The Friends House courtyard during Britain Yearly Meeting |
David used the metaphor
of the economy as a kind of organism that is always moving towards an
equilibrium, in response to changing conditions. This economy is now
so 'broken' that it is 'seeking a transformation' to a new form that
may be very different indeed to the 'old' economy; dependent on
infinite growth and 'addicted to debt'.
There is much to
stimulate reflection in this image. In the session itself it seemed
to encourage an avenue of utopian thinking about the future of the
economy, perhaps based on our attachment to the myth of progress,
which tells us that the future will always somehow turn out 'better'
than the present. So this gathering was anticipating the economy of
the future to be based on sustainability, co-operation, economic and
social justice etc. The only discordant note in this general theme
was struck by a teenage Friend, who rose to suggest that 'there is no
proof that this new economy wouldn't be unfair as well'.
The young Friend speaks
my mind on this, for at least two reasons. Firstly, although there
are some aspects of the economy that are largely beyond human control
(including a long-term rise in energy costs due to oil depletion),
many other aspects of the economic system are deliberate creations,
including the tax system, trade tariffs, financial regulation,
incentives and subsidies, credit mechanisms etc. These policies are
all deliberately designed (albeit sometimes with unintended
consequences), with the principal objective of benefiting the elites
which implement them. The decisions to dismantle regulation of the
finance industry in the USA and UK in recent years were conscious
political choices, intended to increase financial sector profits by
enabling huge increases in bank lending and speculation. The last
time I looked, the same political and economic elites are still in
charge of the decisions that determine the structure of our economic
system, with a ruthlessness undiminished by their achievement of
bankrupting the public finances of the USA and most of the EU.
The second, and more
fundamental reason why I am not expecting the ideal society to bloom
naturally from the ashes of the current economic system, is that the
financial crisis we are experiencing seems to me just the start of a
very long-term process of de-industrialization and economic
contraction, what John
Michael Greer calls 'the long descent'. In a submission to the
Friends Quarterly essay competition on the
future of Quakers in Britain in 2008, I summarized the grounds
for expecting future decades to see a contracting world economy
(chiefly to do with the depletion of cheap and easily accessible
energy sources), and some thoughts on how British Quakers might be
affected and led to respond.
Based on the
contributions at Yearly Meeting, many British Friends seem to be at
the stage of starting to question the possibility and desirability of
continual economic growth, but fewer have begun grappling with the
question of how to live through a future of very long-term economic
contraction (what economists amusingly insist on calling 'negative
growth').
The biggest problem for
most of us with trying to advocate for or even imagine alternatives
to continued economic growth, is that our current incomes and
lifestyles are so dependent on a growth economy. The great majority
of British Quakers of working age are employed directly or indirectly
by national or local government (especially in the teaching, health
and social welfare professions), and are dependent for their jobs on
the continuing flow of tax revenues from a growing economy. Retired
Friends are even more directly dependent on constant economic
expansion for steady returns on their investments (including ethical
ones) and pension funds.
As long as our way of
life is completely dependent on the expectation of continual economic
expansion (including shepherding our children into higher education
that will leave them burdened by huge debts before they start their
working lives) we will need to embrace an attitude of 'double-think'
to even imagine an alternative.
But this is already
starting to change, as the steadily accumulating failures of the
current economic system, including long-term recession, public-sector
cuts, sovereign debt and eurozone crisis, are already threatening the
livelihoods of many British Friends - especially through recent cuts
to public sector jobs and services. Over the last year, it seems as
if most of the people I know have either lost their jobs, been
threatened with redundancy, or experienced a substantial reduction in
income. As this hardship continues to grow among previously
well-insulated British Friends, it will undoubtedly help to focus our
minds on our realistic prospects and options for the future.
It may be that we will
gradually come to concentrate on more achievable economic aims than
the utopian transformation of society. One such achievable objective
would be to recover the tradition of being communities of mutual aid
– a role that Friends' Meetings frequently played in the era before
the Welfare State. Friends' Meetings once played a huge role in the
provision of essential economic and welfare services for their
members. They provided facilities for savings and loans, education
(the origin of Friends' Schools), vocational training and employment,
and medical care as well as emergency relief in cases of extreme
need. Friends' Churches (in common with many other religious and
secular associations) are performing these functions now in Africa
and South America, wherever the State cannot be relied upon to
provide them.
If governments continue
to be starved of funds by a long-term process of world-wide economic
decline, many of these functions of Quaker Meetings may acquire a
renewed relevance for us in Britain. Friends around the country are
already starting to experience job insecurity and unemployment -
especially among young people, with graduate unemployment currently
around
20%. If the economy doesn't resume growth, and even contracts
over the next 5 years, or 10, or 20, what will that look like in our
lives and our children's?
Rather than sharing
vague dreams of a utopian future economy, we might do better to start
imagining ways that Quaker communities can support each other in
adapting to a world of growing energy and resource scarcity. We might
start to explore ways of working together, investing in each other,
sharing our skills, apprenticing our young people in genuinely useful
occupations, and supporting each other in hardship.
At our Meeting in
Sheffield we are already starting to make some small steps in this
direction, prompted by financial challenges to the Meeting's lettings
business (a direct consequence of reduced Council spending), as well
as our attempts to work towards becoming a low
carbon, sustainable community. We are exploring new ideas for
generating income and sustaining employment through our Meeting
House, and starting to learn and work together to grow food on our
edible roof
garden. These and many other approaches being adopted by Meetings
around the country are steps towards embodying 'good economics' as
part of our Quaker communities. We may not see the emergence of a
'good economy', but we might usefully work to build some 'good
communities', with the resilience to survive and sustain us
through the long descent of the growth economy.
Something I observed about Pendle Hill (our Woodbrooke?)...
ReplyDeleteThe big expense of living there for a year was salaries for a highly-educated staff of inspired teachers for a very small student body.
Aside from that, all we had to ourselves was a room for each person.
Leaving that room, all the grounds and other buildings were available for our use.
This was a very rich way to live.
Thank you for this post, Craig. I very much agree with you. I am a bit of an apocalyptic myself and also see the decline of cheap fossil fuels as a key problem.
ReplyDeleteIn addition to the erosion of Quaker fortunes because of the Great Recession, I also expect to see a lot of Friends slip into poverty as their retirement savings fail them and they end up on public support just as that support falls deeply into crisis. This would be happening to me very soon if I had not married a woman with a real pension, but she works for an American municipality and that pension is now under attack. So I'm luck—for now—but my brother isn't, and neither are millions of us baby boomers.
Meanwhile, Friends have led the way here in the US in creating excellent retirement options—if you have the money. Which many of my F/friends do. But there is no way I could ever hope to live in one of these facilities, even with my long term care insurance.
This may drive radical innovation among us: affordable collective living arrangements, perhaps,maybe modeled on the Movement for a New Society, a movement that started in Philadelphia in the 1970s with significant Quaker involvement. They eventually got organized enough to buy or occupy whole apartment buildings close to each other and arranging their lifestyle so that they worked half the time and did service or political work the other half. If meetings followed this model, 10 households, say, who now have (say) 16 vehicles, 10 circular saws, 6 washing machines and driers, 12 toasters, etc. could have instead, 8 vehicles, one of them a van or bus that could transport many of them, plus, maybe a backhoe for rental and use in a small construction business, some really small efficient cars for those who have to commute, 2 circular saws, 2 or 3 washing machines—plus child care and maybe home schooling. In other words, I think the only way to reduce our carbon footprint and our involvement in and dependence on the consumer economy is to work at the level of community, leveraging our meetings to transform our collective lifestyles.
Do you suppose any meetings would go for this? I doubt it. Not until the economic apocalypse actually arrives. In the meantime, we can think about it, maybe even plan. . .
Steven, Many thanks for this pointer to the 'Movement for a New Society' model, which I hadn't heard of before. It is especially interesting as we are currently sharing a house with another family from our Meeting, and finding it a great source of financial, social and spiritual support.
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