by Mark Burch, originally published by The Daly News, Resilience: http://www.resilience.org/stories/2014-01-07/voluntary-simplicity-and-the-steady-state-economy
Mark Burch is a fellow of the Simplicity Institute and also the author of Stepping Lightly: Simplicity for People and the Planet.
Voluntary simplicity is most basically characterized by the practices of mindfulness and material sufficiency.
Through bringing mindfulness to our daily lives, we seek the maximum of
well-being achievable through the minimum of material consumption.
Well-being applies to all life forms on Earth, not just people.
The practice of sufficiency implies conscious moderation of material
consumption to some admittedly flexible limit discerned by weighing both
physical needs and ethical principles.
Voluntary simplicity is about
enough, for everyone (including other species), forever. The practice of
sufficiency replaces the pursuit of affluence in consumer culture.
There are a number of synergies between voluntary simplicity and the
social arrangements conducive to a steady-state economy. There are also
some differences and divergences.
First, voluntary simplicity traditionally takes an individual
household or “microeconomic” perspective of the good life.
Most of the
literature about simple living is addressed to individuals and how they
can exercise choice within the scope of their personal lifestyles and
families to improve quality of life through reducing material
consumption.
Steady-state economics is a set of macroeconomic policy
recommendations. There is a discontinuity of scale between these two
ways of looking at life, though certainly not a discontinuity of the
values that inform both perspectives.
Both steady-state economists and practitioners of voluntary
simplicity care deeply about ecological limits and social justice.
Both
see conserving ecosystems and reducing inequity as intimately tied up
with decisions about consumption. The steady-state goal of limiting the
scale of the economy relative to the ecosphere would probably be
endorsed by many practitioners of simple living.
Second, there is little reference in the simplicity literature to
population issues. But I would suggest that among most practitioners of
voluntary simplicity, limiting population as a necessary condition for a
good life is a concept so taken for granted that it scarcely gets
mentioned.
From its earliest formulations, steady-state economics has
urged limits on human population as a prerequisite for attaining a
steady state within Earth’s carrying capacity (Daly 1995). Just how this might be achieved is a continuing topic of discussion with fertility licensing being only one option.
Third,
mindfulness practice helps us distinguish material from nonmaterial
needs. As we become more skilled at securing appropriate satisfiers for
each, we discover that material needs are small and relatively stable
over time, thus calling for a small, steady-state economy to provide for
them.
Consumer culture’s emphasis on production for affluence derives
from its tendency to conflate nonmaterial needs (which are limitless)
with material consumption (which is constrained by planetary limits).
The insights offered by voluntary simplicity about what makes for a good
life, what role material things play in it, and how to cultivate
mindfulness about our consumption choices offer a powerful complement to
macroeconomic policies in promoting overall sustainability.
Fourth, the history and present-day practice of voluntary simplicity illustrate that a high quality of life depends jointly on sufficient material provision and abundance of nonmaterial experiences
that contribute to well-being.
Fortunately, sufficient material
provision is easy to achieve within ecological limits if our economy and
marketing methods do not systematically and artificially inflame desire
for material goods as proxies for meeting nonmaterial needs.
Once
material needs have been met, the extra ecological footprint incurred
for meeting nonmaterial needs is remarkably small. Practitioners of
voluntary simplicity, therefore, provide living examples of the good
life that is possible in a steady-state economy.
Fifth, living within the means of what the planet can provide, as
urged by steady-state economics, requires a move away from economic
globalization and toward localization. Voluntary simplicity recognizes self-reliance
as a key element of a good life.
Cooperating with our neighbors to
provide local goods and services achieves community economic
development. Such cooperation builds economic assets with tools such as
local currencies, barter systems, cooperative enterprises, and all
manner of production using local labor and resources.
These practices
also build “social capital” - the dense network of relationships which
include, but also transcend, economic exchange relationships.
Psychological research has repeatedly shown that the quality of our
relationships is the most important contributor to well-being, followed
closely by the quality of our work experience, access to leisure, and
physical health.
Beyond modest sufficiency, monetary riches occupy a
distant fourth or fifth place on the list of what makes for a good life.
Promoting personal and community self-reliance seems highly synergistic
with the requirements of a steady-state economy.
Perhaps the greatest difference between the voluntary simplicity
movement and steady-state economics is the analysis of desire (or lack
thereof). For simple living, this analysis is fundamental to a good
life. The origins of desire seem to be mostly lacking from economic
theory and analysis.
Mainstream economics rests on an 18th-century
theory of human psychology and motivation that finds no empirical
support from modern psychological research (see the critique of the
“standard economic model” offered in Schor 2009).
Moreover, macroeconomic policies amount to the imposition of measures
by elite economic agents upon the rank and file of humanity who are
often kept in the dark about social and environmental problems and are
intentionally kept out of decisions for fixing these problems.
While
expedient in some circumstances, such an approach squares poorly with
the values of simple living. Something more is required.
The discipline of economics claims that people can be forced to
modify the expression of their desires through their consumption
behavior. The forcing device is the pricing mechanism, which is driven
by those who want to exploit desire to generate profit.
But in reality,
changing behavior requires much more than getting the prices right. It
requires both inquiry into the nature of desire itself and further
insight or self-awareness on the part of consumers.
Certainly people can be coerced to behave in certain ways by creating
price incentives for desired behavior. But another approach is possible
that grows from enlightened self-awareness - not just “rational”
self-interest.
Human behavior changes when our consciousness of
ourselves and our relationships change. Since consciousness is at least
partly socially constructed, it is through our relationships with others
that transformations of consciousness can occur.
Therefore, changing
the focal length of consciousness through mindfulness practice and conscientization
experiences represents an alternate evolutionary pathway toward a
better life. We need not be limited to just tinkering with price systems
or imposing “limits” by elite fiat.
I should hasten to add that my view is not universal among voluntary
simplicity practitioners. But there is noteworthy consistency over
centuries and across cultures that the choice to adopt a simpler life is
usually preceded by a fundamental change in outlook (Wagner 1903, 17).
Sometimes this is caused by trauma or loss (Spina 1998), sometimes by deliberate spiritual practice (Kasser and Brown 2005),
and sometimes it happens as a series of spontaneous insights that lead
us to question our previous understanding of what constitutes the good
life and seek alternatives (Elgin 2010; Pierce 2000).
I see many synergies between a steady-state economy and the sorts of
policies and social structures that support simple living.
Broad
acceptance of a steady-state economy would almost necessarily include
the practice of simple living, especially if the transition is to be
democratic and involve the majority of citizens.
Conversely, voluntary
simplicity has much to offer in achieving a steady-state economy through
its analysis of human desire and its emphasis on the power of
mindfulness to transform consciousness. Voluntary simplicity can help us
evolve toward wanting what we must in any case do.
References
Daly, Herman (1995). The steady-state economy: Alternative to growthmania. In: Steady State Economics, (2nd Edition). Washington, DC: Island Press, pp. 180-194.
Elgin, Duane. (2010). Voluntary simplicity: Toward a way of life that is outwardly simple, inwardly rich. 2nd ed. New York, NY: HarperCollins, Publishers. Elgin discusses collective action through the creative use of social media.
Kasser, Tim and Brown, Kirk Warren (2009). A scientific approach to
voluntary simplicity. In: Cecile Andrews and Wanda Urbanska (2009) Less Is More: Embracing simplicity for a healthy planet, a caring economy and lasting happiness. Gabriola Island: New Society Publishers, pp. 35-40.
Pierce, Linda Breen (2000). Choosing simplicity: Real people finding peace and fulfillment in a complex world. Carmel, CA: Gallagher Press.
Schor, Juliet. (2009). “The new politics of consumption.” In: Voluntary simplicity: The poetic alternative to consumer culture.
Samuel Alexander. ed., 253-269. Wanganui, NZ: Stead and Daughters Ltd.
Schor provides yet another take on what might motivate the formation of a
politics of simple living and some key principles that might guide it.
Spina, Anthony C. (1998). “Research shows new aspects of voluntary simplicity.” The Simple Living Network On-Line Newsletter, January-March, 1999.
Wagner, Charles (1903). The simple life. New York, NY: McClure, Philips & Co.
This site has been inspired by the work of Dr David Korten who argues that capitalism is at a critical juncture due to environmental, economic and social breakdown. This site argues for alternatives to capitalism in order to create a better world.
Thursday, January 9, 2014
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