Monday, August 17, 2009

rumi poem

- a small green island
There is a small green island where one white cow lives
alone, a meadow of an island.

The cow grazes till nightfall, full and fat, but during the
night she panics and grows

thin as a single hair. "What shall I eat tomorrow? there's
nothing left" By dawn,

the grass has grown up again, waist-high. the cow starts
eating and by dark the

meadow is clipped short. She's full of strength and energy,
but she panics in the dark

as before, and grows abnormally thin overnight. The cow
does this over and over,

and this is all she does. She never thinks, "This meadow has
never failed to grow back.

why should I be afraid every night that it won't? The cow
is the bodily soul. The

island field is this world where that grows lean with fear and
fat with blessing, lean

and fat. White cow, don't make yourself miserable with what's
to come, or not to come.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Enough is Enough - an Economic Paradigm Shift

It is so important for us to realise that there is no longer an economic problem. Our technological genius has gotten us to the point where we know how to produce enough for everybody with much much less labour and angst than we currently do now. The problem that drove our ancestors is no more. But we have another problem in its place. That is in an economic sense we still operate using a mindset that believes we don’t have enough. Basic logic tells us that if we operate out of an idea which is inconsistent with reality it will not work properly. You can see the results all around us. On the one hand we have the enormous over-consumption and gluttony of the west to the point of creating ecological and social disaster, while at the same time a sixth of the world’s population can’t even provide enough food for themselves. We have an abundance of riches that kings of past ages would have wanted, yet large parts of the population cannot access them because they are unemployed. Our consumer culture tells us that the way to happiness is through being able to satisfy never ending desires for more and more things. The late Michael Jackson is an example of how hollow that promise is.

So the new economic problem is how do we get out of the old problem mindset we have inherited from our ancestors and get on with the obvious and in some respects simple task (in other respects unbelievably complex task) of transforming this world into an economic garden of enoughness. Strangely in our current economic language the word enough means “only barely enough”. The implication is that it is on the borderline of poverty. I mean literally enough.

How much more obvious could it be…WE KNOW HOW TO LOOK AFTER EVERYBODY’S BASIC MATERIAL WELL-BEING WITH MUCH LESS EFFORT THAN WE USE NOW. All economic actions should flow from this understanding.

Friday, July 10, 2009

Has The Economic Problem Become a Psychological Problem?

…the economic problem is not-if we look into the future the permanent problem of the human race.
Why, you may ask, is this so startling? It is startling because - if, instead of looking into the future, we look into the past - we find that the economic problem, the struggle for subsistence, always has been hitherto the primary, most pressing problem of the human rac
e
JM Keynes
from Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren


Open any basic economic textbook and one of the first things you will see is a definition of the economic problem. It goes something like this; human needs and wants are always much greater than our ability to satisfy them. Put another way – resources are limited but human wants are never ending, therefore we have to make decisions about what is the most intelligent way to use our resources to create the greatest good for the greatest number. All economic systems and theories are born out of attempts to solve this problem.

An important question arises when looking at this problem of wants and needs. Because obviously the wants of a poor African villager are very different to those of an affluent Westerner. As basic needs such as food and shelter are satisfied, needs and desires still arise, but they become less and less essential. This is the critical distinction between the concept of needs versus that of wants. Many economic theories try to deal with this difference. For example, we tax more trivial wants such as luxury cars and then use those taxes to support more essential needs such as health care and education. But is it economically or psychologically wise to try to satisfy wants that are more and more trivial?

Many economists when they talk about the economic problem state that human wants are insatiable and then quickly pass on to the problem of how to satisfy these wants, rather than questioning – will satisfying insatiable desires really make us happy or is it even possible to satisfy them and what are the social and environmental consequences of trying to do so.

We have developed a technology that gives us the ability to provide for the comfortable living needs of everybody on the planet. We know how to do this with a minimum of drudgery. The prevailing idea that it is desirable to go on trying to satisfy trivial needs past this point only strengthens the bonds of our insecurities and feeds our addictions.

So is there a point where enough needs have been satisfied and we can say the economic problem has been solved – now we can really start living? I believe in most western countries we have gone well past that point. So much so that we now even have industries whose job it is to convince us that we have needs that we otherwise would probably not have had. As well as this there is the sense of meaninglessness that many in the affluent west feel in spite of their material riches.

We are living at the remarkable time when, if we chose, we could declare the economic problem solved. One of the biggest impediments to being aware of this great possibility, let alone doing anything about it, is that we continue to look at the situation through outdated, psychologically simplistic economic theory.