THE NEED FOR TRANSITION TO THE SIMPLER WAY
(Two page summary; 5.10.2010.)
The basic cause of the many alarming global problems we face is the pursuit of affluent “living standards” and economic growth…the determination to produce and consume more and more, without limit, even in the richest countries. There is no possibility that the per capita levels of resource consumption in rich countries can be kept up for long. Only a few of the world’s people have these “living standards” and the rest can never rise anything like them.
These problems are inevitable consequences of a society that is driven by
acquisitiveness, competition, the profit motive, market forces and growth. It is not just that this society is
grossly unsustainable and unjust – the point is that such a society cannot
be made sustainable or just. It is not possible to reform such a society so that it does not generate
the above problems, while it continues to be about the fierce drive to get as
rich as possible and to allow development to be determined by what will be most
profitable to corporations and banks.
Most people however believe that technical advance, such as the development of more efficient cars and of renewable energy sources, will indeed enable us to plunge on down the affluence and growth path for ever while it solves the environment and other problems. But the magnitude of the overshoot, the unsustainability, is far too great for this to be possible. If by 2050 all the world’s people had risen to the “living standards” we in rich countries will have then given 3% p.a. growth, then world economic output would be 30 times as great as it is now…and right now it is at a grossly unsustainable level. Technical advance cannot make such a situation remotely sustainable…and with 3% growth the task would be twice as great every 23 years thereafter.
The second fundamental fault in consumer-capitalist society is that it is based on a massively unjust global economy. Most of the world’s resources and markets are taken by the few in rich countries, basically because it is a market system. Markets allow the rich to tae most of what is produced, and to ensure that the development” that takes place in the Third World is development that will enrich corporations and rich world shoppers. There cannot be peace or justice in the world until the rich countries stop hogging most of its wealth and begin to live on their fair share. Again this is not possible unless they accept moving down to much lower levels of consumption.
The solution.
The can be no solution to these alarming problems unless there is transition to ways in which there are,
- Simpler lifestyles, much less production and consumption, much less
concern with luxury, affluence, possessions and wealth, and much more
concern with non-material sources of life satisfaction.
- Mostly small, highly self-sufficient local economies, largely independent of the global economy, putting local resources to meeting local needs. When petroleum becomes scarce there will be no choice about this.
- More cooperative and participatory ways, enabling people in small communities to take control of their own development, to include and provide for all. In the coming era of scarcity communities that cooperate to meet needs will have much better chances. We must develop commons and working bees, and there must be town assemblies, local committees and referenda making the important decisions about local development and administration.
- A new economy, one that is not driven by profit or market forces, and one that has no growth at all, that produces much less than the present one, and focuses on needs and rights. It might have many private firms and markets, but there must be (participatory, democratic, open and local) social control over what is developed, what is produced, and how it is distributed. Most economic activity will be local, using local resources, controlled by ordinary citizens, and geared to maximising the quality of life of all in the region.
- Some very different values, especially cooperative not competitive, more collectivist and less individualistic, and concerned with frugality and self-sufficiency not acquisitiveness and consuming.
The alternative or Simpler Way is about ensuring a very high quality of life for all without anywhere near as much work, worry, production, consumption, exporting, investment, environmental damage etc. as our present society involves. It is about liberation from the consumer rat race, and the insecurity, inequality, conflict and cultural squalor that goes with it. Consider having to work for money maybe only two days a week for money, and therefore having a lot of time for arts and crafts and personal growth, living in a rich and supportive community, and in a diverse and productive leisure-rich landscape, having socially worthwhile and enjoyable work with no fear of unemployment...and knowing you are not contributing to global problems.
Many people now accept this view of our situation and the solution, and are working for transition to the alternative way. There are now Global Eco-village and Transition Towns Movements trying to move towards new settlements of the required kind. The fate of the planet depends on whether these movements can provide many impressive examples of sustainable, just and pleasant settlements showing people in consumer society that there is a better way.
What should one do? Form a group in your town or suburb to start developing elements of the new way, such as small cooperative gardens and workshops, community working bees, edible landscapes, festivals…and helping to organise wasted local resources such as unemployed, retired and excluded people into producing to meet some of their own needs….with the vision of gradually expanding until we have transformed the entire suburb. But these efforts must go beyond merely creating community gardens etc.; they must be informed by the vision of vast and radical system change, such as getting rid of an economy driven by profit, market forces and growth. As conditions in consumer society deteriorate, led by the coming petroleum crisis, people will see the wisdom of coming across to The Simple Way we are pioneering.
For detailed argument and evidence on these themes see,
http://ssis.arts.unsw.edu.au/tsw/