and in the future. Just as in the past when the English farmers were driven from the commons by the landed aristocracy, the social question cannot be considered separately from the ecological – despite the fact that this has been done frequently in the past. After a period in which transnational corporations have seized more and more natural resources, and in view of the worldwide escalation of the biocrisis (that is: the climate crisis, peak oil, loss of biodiversity, land degradation, etc.), which dramatically threatens the survival of hundreds of millions of people, (global) justice can only mean socio-ecological justice. A central coordinate pointing in that direction is the just degrowth economy.

2.) Nature is limited and resistant

Unlimited growth on a finite planet is impossible. Neoclassical economists block out the existence of nature and its resistance. Matter, space and time, as dimensions of what we call reality, do not appear in their textbooks. Nature appears only in the form of resources, which when scarce can be substituted for by the increased investment of capital. Yet production and reproduction are fundamentally based on nature: the planet provides services (clean air, farmland, etc.), and raw materials are extracted from it and transformed. Nature has limits, and they can only be insufficiently compensated for by capital. Of course, it would be possible to calculate the costs of using artificial pollination machines for an orchard in California, but when there are no more bees, then we are in serious trouble.
The global biocrisis, above all the climate crisis, and the fact that the production peak of petroleum (Peak Oil) will soon be reached, place external limits on growth. The connection between the exploitation of highly concentrated fossil energy sources and the capitalist system of growth makes Peak Oil (prognoses range from 2005 to 2020) an especially critical phenomenon – the question is simply how to respond: chaotically and violently, or with democratic planning and cooperation. Deadly weather extremes and resource wars cast longs shadows ahead. This will not improve conditions for social struggles worldwide.

3.) Decoupling is not possible

The past few years have seen a renaissance in concepts of „sustainable“ or „green“ growth, a Green New Deal and other variations of „green“ capitalism. Think tanks develop new concepts, with which politicians try to create new majorities. Common to all of these programmatic approaches is the notion that a comprehensive decoupling of economic growth from resource use and environmental destruction is possible. Technological innovations, renewable energies, increases in resource-use efficiency and the “green” service sector society – the proclaimed goals of dematerialized growth – would make it possible for the gross domestic product to continue to grow, while at the same time less and less fossil energy and other limited resources are used. This kind of decoupling – to the absolute degree that would be necessary – is an illusion. The necessity for reducing CO2 emissions in the advanced industrial countries of the North, while simultaneously maintaining their economic growth, necessitates increases in resource efficiency and technological developments that are beyond what is technically and politically possible. This is true also in view of the manner in which our economy functions, the historical evidence of the falling rate of innovation and the failure of decoupling strategies up until now.[1] Hence, growing out of the biocrisis is not a viable option. Moreover, shrinking the economy to a healthy level in the North is also necessary because the poorer regions in the South must be given options for development and growth in the mid-term future.

4.) „Leur récession n’est pas notre décroissance!“

…was a slogan during the protests against the crisis in 2009 in France („Their recession is not our degrowth!“). Because one thing is clear: Our idea of a degrowth economy is not to shrink the economies within the existing economic and social structures and distributory relations – this would lead to massive social cutbacks, poverty and other symptoms of capitalist crisis, such as we are currently experiencing. Within the existing growth-dependent structures, shrinking the economy means that increases in productivity cannot be compensated for by growth, and consequently unemployment increases rapidly. Demand decreases, the crisis intensifies, the recession is accompanied by deflation. At the same time publicly administered tax revenues decrease, social security systems come under pressure, and debt explodes. Both lead to a dangerous spiral of recession and pauperisation. In growth-dependent capitalism the following holds: shrinkage = recession = social crisis.

5.) …and your austerity is not our degrowth!

The transformation to a just degrowth economy demands struggling for a new economic grammar, one that would make social justice and a good life for people all over the world possible in the first place. It would lead consequently to a reduction of the GDP. However, focusing solely on the imperative to shrink is reductionist and dangerous. This is made evident by neo-liberal and conservative or neo-feudalistic varieties of growth criticism, especially in the Federal Republic of Germany, which, with their ecologically motivated arguments join the reactionary chorus of: „We have lived beyond our means,“ or: „We have to tighten our belts,“ and turn criticism of growth into a lever for justifying austerity and cuts in social services.[2] In opposition to this, the concept of a solidarity-based degrowth economy of décroissance aims at a democratically negotiated reduction of production and consumption in order to enable social rights for everyone, globally, now and in the future.

6.) There is no good growth, only a good life!

Degrowth is not aimed at abstract and utopian speculation about a society that emerges after capitalism, rather it aims at recognizing often unseen socio-economic and ecological dynamics, and the corresponding reorientation of emancipatory strategies. Governments and transnational corporations are opposed to this. Yet the same is true of those who agitate against the current crisis with the slogan „No cuts, more growth“, like the bureaucrats of the European Federation of Trade Unions. Despite the necessity for pushing back against social cuts, they fall into the illusion that social problems can be solved by more growth. For decades the growth rates of the industrial countries have been declining, a process which has its causes not only in the limits to growth (increasing cost of resources, destruction of the climate, etc.), but also in the internal barriers of capitalistic development (relative saturation of demand). Growth alone has not been enough to alleviate structural unemployment effectively (jobless growth) for a long time; nor does growth increase public welfare; and the rising tide does not lift all boats.[3] Peak Oil is also a serious challenge to the growth strategies of the traditional left. Wars fought to secure raw materials, catastrophic deep-sea drilling and millions of refugees are an integral part of the fossilistic growth model. Growth is opposed to the goal of global social rights. Because what grows are abstract exchange values and accumulation opportunities for the few, which make a good life for everyone impossible.

7.) Goodbye, Keynes – good morning Keynes and beyond…

Keynesian policy-making failed in the 1970/80s when it was no longer able to satisfy the requirements for returns on capital. In short: the Keynesian growth model reached its limits. The answer was the neo-liberal counter-revolution, as Milton Friedman, its mastermind, called it. In the meantime, the neo-liberal growth model of finance capitalism is also in a crisis. In view of the failure of Keynesianism – above all in the global context – and the apparent ecological limits, hopes for a new Keynesian phase, an eco-Keynesian growth program beyond neo-liberal finance-market capitalism, miss the mark. Many concepts discussed by the emancipatory Left – even Keynesian – are still important, especially those aimed at reducing social injustice and exploitation: radical redistribution, shortening of working hours, economic democracy and control of capital and investment. It is necessary to re-conceptualize these in connection with ideas that go further, such as (re)appropriating common goods, deglobalisation, new forms of work, food sovereignty[4] and energy democracy, under the guiding principles of an economy that does not grow, but shrinks to a point of stabilisation. So it is necessary to discover the hidden Keynes, the theoretician of stagnation, who sketched a society freed from the compulsion to work and the profit motive. In the end we have to pass through and go beyond Keynes, in order to arrive at our just degrowth economy.

8.) Reduce production, shorten working hours, redistribute wealth, regulate investment

Degrowth means a break with the superficial, positive-sum game logic of distributory policy making and the illusion of an economy based on scarcity, one in which there is only redistribution when the economy grows. Not only has „trickle-down“ failed radically; growth actually contributes to the production of underdevelopment and the increasing inequality of distribution. Yet there is enough for all. Wealth must be distributed equitably, and not grow further. For this to happen, we not only need a minimum income, but also a maximum income, as the French décroissance movement demands.
Degrowth also says goodbye to the illusion of a growth-based full-employment society. For a long time, the real rates of growth have not been sufficient to integrate the work force, set free by increases in productivity and commoditisation, back into the labour market. The alternative to making large sections of society poorer and „obsolete“ is to shorten the working hours for everyone. In addition, reducing the absolute number of hours performed in wage-labour is actually necessary for a long-term reduction of the GNP. 20 hours are enough – for a start![5] And don’t forget: there is a life beyond working for wages, in which – as feminist economists always stress – much of the necessary work (re)producing society is performed. And this also has to be distributed – to everyone.
The reduction of working hours is sand in the gears of the growth economy and it creates necessary strategic latitude, but that alone is not enough. In the end, additional massive „rationalisation“ would be the answer of corporations, and their imperative to make profits, to grow, would not be dislodged. New forms of demonetised transaction, a just solidarity-economy and the cultivation/management of commons are crucial. At the same time it is necessary to intervene in the actually existing finance capitalism, to control investment democratically and turn it around – away from fossil high-growth sectors to the „care economy“, use-value oriented grass-roots services and social-ecological reorganisation. And instead of servicing (public) debt, we struggle for debt cancellation. Drop the debt! [6]
 
9.) Beyond capitalism 


All those who seriously attempt to go beyond a criticism of growth and strive for degrowing the economy face enormous challenges, because it is a matter of fundamental social transformation, one which takes hold at the roots. Plausible technocratic concepts for a degrowth economy, as well as exemplary islands of projects of a solidarity-based economy are essential – but they are not enough if the accumulation process of capitalism continues. Growth is driven by the blind self-realisation of capital: Money is invested in production in order to earn more money, which requires an increase in the production of value. So degrowth means that the self-valorisation opportunities of capital decrease and the fictitious asset claims, inflated by the financial markets, cannot be realised. In addition, in order to arrive at a just and ecological economy, many production facilities – above all in the fossil sectors – must be shut down in the course of a transformation to a degrowth economy (disinvestment). Both mean the destruction of capital. There is no way around this central core of political economy if global social rights are to be realised, and thus no way around the question of power. The problem: the neo-liberal project of globalisation, with its liberalisation of markets (WTO, IMF), privatisation, de-regulation and attacks on collective social agents, has increased the power of transnationally active capital enormously. FAQ: what constellation of social agents, with what interests, means and strategies has the will and ability to establish a just degrowth economy and the necessary de-commodification and de-monetisation of the (re)production sectors?


10.) Buen vivir beyond tradition and modernity


The idea of eternal growth, tied to the idea of homo economicus, is an integral component of the concept of modernity. It is time to abandon this notion here and now. But the good news is: „We never were modern!“, as Bruno Latour discovered and Donna Haraway confirmed.[7] Nor are we the „dromomaniacs“ (speed fanatics) as we have been called by the French urbanist Paul Virilio.[8] But even if we abandon growth – farewell, farewell! – we will continue to claim the modern concepts of human rights and democracy, which have been the fruits of struggles for emancipation. Degrowth does not mean abandoning the idea of the possibility for progress – instead it means liberating the idea of progress from the belief in piling up goods and economic growth. Thus, degrowth does not mean returning to tradition, to the stone age, or giving in to an anything-goes post-modernism. Degrowth takes seriously the post-colonial situation and the multi-polar constellation caused by the ascendancy of newly industrialising countries – and thus the question of global justice and equality. The concrete utopia of the good life (buen vivir) in an egalitarian society without growth constitutes a new point of orientation beyond tradition and modernity. The idea of a just degrowth economy reopens the horizon of opportunity beyond the dominance of ruling economic conceptions and imperatives. It is a matter of de-colonizing the imagination, of the de-mystification of fetishised conceptions such as economic growth, progress, wage labour, efficiency and GNP. Preguntando caminamos…

11.) Trans-communalism instead of post-democracy


Democracy has been suffering severe attacks through the neo-liberal rollbacks since the 1970/80s. At the latest with the emergency conditions of the world economic crisis and the massive bailout packages put together overnight for the banks we have arrived at a post-democracy. The social impact of the crisis and the social consequences of the biocrisis increase the pressure on democratic structures. Therefore, a just degrowth economy requires new democratic institutions, a reconstitution of local and national democracy. European democracy and a global democracy are still a long way off. Therefore the restructuring of production aims for deglobalisation, a new articulation of the local level with the national and global on the basis of new democratic procedures.[9] Among these are the control of financial markets, and especially investments. We will not fall into the trap of shortsighted localism. Nor that of racist chauvinism in view of the streams of migrants and the projected nine billion people living on this planet. Instead, it is necessary to invent democratic trans-communal strategies.

12.) The horizon of degrowth

Defensive battles against the politics of austerity will impact the second phase of the crisis, which began in the Euro zone. These struggles against social cuts are and will continue to be defensive. An offensive project that actually points beyond (neo-liberal, finance-market driven) capitalism is not yet evident. But we need a new horizon in order to focus our energies. One of the guiding points (directions) which mark this new horizon is the (solidarity-based) degrowth economy.
The altermondialiste or „global justice“ movements (comprising trade unions, political groups, networks and organisations) with their anti-neo-liberal position played an important part in reconstituting the social question after the long years of the neo-liberal „pensé unique“ of the 90s. Around 2007/08 – symbolized by the founding of Climate Justice Now! at the climate summit in Bali, the first degrowth conference in Paris, and most of all by the indigenous movements at the World Social Forum in Belem[10], etc. – the reconstitution of the field of critical political ecology, environmental and climate justice began.
It appears imperative to us that ecological justice becomes an integral component of a potential second cycle of the „global justice“ movement. The degrowth horizon links the social and ecological questions (of distribution), it connects micro-practices with macro-economic concepts and joins trans-communally the local with the national and the global level. The just degrowth economy is a perspective for an offensive movement that connects the old and the completely new in a coming horizon.
(Translated from German by Larry Swingle, Coorditrad, with additions from Michelle Wenderlich)

[1] Cf. Sustainable Development Commission (2009), Prosperity without growth?, http://www.sd-commission.org.uk/pages/redefining-prosperity.html; NEF (2010), Growth Isn’t Possible, http://www.neweconomics.org/publications/growth-isnt-possible.
[2] Cf. www.denkwerkzukunft.de/index.php/englishdocuments Cf. also the ideas of Zac Goldsmith, a conservative representative in the House of Commons, „The Constant Economy.“
[3] This saying can be traced back originally to J.F. Kennedy, and it claims that growth raises the income of the poorest. Cf. for example, the speech by the managing director of the IMF, Rodrigo de Rato, A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats: How Europe, by Promoting Growth, Can Help Itself and Help the World, http://www.imf.org/external/np/speeches/2006/052206.htm; and the report by NEF (2006), Growth Isn’t Working, http://www.neweconomics.org/publications/growth-isn%E2%80%99t-working.
[4] Cf. http://viacampesina.org.
[5] Cf. www.neweconomics.org/publications/21-hours.
[6] Cf. www.cadtm.org
[7] Bruno Latour (2008), We Have Never Been Modern. Attempt at a Symmetrical Anthropology, Harvard University Press; Donna Haraway (1991), Simians, Cyborgs, and Women. The Reinvention of Nature, Routledge, New York.
[8] Paul Virilio (1986), Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology, Autonomedia.
[9] Walden Bello (2002), Deglobalisation: Ideas for a new world economy, Zed Books.
[10] Cf. www.movimientos.org/fsm2009.

Postwachstum – Degrowth – Décroissance

Postwachstum – 12 Fluchtlinien einer solidarischen Ökonomie jenseits des Wachstums – im Internet oder als PDF

12 lines of flight for just degrowth – online or as PDF

Décroissance – 12 lignes de fuite pour une économie solidaire au-delà de la croissance – online ou comme PDF

terça-feira, 22 de fevereiro de 2011

Postwachstum in Bewegung: 12 lines of flight for just degrowth

By Alexis Passadakis

Now, our stirring paper for the debate of Attac Germany about degrowth is available in English here.

1.) Our goal: Social rights – global and concrete

What is our goal in criticising growth, and why do we think it necessary in principle to sketch lines of flight for a degrowth economy at this juncture? Our goal is to establish social rights globally, such that a good life is possible for everybody. Our alternative of a just degrowth economy is not simply focused on an abstract „survival of humanity“ or „saving nature,“ as are many varieties of growth criticism. This kind of perspective is in danger of obscuring the concrete social rights of individuals and groups. Instead, it aims at meeting the demand for social justice and equality in the here and now, and in the future. Just as in the past when the English farmers were driven from the commons by the landed aristocracy, the social question cannot be considered separately from the ecological – despite the fact that this has been done frequently in the past. After a period in which transnational corporations have seized more and more natural resources, and in view of the worldwide escalation of the biocrisis (that is: the climate crisis, peak oil, loss of biodiversity, land degradation, etc.), which dramatically threatens the survival of hundreds of millions of people, (global) justice can only mean socio-ecological justice. A central coordinate pointing in that direction is the just degrowth economy.

2.) Nature is limited and resistant

Unlimited growth on a finite planet is impossible. Neoclassical economists block out the existence of nature and its resistance. Matter, space and time, as dimensions of what we call reality, do not appear in their textbooks. Nature appears only in the form of resources, which when scarce can be substituted for by the increased investment of capital. Yet production and reproduction are fundamentally based on nature: the planet provides services (clean air, farmland, etc.), and raw materials are extracted from it and transformed. Nature has limits, and they can only be insufficiently compensated for by capital. Of course, it would be possible to calculate the costs of using artificial pollination machines for an orchard in California, but when there are no more bees, then we are in serious trouble.

The global biocrisis, above all the climate crisis, and the fact that the production peak of petroleum (Peak Oil) will soon be reached, place external limits on growth. The connection between the exploitation of highly concentrated fossil energy sources and the capitalist system of growth makes Peak Oil (prognoses range from 2005 to 2020) an especially critical phenomenon – the question is simply how to respond: chaotically and violently, or with democratic planning and cooperation. Deadly weather extremes and resource wars cast longs shadows ahead. This will not improve conditions for social struggles worldwide.

3.) Decoupling is not possible

The past few years have seen a renaissance in concepts of „sustainable“ or „green“ growth, a Green New Deal and other variations of „green“ capitalism. Think tanks develop new concepts, with which politicians try to create new majorities. Common to all of these programmatic approaches is the notion that a comprehensive decoupling of economic growth from resource use and environmental destruction is possible. Technological innovations, renewable energies, increases in resource-use efficiency and the “green” service sector society – the proclaimed goals of dematerialized growth – would make it possible for the gross domestic product to continue to grow, while at the same time less and less fossil energy and other limited resources are used. This kind of decoupling – to the absolute degree that would be necessary – is an illusion. The necessity for reducing CO2 emissions in the advanced industrial countries of the North, while simultaneously maintaining their economic growth, necessitates increases in resource efficiency and technological developments that are beyond what is technically and politically possible. This is true also in view of the manner in which our economy functions, the historical evidence of the falling rate of innovation and the failure of decoupling strategies up until now.[1] Hence, growing out of the biocrisis is not a viable option. Moreover, shrinking the economy to a healthy level in the North is also necessary because the poorer regions in the South must be given options for development and growth in the mid-term future.

4.) „Leur récession n’est pas notre décroissance!“

…was a slogan during the protests against the crisis in 2009 in France („Their recession is not our degrowth!“). Because one thing is clear: Our idea of a degrowth economy is not to shrink the economies within the existing economic and social structures and distributory relations – this would lead to massive social cutbacks, poverty and other symptoms of capitalist crisis, such as we are currently experiencing. Within the existing growth-dependent structures, shrinking the economy means that increases in productivity cannot be compensated for by growth, and consequently unemployment increases rapidly. Demand decreases, the crisis intensifies, the recession is accompanied by deflation. At the same time publicly administered tax revenues decrease, social security systems come under pressure, and debt explodes. Both lead to a dangerous spiral of recession and pauperisation. In growth-dependent capitalism the following holds: shrinkage = recession = social crisis.

5.) …and your austerity is not our degrowth!

The transformation to a just degrowth economy demands struggling for a new economic grammar, one that would make social justice and a good life for people all over the world possible in the first place. It would lead consequently to a reduction of the GDP. However, focusing solely on the imperative to shrink is reductionist and dangerous. This is made evident by neo-liberal and conservative or neo-feudalistic varieties of growth criticism, especially in the Federal Republic of Germany, which, with their ecologically motivated arguments join the reactionary chorus of: „We have lived beyond our means,“ or: „We have to tighten our belts,“ and turn criticism of growth into a lever for justifying austerity and cuts in social services.[2] In opposition to this, the concept of a solidarity-based degrowth economy of décroissance aims at a democratically negotiated reduction of production and consumption in order to enable social rights for everyone, globally, now and in the future.

6.) There is no good growth, only a good life!

Degrowth is not aimed at abstract and utopian speculation about a society that emerges after capitalism, rather it aims at recognizing often unseen socio-economic and ecological dynamics, and the corresponding reorientation of emancipatory strategies. Governments and transnational corporations are opposed to this. Yet the same is true of those who agitate against the current crisis with the slogan „No cuts, more growth“, like the bureaucrats of the European Federation of Trade Unions. Despite the necessity for pushing back against social cuts, they fall into the illusion that social problems can be solved by more growth. For decades the growth rates of the industrial countries have been declining, a process which has its causes not only in the limits to growth (increasing cost of resources, destruction of the climate, etc.), but also in the internal barriers of capitalistic development (relative saturation of demand). Growth alone has not been enough to alleviate structural unemployment effectively (jobless growth) for a long time; nor does growth increase public welfare; and the rising tide does not lift all boats.[3] Peak Oil is also a serious challenge to the growth strategies of the traditional left. Wars fought to secure raw materials, catastrophic deep-sea drilling and millions of refugees are an integral part of the fossilistic growth model. Growth is opposed to the goal of global social rights. Because what grows are abstract exchange values and accumulation opportunities for the few, which make a good life for everyone impossible.

7.) Goodbye, Keynes – good morning Keynes and beyond…

Keynesian policy-making failed in the 1970/80s when it was no longer able to satisfy the requirements for returns on capital. In short: the Keynesian growth model reached its limits. The answer was the neo-liberal counter-revolution, as Milton Friedman, its mastermind, called it. In the meantime, the neo-liberal growth model of finance capitalism is also in a crisis. In view of the failure of Keynesianism – above all in the global context – and the apparent ecological limits, hopes for a new Keynesian phase, an eco-Keynesian growth program beyond neo-liberal finance-market capitalism, miss the mark. Many concepts discussed by the emancipatory Left – even Keynesian – are still important, especially those aimed at reducing social injustice and exploitation: radical redistribution, shortening of working hours, economic democracy and control of capital and investment. It is necessary to re-conceptualize these in connection with ideas that go further, such as (re)appropriating common goods, deglobalisation, new forms of work, food sovereignty[4] and energy democracy, under the guiding principles of an economy that does not grow, but shrinks to a point of stabilisation. So it is necessary to discover the hidden Keynes, the theoretician of stagnation, who sketched a society freed from the compulsion to work and the profit motive. In the end we have to pass through and go beyond Keynes, in order to arrive at our just degrowth economy.

8.) Reduce production, shorten working hours, redistribute wealth, regulate investment

Degrowth means a break with the superficial, positive-sum game logic of distributory policy making and the illusion of an economy based on scarcity, one in which there is only redistribution when the economy grows. Not only has „trickle-down“ failed radically; growth actually contributes to the production of underdevelopment and the increasing inequality of distribution. Yet there is enough for all. Wealth must be distributed equitably, and not grow further. For this to happen, we not only need a minimum income, but also a maximum income, as the French décroissance movement demands.

Degrowth also says goodbye to the illusion of a growth-based full-employment society. For a long time, the real rates of growth have not been sufficient to integrate the work force, set free by increases in productivity and commoditisation, back into the labour market. The alternative to making large sections of society poorer and „obsolete“ is to shorten the working hours for everyone. In addition, reducing the absolute number of hours performed in wage-labour is actually necessary for a long-term reduction of the GNP. 20 hours are enough – for a start![5] And don’t forget: there is a life beyond working for wages, in which – as feminist economists always stress – much of the necessary work (re)producing society is performed. And this also has to be distributed – to everyone.

The reduction of working hours is sand in the gears of the growth economy and it creates necessary strategic latitude, but that alone is not enough. In the end, additional massive „rationalisation“ would be the answer of corporations, and their imperative to make profits, to grow, would not be dislodged. New forms of demonetised transaction, a just solidarity-economy and the cultivation/management of commons are crucial. At the same time it is necessary to intervene in the actually existing finance capitalism, to control investment democratically and turn it around – away from fossil high-growth sectors to the „care economy“, use-value oriented grass-roots services and social-ecological reorganisation. And instead of servicing (public) debt, we struggle for debt cancellation. Drop the debt! [6]

9.) Beyond capitalism

All those who seriously attempt to go beyond a criticism of growth and strive for degrowing the economy face enormous challenges, because it is a matter of fundamental social transformation, one which takes hold at the roots. Plausible technocratic concepts for a degrowth economy, as well as exemplary islands of projects of a solidarity-based economy are essential – but they are not enough if the accumulation process of capitalism continues. Growth is driven by the blind self-realisation of capital: Money is invested in production in order to earn more money, which requires an increase in the production of value. So degrowth means that the self-valorisation opportunities of capital decrease and the fictitious asset claims, inflated by the financial markets, cannot be realised. In addition, in order to arrive at a just and ecological economy, many production facilities – above all in the fossil sectors – must be shut down in the course of a transformation to a degrowth economy (disinvestment). Both mean the destruction of capital. There is no way around this central core of political economy if global social rights are to be realised, and thus no way around the question of power. The problem: the neo-liberal project of globalisation, with its liberalisation of markets (WTO, IMF), privatisation, de-regulation and attacks on collective social agents, has increased the power of transnationally active capital enormously. FAQ: what constellation of social agents, with what interests, means and strategies has the will and ability to establish a just degrowth economy and the necessary de-commodification and de-monetisation of the (re)production sectors?

10.) Buen vivir beyond tradition and modernity

The idea of eternal growth, tied to the idea of homo economicus, is an integral component of the concept of modernity. It is time to abandon this notion here and now. But the good news is: „We never were modern!“, as Bruno Latour discovered and Donna Haraway confirmed.[7] Nor are we the „dromomaniacs“ (speed fanatics) as we have been called by the French urbanist Paul Virilio.[8] But even if we abandon growth – farewell, farewell! – we will continue to claim the modern concepts of human rights and democracy, which have been the fruits of struggles for emancipation. Degrowth does not mean abandoning the idea of the possibility for progress – instead it means liberating the idea of progress from the belief in piling up goods and economic growth. Thus, degrowth does not mean returning to tradition, to the stone age, or giving in to an anything-goes post-modernism. Degrowth takes seriously the post-colonial situation and the multi-polar constellation caused by the ascendancy of newly industrialising countries – and thus the question of global justice and equality. The concrete utopia of the good life (buen vivir) in an egalitarian society without growth constitutes a new point of orientation beyond tradition and modernity. The idea of a just degrowth economy reopens the horizon of opportunity beyond the dominance of ruling economic conceptions and imperatives. It is a matter of de-colonizing the imagination, of the de-mystification of fetishised conceptions such as economic growth, progress, wage labour, efficiency and GNP. Preguntando caminamos…

11.) Trans-communalism instead of post-democracy

Democracy has been suffering severe attacks through the neo-liberal rollbacks since the 1970/80s. At the latest with the emergency conditions of the world economic crisis and the massive bailout packages put together overnight for the banks we have arrived at a post-democracy. The social impact of the crisis and the social consequences of the biocrisis increase the pressure on democratic structures. Therefore, a just degrowth economy requires new democratic institutions, a reconstitution of local and national democracy. European democracy and a global democracy are still a long way off. Therefore the restructuring of production aims for deglobalisation, a new articulation of the local level with the national and global on the basis of new democratic procedures.[9] Among these are the control of financial markets, and especially investments. We will not fall into the trap of shortsighted localism. Nor that of racist chauvinism in view of the streams of migrants and the projected nine billion people living on this planet. Instead, it is necessary to invent democratic trans-communal strategies.

12.) The horizon of degrowth

Defensive battles against the politics of austerity will impact the second phase of the crisis, which began in the Euro zone. These struggles against social cuts are and will continue to be defensive. An offensive project that actually points beyond (neo-liberal, finance-market driven) capitalism is not yet evident. But we need a new horizon in order to focus our energies. One of the guiding points (directions) which mark this new horizon is the (solidarity-based) degrowth economy.

The altermondialiste or „global justice“ movements (comprising trade unions, political groups, networks and organisations) with their anti-neo-liberal position played an important part in reconstituting the social question after the long years of the neo-liberal „pensé unique“ of the 90s. Around 2007/08 – symbolized by the founding of Climate Justice Now! at the climate summit in Bali, the first degrowth conference in Paris, and most of all by the indigenous movements at the World Social Forum in Belem[10], etc. – the reconstitution of the field of critical political ecology, environmental and climate justice began.

It appears imperative to us that ecological justice becomes an integral component of a potential second cycle of the „global justice“ movement. The degrowth horizon links the social and ecological questions (of distribution), it connects micro-practices with macro-economic concepts and joins trans-communally the local with the national and the global level. The just degrowth economy is a perspective for an offensive movement that connects the old and the completely new in a coming horizon.

(Translated from German by Larry Swingle, Coorditrad, with additions from Michelle Wenderlich)

[1] Cf. Sustainable Development Commission (2009), Prosperity without growth?, http://www.sd-commission.org.uk/pages/redefining-prosperity.html; NEF (2010), Growth Isn’t Possible, http://www.neweconomics.org/publications/growth-isnt-possible.

[2] Cf. www.denkwerkzukunft.de/index.php/englishdocuments Cf. also the ideas of Zac Goldsmith, a conservative representative in the House of Commons, „The Constant Economy.“

[3] This saying can be traced back originally to J.F. Kennedy, and it claims that growth raises the income of the poorest. Cf. for example, the speech by the managing director of the IMF, Rodrigo de Rato, A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats: How Europe, by Promoting Growth, Can Help Itself and Help the World, http://www.imf.org/external/np/speeches/2006/052206.htm; and the report by NEF (2006), Growth Isn’t Working, http://www.neweconomics.org/publications/growth-isn%E2%80%99t-working.

[4] Cf. http://viacampesina.org.

[5] Cf. www.neweconomics.org/publications/21-hours.

[6] Cf. www.cadtm.org

[7] Bruno Latour (2008), We Have Never Been Modern. Attempt at a Symmetrical Anthropology, Harvard University Press; Donna Haraway (1991), Simians, Cyborgs, and Women. The Reinvention of Nature, Routledge, New York.

[8] Paul Virilio (1986), Speed and Politics: An Essay on Dromology, Autonomedia.

[9] Walden Bello (2002), Deglobalisation: Ideas for a new world economy, Zed Books.

[10] Cf. www.movimientos.org/fsm2009.

sexta-feira, 14 de janeiro de 2011

Study Finds Energy Limits Global Economic Growth

Read the full article (PDF)

A study that relates global energy use to economic growth, published in the January issue of BioScience, finds strong correlations between these two measures both among countries and within countries over time. The research leads the study's authors to infer that energy use limits economic activity directly. They conclude that an "enormous" increase in energy supply will be required to meet the demands of projected world population growth and lift the developing world out of poverty without jeopardizing standards of living in most developed countries.

The study, which used a macroecological approach, was based on data from the International Energy Agency and the World Resources Institute. It was conducted by a team of ecologists led by James H. Brown of the University of New Mexico. The team found the same sort of relationship between energy consumption per person and gross domestic product per person as is found between metabolism and body weight in animals. Brown's group suggests the similarity is real: Cities and countries, like animals, have metabolisms that must burn fuel to sustain themselves and grow. This analogy, together with the data and theory, persuades the BioScience authors that the linkage between energy use and economic activity is causal, although other factors must also be in play to explain the variability in the data.

The study goes on to show that variables relating to standard of living, such as the proportion of doctors in a population, the number of televisions per person, and infant mortality rate, are also correlated with both energy consumption per person and gross domestic product per person. These correlations lead the authors to their conclusions about the increases in energy production necessary to sustain a still-growing world population without drops in living standards. To support the expected world population in 2050 in the current US lifestyle would require 16 times the current global energy use, for example. Noting that 85 percent of humankind's energy now comes from fossil fuels, the BioScience authors point out that efforts to develop alternative energy sources face economic problems of diminishing returns, and reject the view of many economists that technological innovation can circumvent resource shortages.

terça-feira, 9 de novembro de 2010

Conferência-Palestra sobre DECRESCIMENTO SUSTENTÁVEL

Fonte: http://pimentanegra.blogspot.com/

Sexta, 12/11/2010 - 11:00
Local: Auditório da Biblioteca FCT-UNL (Almada)

É possível criar uma sociedade onde se possa viver melhor com menos?

Palestra sobre decrescimento sustentável com a participação de Giorgos Kallis, professor ICREA do Instituto de Ciências e Tecnologias Ambientais da Universidade Autónoma de Barcelona (http://icta.uab.cat/icta )

Degrowth Conference Barcelona 2010 - http://www.degrowth.eu/v1/

segunda-feira, 8 de novembro de 2010

Thermodynamic Roots of Economics

by Herman Daly

The first and second laws of thermodynamics should also be called the first and second laws of economics. Why? Because without them there would be no scarcity, and without scarcity, no economics. Consider the first law: if we could create useful energy and matter as we needed it, as well as destroy waste matter and energy as it got in our way, we would have superabundant sources and sinks, no depletion, no pollution, more of everything we want without having to find a place for stuff we don’t want. The first law rules out this direct abolition of scarcity. But consider the second law: even without creation and destruction of matter-energy, we might indirectly abolish scarcity if only we could use the same matter-energy over and over again for the same purposes — perfect recycling. But the second law rules that out. And if one thinks that time is the ultimate scarce resource, well, the entropy law is time’s irreversible arrow in the physical world. So it is that scarcity and economics have deep roots in the physical world, as well as deep psychic roots in our wants and desires.

Economists have paid much attention to the psychic roots of value (e.g., diminishing marginal utility), but not so much to the physical roots. Generally they have assumed that the biophysical world is so large relative to its economic subsystem that the physical constraints (the laws of thermodynamics and ecological interdependence) are not binding. But they are always binding to some degree and become very limiting as the scale of the economy becomes large relative to the containing biophysical system. Therefore attention to thermodynamic constraints on the economy, indeed to the entropic nature of the economic process, is now critical — as emphasized by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen in his magisterial The Entropy Law and the Economic Process (1971).

Why has his profound contribution been so roundly ignored for forty years? Because as limits to economic growth become more binding, the economists who made their reputations by pushing economic growth as panacea become uncomfortable. Indeed, were basic growth limits recognized, very many very prestigious economists would be seen to have been very wrong about some very basic issues for a very long time. Important economists, like most people, resist being proved wrong. They even bolster their threatened prestige with such pretension as “the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Science in Memory of Alfred Nobel” — which by journalistic contraction becomes, “the Nobel Prize in Economics,” infringing on the prestige of a real science, like physics. Yet it is only by ignoring the most basic laws of physics that growth economics has endured. Honoring the worthy contributions of economists should not require such flummery.

I once asked Georgescu-Roegen why the “MIT-Harvard mafia” (his term) never cited his book. He replied with a Romanian proverb to the effect that, “in the house of the condemned one does not mention the prosecutor.”

Source: http://steadystate.org/thermodynamic-roots/

sexta-feira, 22 de outubro de 2010

Decrecimiento: 10 puntos para desintoxicarse del crecimiento y reconectarse a la vida

El decrecimiento, más que una teoría nueva, es un nombre impactante para alertar de la necesidad de un cambio.

http://es.demagazine.eu/

UNA PREMISA

El decrecimiento, más que una teoría nueva, es un nombre impactante para alertar de la necesidad de un cambio. La información que utiliza es conocida desde hace tiempo, lo que aporta, tal vez, es una visión de conjunto, un espacio de confluencia, como una cuenca hidrográfica extensa que recoge ideas y prácticas "alternativas". El decrecimiento reúne conocimientos y perspectivas que son el legado de movimientos sociales y tradiciones culturales, espirituales y religiosas diversas: el movimiento de las mujeres y, en general, los movimientos de emancipación, los movimientos por la paz, los derechos civiles, la noviolencia , el movimiento ecologista, que trabaja por la protección y recuperación de la diversidad biológica y sociocultural, pero también de una visión integrada de la realidad y de la vida, los movimientos "alterglobalizador", que se oponen a la exportación a nivel mundial de una estructura de dominio, que es a la vez económico, tecnológica y mental, donde la jerarquía, el control y la competición imponen su lógica encima de cualquier otra; estas voces proponen un camino alternativo para compartir el mosaico de diversidades y hacer -una red que abarque el mundo, basada en la equidad de los intercambios y en la capacidad de cooperación ante los retos enormes a los que las sociedades humanas han de hacer frente en las próximas décadas.

Así, por un lado, se plantea la necesidad de salir de un conjunto de adicciones que generan "deudas", y por otro, se propone restablecer una serie de conexiones y arraigos, hoy en peligro, para volver a alimentar la vida. Entre estas polaridades, se abre un camino de experimentación y síntesis creativa entre lo viejo y lo nuevo, las tradiciones y las innovaciones, que no se puede agotar ni en diez ni en cien o mil puntos.

Desintoxicarse

1. Salir de la adicción energética

Gran parte de las sociedad humanas se han vuelto adictos, desde hace 150 años, a una inyección elevada y creciente de recursos energéticos, especialmente de origen fósil, el principal es el petróleo. Este es un capital energético "ahorrado" durante miles de millones de años de fotosíntesis, que nos hemos medio gastado sin pedir permiso a las generaciones futuras, y que seguimos utilizando para construir una sociedad cada vez más alejada de su viabilidad ecológica. El cambio climático es el síntoma más contundente que muestra el contrasentido de esta cultura de falsa abundancia energética, que genera una deuda ecológica que deberán pagar nuestros hijos y nietos. Se pondrá freno a este abuso, y dar pasos decididos, desde ahora y progresivamente, hacia un metabolismo social y tecnológico basado en la radiación solar-la única que recibimos de forma gratuita-y sus derivados (eólica , hidráulica, biomasas, mareas ...). Es necesario promover formas de generación distribuida de energía y políticas de ahorro, con una revisión de todas las prácticas energívoros (transporte, agricultura, etc.).

2. Salir de la adicción financiera

La desregulación de las finanzas nos ha hecho vivir los últimos cuarenta años en un estado poco menos que al.lucinatori. El espejismo del dinero fácil nos ha hecho perder el mundo de vista. Muy pocos se han aprovechado y muchos, muchísimos, han sufrido las consecuencias. La suma de abstracción y anonimato ha hecho del dinero el arma de destrucción masiva más devastadora del planeta, para que más inadvertida. En pocas décadas se ha generado una deuda astronómico, que ha llevado el sistema a su colapso y no sabemos cómo y cuándo se podrá devolver. El poder del dinero mueve las palancas del poder a menudo en formas ocultas, a través de operaciones delictivas que no dejan rastro. La actividad especulativa no añade valor sino que aumenta precios, y recaudando sin esfuerzo las rentas que otras personas han generado con trabajo e ingenio. Es necesario adoptar medidas, como la Tasa Tobin o similares, que hagan tributar la circulación del dinero en el mercado, para desincentivar las operaciones puramente especulativas. Hay que recuperar los bancos públicos el monopolio de la creación de dinero, limitando el mecanismo del multiplicador bancario que facilita la expansión incontrolada del crédito. Hay que avanzar hacia una moneda informativa y hacia un sistema económico-transparente.

3. Salir de la adicción productivista

La actividad industrial ha dejado en gran medida de ser funcional a satisfacer necesidades fundamentales y concretas. El engranaje productivista responde más bien a la necesidad de amortizar gastos y generar dividendos para los accionistas. La carrera hacia el crecimiento parece ser el único camino para alimentar este mecanismo insaciable. El circuito producción-consumo se va acelerando constantemente, gracias a la cultura del usar y tirar ya la política de la obsolescencia programada. Por otra parte, se genera al mismo tiempo la necesidades de ingresos proporcionados a la fiebre consumidora. La adicción al consumo se prolonga en la adicción al trabajo, en la dependencia del sueldo, que todavía se hace más perversa con el difundirse de actividades "autónomas", que en realidad se traducen en formas de autoesclavatge aún más alienante. Repensar la actividad productiva, sus prioridades, sus procedimientos, el ciclo de vida de los productos, los criterios de distribución ... son pasos indispensables y urgentes, igual que lo son el reparto de las horas de trabajo, la participación de los trabajadores en el empresa, o unas nuevas pautas en el consumo de manufactes, su mantenimiento, reutilización, reparación y reciclaje.

4. Salir de la adicción informativa

El imaginario ha sido y es la última frontera de un proyecto de colonización planetaria. La publicidad, los medios de comunicación, la industria del entretenimiento, han jugado un papel fundamental en decantar las preferencias del gran público hacia la simplificación y superficialidad de los mensajes. La adicción a la "noticia", es decir, a "pastillas de información" de consumo rápido, carentes a menudo de contexto y de profundidad temporal (ni antecedentes, ni consecuencias) va paralela a la pérdida de capacidad narrativa y sentido crítico. Televisión, videojuegos, imágenes sin conexión que ocupan todo el espacio perceptivo, favorecen el adviento de una sociedad más "fluida", donde se pasa del individuo a la masa sin pasajes intermedios. Se generan hábitos de participación ficticia, o bien porque directamente virtuales, sin repercusión, o bien porque reducidos esquema de la competición bipolar, que banaliza cualquier motivo, incluso serio, de conflicto. Hay que reducir la dosis de exposición a inputs informativos desconectados de la vida real de cada persona. Hay que favorecer el ejercicio del sentido crítico ante lo que nos viene de fuera y que, con promesas inverosímiles, nos manipula. En especial, hay que frenar la omnipresencia de la publicidad y encontrar formas de reglamentación de sus mensajes.

5. Salir de la adicción jerárquica

Un modelo de dominio se basa en los mitos y en la retórica de la independencia, la superioridad y el control. La geopolítica mundial sigue respondiendo a esta lógica imperial, más o menos disimulada, y no a la voluntad de gestionar en común el uso de los recursos y la solución de los problemas. Con todos los medios alimenta una especie de aspiración colectiva a liderazgos fuertes y carismáticos, a "hombres de la providencia" que nos tengan que salvar los desastres que justamente esta ansia de dominio ha generado. Y aquí es pertinente hablar de hombres, ya que este modelo tiene connotaciones históricamente masculinas. La burocratización creciente de las sociedades y de sus servicios principales (administración, salud, educación, justicia, representación política ...) visualiza una tendencia general a la cesión de las propias capacidades y responsabilidades, ya la delegación de una cuota de poder personal. Se siembra la sospecha, por otra parte, que quisieron participar en la política no sea civismo sino el síntoma de una ambición personal, y nos hacen creer que la lucha competitiva es obligada. Todos los racismos-por sexo, condición social, credo religioso o color de piel-nacen de esta cultura de la superioridad, incentivada por la mayoría de culturas. Hay que salir de este imaginario, de este modelo mental "único" y de las prácticas que genera en todas las escalas, grandes y pequeñas.

Reconectarse

6. Arraigarse en el territorio

La relocalización es la primera gran opción para reconectar a una forma de vida posible. Hay que invertir la doble tendencia de urbanización acelerada de una parte y despoblamiento del territorio por la otra. Hay que construir una nueva síntesis entre actividades primaria, secundaria y terciaria basada en el cuidado territorial y en un nuevo equilibrio de distribución de la población. El territorio debe volver a ser la fuente principal de la riqueza material y también identitaria. Reconstruir el mosaico de usos, aprovechar al máximo la actividad fotosintética, redescubrir la biodiversidad local, las rotaciones de cultivos, las complementariedades múltiples entre actividades diversas ...

7. Reencontrarse con el propio tiempo vital

Habría que tener muy clara la percepción de que el tiempo no es simplemente un contenedor anónimo y abstracto, sino también tiempo vivido, y como tal emanación de la persona, vinculado a su salud y etapas vitales. La actividad de los individuos se inscribe en este marco, por lo que habría que repensar las formas sociales de cesión del tiempo propio para garantizar las tareas colectivas y el sostentament personal y familiar. Una renta básica universal permite reconocer un valor intrínseco al hecho de ser persona y desvincular una parte de la capacidad adquisitiva de la actividad "asalariada". El tiempo necesario para la reproducción y el mantenimiento de la vida, o la participación en los asuntos colectivos recibiría de esta manera una ayuda concreto para reservarlo. También se evitan los mecanismos perversos del mercado laboral, donde la abundancia de mano de obra modifica a la baja tanto la remuneración del trabajo como sus garantías.

8. Redescubrir la dimensión comunitaria

La aceleración de los últimos 50 años ha "liquidado" estructuras sociales y formas de convivencia muy antiguas. El ser humano es un mamífero, por el que la socialidad y la identificación en un grupo tiene valor de supervivencia. El haber sustituido los "bienes relacionales" con el consumo de bienes materiales no siempre ha supuesto una mejora de nuestra existencia. El reencuentro de la socialidad y de los bienes que las personas pueden intercambiarse sin hacer uso de dinero es un paso importante en la buena dirección. Un retorno a formas de propiedad pública o comunitaria del territorio (referido a la nuda propiedad, con posible usufructo privado) permitiría dar solidez a experiencias de moneda local en beneficio de la comunidad, para favorecer intercambios dentro de un área geográfica concreta. El ámbito local también es propicio para formas de democracia más participada, con un mayor grado de consenso y de corresponsabilidad sobre el futuro colectivo.

9. Elegir la sobriedad

Con un planteamiento más sobrio, todos podríamos tener lo suficiente para vivir con satisfacción. Volver a reconocer las necesidades reales ya diferenciarlas de las necesidades falsas, es el paso previo para construir un mundo en el que podemos sentirnos prósperos sin malgastar recursos ni humillar a nadie. Es necesaria una mayor conexión entre necesidades y consumo, tanto a la hora de comprar como, también, de producir. Reorientar las prioridades productivas hacia bienes y servicios duraderos, fáciles de arreglar, de poco impacto, por mercados lo menos alejados posible, es otra de las prioridades. Esto será más fácil de realizar, si la empresa se democratiza, con una mayor implicación de los trabajadores en las decisiones de la empresa, según una lógica cercana a la del cooperativismo.

10. Reanudar al sentido

Personas y comunidades tienen otra necesidad fundamental: dar un sentido a la propia actividad y presencia en el mundo. La autodestrucción colectiva no puede ser la respuesta que buscábamos. Hay que hacer espacio, redescubrir el silencio, la quietud, la escucha, para imaginar un mundo posible donde el diálogo, la condivisió, la simplicidad, la belleza, sean la base para un nuevo equilibrio arraigado en la vida.

[Este escrito me solicitó Martí Olivella para intentar resumir la propuesta del decrecimiento en el proceso del "Consenso de Barcelona", del que es uno de los principales impulsores]

sexta-feira, 8 de outubro de 2010

La semana laboral de 21 horas

http://www.decrecimiento.info/
Una jornada semanal más corta deberá ser la norma vigente, según el informe de esta semana del nef (The new economics foundation), el tanque de ideas independiente líder en el Reino Unido.

El informe “21 horas” prevé un importante cambio en la duración ordinaria de la semana laboral como una medida necesaria para lidiar con problemas clave en el ámbito económico, social y ambiental. Los investigadores afirman que esto debe ser visto más como una oportunidad que como una amenaza.

De acuerdo con el nef, hay varios factores que nos presionan en dirección a una jornada semanal más reducida: la continuidad de los daños económicos causados por la crisis de los bancos; una sociedad dividida que tiene por un lado cargas horarias demasiado largas, además de horas extras, a la vez que hay demasiado desempleo; y la necesidad urgente de cortar los daños medio ambientales causados por el exceso de consumo. Esto combinado con el creciente interés por invertir más tiempo en producir una parte de sus productos de consumo y servicios – desde la asistencia compartida a actividades organizadas entre vecinos, pasando por la alimentación, ropas y otras necesidades.

Mucha gente vive para trabajar, trabaja para ganar y gana para consumir. Y nuestros hábitos de consumo están despilfarrando los recursos naturales del planeta”, dice Anna Coote, co-autora del informe y jefa de Política Social del nef. “Gastar menos tiempo en un trabajo remunerado podría ayudarnos a romper este ciclo. Nosotros tendríamos más tiempo para ser mejores padres, mejores ciudadanos, mejores cuidadores y mejores vecinos. E, incluso, podríamos ser mejores empleados: menos estresados, controlando nuestro tiempo, más felices y más productivos. Es el momento de romper con el viejo reloj industrial, recuperar nuestras vidas y trabajar por un futuro sostenible”.

Si luchamos por esta oportunidad, dice el nef, la consecuencia inevitable será una jornada semanal mucho más corta, con la duración de 21 horas como objetivo. El informe apunta que:
  • Mucha gente trabaja más horas que hace 30 años. Desde 1981 las parejas de los hogares han añadido 6 horas – casi un día de trabajo – a su jornada laboral combinada.
  • Hoy, cerca de 2,5 millones de personas no consiguen encontrar un empleo. Cortar los puestos de trabajo en busca de ahorro sin cambiar la jornada laboral significa cargar a unos con horas extra de trabajo, mientras se elimina el medio de vida de otros.
  • Como resultado de esta falta de equidad en la jornada laboral, las actividades no remuneradas de nuestras vidas están siendo penalizadas. El tiempo con la familia, las relaciones con el vecindario, el tiempo con los niños y la calidad de vida de los mayores, todo esto se ha reducido con dolorosos resultados para la sociedad que algunas veces tiene que aguantarse y lamentarse como el “Reino Unido roto”.
Los autores de “21 horas” argumentan que una semana laboral mucho más corta podría ayudarnos a afrontar varios problemas urgentes e íntimamente relacionados: el exceso de trabajo, el desempleo, el exceso de consumo, las emisiones de carbono, el bajo índice de bien estar, las desigualdades y la falta de tiempo para vivir de manera sostenible, de cuidarse mutualmente, y simplemente disfrutar de la vida. Las 21 horas posibilitarían a mucha más gente unirse a la fuerza de trabajo y permitirían medidas para reducir los daños de las desigualdades.

Andrew Simms, co-autor del informe y Director de Políticas del nef afirma: “Los últimos dos años nos han enseñado que consumimos más allá de nuestros límites económicos y más allá de los límites de nuestro planea, y aun así no logramos mejorar nuestro bien estar. Mientras tanto otros sufren pobreza y hambrunas. Nuestra investigación apunta que ir hacia una jornada semanal más corta sería la única manera que todavía no se ha intentado para romper este ciclo. Un cambio cultural presentará retos reales, pero también podría presentar beneficios masivos para nuestra economía, nuestra calidad de vida y para el planeta. Después de todo, ¿a quién no le gustaría un fin de semana de 4 días?

El informe examina la situación para un cambio radical de lo que mucha gente cree como algo inmutable: una jornada laboral de 8 horas 5 días por semana. Aunque esto sea simplemente un resquicio de la Revolución Industrial. John Maynard keynes se dio cuenta de que no había nada de inmutable en esta jornada laboral. En 1930, él preveía que a inicios del siglo XXI la humanidad trabajaría 15 horas semanales, porque se habría “liberado de la presión de las necesidades económicas”. Mientras el mundo lucha para hacer frente a las crisis actuales, la posibilidad de una semana de 21 horas laborables sería la oportunidad detrás de esta crisis.

Principales descubrimientos y propuestas

El estudio demuestra que trabajar 21 horas a la semana – o el equivalente en escala anual – podría traer beneficios en diversas áreas:
  • Curar las rupturas en el Reino Unido dividido: Una semana de 21 horas ayudaría a distribuir el trabajo remunerado a toda la población, reduciendo el mal estar asociado al desempleo, a las largas jornadas laborables y a la falta de control sobre las horas-extras. Las 21 horas harían posible distribuir mejor el trabajo remunerado y el no remunerado entre hombres y mujeres, permitiría a los padres pasar más tiempo con los hijos – y a pasar el tiempo de manera diferente, permitir que la gente retrase la jubilación si así lo desea, a tener más tiempo para cuidar a los demás, para participar en actividades locales y a dedicar tiempo a cosas que le interesen. Cuándo el trabajo sea redistribuido, los ingresos serán más igualitarios y habrá una reducción en el vasto grupo de problemas relacionados a la desigualdad.
  • Pocas emisiones de carbono y un estilo de vida de alto bien estar: Con la jornada semanal de 21 horas muchas personas se encontrarían ganando menos, pero con mucho más tiempo libre. Esto significa que en vez de tener que pagar por todo – y muchas veces para “ahorrar tiempo” en una vida muy ocupada – la gente será capaz de empezar a hacer cosas: cultivar su propia comida y cocinarla en vez de comprar alimentos pre-cocinados, a caminar y andar en bicicleta en vez de usar vehículos motorizados, a arreglar y reparar objetos dañados en vez de tirarlos a la basura. Vivir a un ritmo más lento, con más tiempo para hacer las tareas del día a día, cortaría las emisiones de carbono y aumentarían el nivel de satisfacción. Una cultura más igualitaria también reduciría la necesidad de consumir para auto-afirmar su posición en la jerarquía social.
  • Nuevos niveles de participación social: hace falta tiempo para ser un ciudadano activo en la democracia. Necesitamos tiempo para aprender las cuestiones políticas, involucrarse en la tomada de decisiones y juntarse y soportar a partidos políticos. Pasar menos horas en el trabajo permitiría que las personas dedicasen más tiempo en actividades ciudadanas en su comunidad local.
  • Una economía robusta y prospera: en la raíz de la crisis financiera se evidencia que la economía debe empezar a servir las necesidades de la sociedad, respetando los límites del medio ambiente. Con una jornada laboral de 21 horas, los negocios se beneficiarían de que más mujeres entrasen en el mercado de trabajo y que los hombres viviesen una vida más plena y equilibrada. El estrés también se reduciría porque los empleados no tendrían que hacer malabarismos para conciliar la vida laboral y sus responsabilidades familiares. Hay evidencias de que la gente que trabaja menos horas es más productiva. El plano de 21 horas pondría fin a la principal causa de la crisis del crédito – la burbuja de deudas del consumo – moviéndose de una economía basada en el consumismo y en el crecimiento a una economía basada en la estabilidad, resistencia y adaptabilidad
  • Más tiempo para dedicarse al hogar: Si se atribuyera un valor a las horas gastadas en el trabajo doméstico y al cuidado de los hijos en el Reino Unido en 2005, basándose en el sueldo mínimo nacional (4,85 libras por hora, en aquel entonces), llegaríamos al valor de 253,7 billones de libras, equivale al 21% del producto interno bruto del Reino Unido en aquel año. Cambiar a una semana de 21 horas, hará que el trabajo no remunerado y el trabajo domestico sean tan valorados cómo el trabajo remunerado y los hombres podrían participar más en el trabajo no remunerado.
  • Servicio público más fuerte: los servicios públicos deberán aprender a gestionarse con mucho menos dinero debido al déficit público y a las restricciones ambientales al crecimiento económico. Una manera de hacerlo es aprovechar mejor los recursos humanos – todas las relaciones, conocimientos y habilidades que la gente tiene en abundancia – para complementar los fondos públicos. Con más horas libres la gente tendría más tiempo para cuidar a los necesitados, pasar más tiempo con los niños, mantenerse saludable y contribuir en las tareas de la comunidad. Las personas se transformarían en co-productores de los servicios públicos, en una asociación activa e igualitaria con los profesionales del sector público.

El cambio a una jornada semanal de 21 horas traería estos beneficios. Pero hay grandes desafíos en el corto plazo que deben ser anticipados. El informe apunta varias medidas para hacer la transición lo más suave posible, incluyendo:
  • Formación activa para combatir la escasez de mano de obra calificada y para re-incorporar los desempleados a la fuerza de trabajo.
  • Reformar la seguridad social de manera que los costes para el empleador se acumulen en relación a las horas trabajadas, no por los trabajadores registrados
  • Disuadir las horas-extras, premiando a los empleadores por aumentar la plantilla cuándo el volumen de trabajo aumenta
  • Hacer las nóminas más igualitarias subiendo el salario mínimo y poniendo restricciones a las nóminas súper altas.
  • Crear un estándar flexible en la Directiva del Horario de Trabajo de la Unión Europea, la regulación introduciría un estándar en las horas trabajadas permitiendo la máxima flexibilidad posible. Esto permitiría variaciones al modelo de 21 horas, incluyendo trabajo compartido, cambio de turnos escolares, permisos de salud más amplios y años sabáticos.