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Postcapitalism and the city<br /><br /> - 0 views
blog.p2pfoundation.net/...12
'paul mason' p2pfoundation post-capitalism information jukkap2p technology commons
shared by Jukka Peltokoski on 12 Oct 16
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Things that in all previous eras of capitalism the elite desired to be as cheap as possible—to ease wage pressures—are now made as expensive as possible
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capital migrates away from production and from private-sector services towards public sector services.
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But as soon as technology allowed it, we started to create organisations where the positive effects of networked collaboration were not captured by the market.
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Fortunately there is a third impact of info-tech. It has begun to create organisational and business models where collaboration is more important than price or value.
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The technology itself is in revolt against the monopolised ownership of intellectual property, and the private capture of externalities.
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We must promote the transition to a non-capitalist form of economy which unleashes all the suppressed potential of information technology, for productivity, well.being and culture.
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The strategic aim is: to reduce the amount of work done to the minimum; to move as much as possible of human activity out of the market and state sectors into the collaborative sector; to produce more stuff for free.
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If the aim is for humanity to do as little work as possible, you can do it through three mechanisms. One is to automate. The other is to reduce the input costs to labour, so that we can survive on less wages and less work. The third is to push forward rapidly the de-linking of work and wages.
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We know what it’s there for—to hand public assets to the private sector so that the profits of decaying businesses are temporarily boosted
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The basic income is an idea whose time is coming, because there won’t be enough work to go around. For me the basic income is a one-off subsidy for automation—to un-hook humanity from bullshit job creation and promote the delinking of work and wages.
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The building block is the co-op, the credit union, the NGO, the non-profit company, the peer-to-peer lender and the purely voluntary or social enterprise.
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the state and eventually the commons should have first rights to all the data just the same as in a republic it owns all the land
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Ultimately, however, the greatest good comes from the common ownership and exploitation of data, because it establishes the principle that this vast new information resource—which is our collaborative behaviour captured as data—is part of the commons.
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But you would attract the most innovative capitalists on earth, and you would make the city vastly more livable for the million-plus people who call it home.
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No. The desperate, frantic “survival capitalists” would go away—the rip-off consultancies; the low-wage businesses; the rent-extractors.
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All the other challenges would remain: the environmental challenge—not just low carbon but the preservation of quality living environments in a city sometimes deluged with visitors. Also the ageing challenge and the debt challenge.
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I could be completely wrong. But if I am right, it makes sense for all cities to ask themselves: could we become the first city to begin a demonstrable and tangible transition away from neoliberal capitalism, towards a society of high equality, high well-being, high collaboration?
EU agreement on sustainable development highlights role of co-ops - Co-operative News - 0 views
www.thenews.coop/...lopment-highlights-role-co-ops
EU cooperative UN sustainable development Unioni ICA coopnews jukkap2p
shared by Jukka Peltokoski on 27 May 17
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