article from YES! magazine - new local
economies
Independence from the Corporate Global
Economy
by Ethan Miller
The
old story says we have to depend on big corporations. The new story tells us we
can earn a
livelihood, gain freedom, and build
community through cooperation.
Call it
"globalization," or the "free market," or
"capitalism." Whatever its name, people across the
United
States and throughout the world are experiencing the devastating effects of an
economy that places profit above all else.
None of this, of course, is news.
Many of us have come to believe that the crucial economic decisions affecting
our lives are made not by us, but by far-away "experts" and
mysterious "market forces." A friend asked me recently, "Since
when did the American people decide to send their manufacturing sector south to
exploit people in El Salvador or the Dominican Republic?" We didn't, and
nobody ever asked.
But what's the alternative? We're
taught that there are only two possible economic choices: capitalism—a system
in which rich people and corporations have the power, make the decisions, and
control our lives; or communism—a system where state bureaucrats have the
power, make the decisions, and control our lives. What a choice!
When it comes to real economic
alternatives, our imaginations are stuck. Clearly, we need something different,
but what would it look like? How do we start to imagine and create other ways
of meeting our economic needs?
A Story of Dependency
We can begin by changing the stories
we tell about the overwhelming power and inevitability of our economic system.
These stories have hidden from us our own power, potential, and value as creative
human beings.
The dominant story defines the
heroes of our market system as the rational, self-interested firms and
individuals who seek to satisfy their endless need for growth and accumulation
in a world of scarce resources.
In this story, we the people are
just worker-bees and consumers, making and spending money, hoping for the
opportunity to accumulate more, and perpetually dependent on the jobs and necessities
that the corporate system allocates to the worthy. Citizenship is reduced to
the active pursuit of financial wealth. Feeling powerless to make real change,
we come to see the economy as like the weather—beyond our control and
understood by only the elite "experts." We hope for sunny days and
carry umbrellas.
This story renders all activities
other than business transactions invisible—segregated into the sphere of family
life, social life, and leisure. A community of active, creative, and skilled
people without money or capital (or the desire to have it) is considered
unproductive or backward. This is why many economic developers talk endlessly
about "bringing in new businesses" or "attracting investors"
to improve the local or regional economy. Real value, for them, comes from the
outside, not the inside; from those who invest capital, not those who invest
time and hard work; from the power of money to make more of itself, not from
the power of life and community to self-organize and to thrive. This dominant
story is about how our lives and our communities are never good enough, never
complete or worthwhile without the money and jobs of the capitalist market
economy.
A
Story of Hope
Suppose we try a different story:
instead of defining the economy as a market system, let's define it as the
diverse array of activities by which humans generate livelihoods in relation to
each other and to the Earth. Extending far beyond the workings of the
capitalist market, economic activity includes all of the ways we sustain and
support ourselves, our families, and our communities. Peeling away the dominant
economic story of competition and accumulation, we see that other economies are
alive below the surface, nourishing us like roots. These are not the economies
of the stock-brokers and the economists. They are the economies of mutual care
and cooperation—community economies, local economies.
Many
are familiar to us, though rarely acknowledged. They include:
Household Economies—meeting our
needs with our own skills and work: raising children, offering advice or
comfort, teaching life skills, cooking, cleaning, building, balancing the checkbook,
fixing the car, growing food and medicine, raising animals. Much of this work
has been rendered invisible or devalued as "women's work."
Gift Economies—built on shared
circles of generosity: volunteer fire companies, food banks, giving rides to
hitch-hikers, donating to community organizations, sharing food. Barter
Economies—trading services with friends or neighbors, swapping one useful thing
for another: returning a favor, exchanging plants or seeds, time-based local
currencies. Gathering Economies—living on the abundance of Earth's gift
economy: hunting, fishing, and foraging. Also re-directing the wastestream—salvaging from demolition sites, gleaning from
already-harvested farm fields, dumpster-diving.
Cooperative Economies—based on
common ownership and/or control of resources: worker-owned and -run businesses,
collective housing, intentional communities, health care cooperatives, community
land trusts.
Community Market Economies—networks
of exchange built from small businesses and cooperatives that are accountable
to their communities through social ties, innovative ownership models, and
mutual support. Such economies are not created to make large profits, but to
provide healthy, modest livelihoods to their participants, and services to the
larger community. Recognizing these diverse forms of livelihood we can see not
only that economic possibilities exist beyond the market and the state, but
that these possibilities are viable and powerful. Indeed, the dominant economy
would fall apart without such basic forms of cooperation and solidarity. It is
not the capitalist market that germinates seeds, calls nourishing water from
the sky, or transforms decay into delicious fruit. It is not the capitalist
market that nourishes our souls on a daily basis with friendship and love or
cares for us when we are too young or too old to care for ourselves. Nor is it
this market that keeps us alive in times of crisis when the factories close, when
our houses burn down, or when the paycheck is just not enough. It is the
economies of community and care—what many activists in Latin America and Europe
call the "solidarity economy"—that hold the very fabric of our
society together. It is these relationships that make us human and that meet
our most basic needs for love, care, and mutual support.
So what's the alternative to the
market system? Its seeds already exist. Though capitalist markets are
constantly working to undermine, exploit, and co-opt elements of the solidarity
economy, its power and potential as a space of creation and hope persists.
We already inhabit different kinds
of economic relationships. We have our own forms of wealth and value that are
not defined by money. Economies already exist that place human and ecological
relationships at the center, rather than competition and profit-making. We do
not need to start from scratch.
When faced with the question of
alternatives, then, we can answer not with another Grand Economic Scheme, but
with a vision for creative, diverse, and democratic economic organizing. We can build on existing cooperative economic
practices, cultivating imagination and possibility. Linking together emerging
alternatives in networks of mutual support and exchange, we can take them to
the next level and generate new economic dynamics of solidarity and cooperation
on local, regional, and global scales.
A strategy begins to emerge:
identify existing alternatives; bring them together to build shared identities
and connections; and with new-found collective strength, generate powerful possibilities
for social and economic change.
Sounds simple, right? Perhaps, but
it is the complex, deliberate, and beautiful work of community organizing that
will transform vision into reality!
Efforts
to identify spaces of democratic economic possibility are already under way.
Groups such as the Seattle Local Economies Mapping Project (www.seattlemap.org)
are building inventories of alternative economic initiatives, from cooperatives
and local currencies to volunteer fire companies and community food banks.
Inspired by what is sometimes called "asset-based community
development," other groups are cataloging forms of wealth left out of the
economic equation, such as subsistence skills, traditional arts and crafts,
local stories and lore, and natural landscapes. A coalition of organizations in
the U.S. and Canada called the Data Commons Project is building a directory of
North American cooperative economic projects
(see http://dcp.usworker.coop).
New
Eyes, New Connections
With local economic inventories in
hand, we can begin to generate conversations among solidarity initiatives and
institutions. In Brazil, where the solidarity economy movement is well-established,
23 statewide forums, connected by the national Brazilian Solidarity Economy Forum,
generate dialog and collaboration among solidarity-based economic projects. Similar
gatherings could be highly effective in North America. The United States Social
Forum, to be held in Atlanta, Georgia, in July 2007, offers an exciting
opportunity for solidarity
economy practitioners and organizers to
meet on a large scale.
Such gatherings can link previously
isolated efforts, integrating their work into a new and emergent economic web
of solidarity. These connections are about more than mutual recognition; they
are about building relationships of exchange and support—connecting producers
and consumers, marketers and distributors, investors and organizers. In the
process, we redefine these roles and institutions.
Connections can also extend to the
larger web of organizations and social movements struggling for justice,
ecology, and democracy. Campaigns against big-box stores are enhanced by
efforts to create community-based economic alternatives. Counter-recruitment
work is more effective when youth are involved in cooperative economic projects
that offer viable alternatives to the military, and the creation of community
land trusts and housing cooperatives strengthens anti-gentrification struggles.
In all of these cases and more, the
support is reciprocal: the dreams, aspirations, and energies of grassroots
social movements ensure the integrity and health of community-based economic institutions.
The practices of seeing, convening, and connecting all build toward the
practice of creation. From imagination and possibility can grow new
initiatives, new institutions, new forms of exchange, new
economies of solidarity. Together, we can reclaim our homes and communities as spaces
of safety, care, healing, and mutual aid.
Seeking economic alternatives? The
seeds have been planted. They're ready for the rain.