Commons Sector
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0: Preface (pages ix.-xvi)
Part 2 of the book focuses on capitalism as it could
be, a version I call Capitalism 3.0. The key difference
between versions 2.0 and 3.0 is the inclusion in the
latter of a set of institutions I call the commons
sector. Instead of having only one engine — that
is, the corporate-dominated private sector — our
improved economic system would run on two: one geared to
maximizing private profit, the other to preserving and
enhancing common wealth. ...
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Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 1: Time to Upgrade (pages
3-14)
Assets in the commons are meant to be preserved
regardless of their return to capital. Just as we receive
them as shared gifts, so we have a duty to pass them on
in at least the same condition as we received them. If we
can add to their value, so much the better, but at a
minimum we must not degrade them, and we certainly have
no right to destroy them.
Besides the commons, I use a few similar-sounding
terms that should be clarified here as well.
- By common wealth I mean
the monetary and nonmonetary value of all the assets in
the commons. Like stockholders’ equity in a
corporation, it may increase or decrease from year to
year depending on how well the commons is managed.
- By common property I mean
a class of human-made rights that lies somewhere
between private property and state property. Like
private property, common property arises when the state
recognizes it. Unlike private property, it’s
inclusive rather than exclusive — it strives to
share ownership as widely, rather than as narrowly, as
possible.
- By the commons sector I
mean an organized sector of our economy. It embraces
some of the gifts we inherit together, but not all. In
effect, it’s a subset of the given commons that
we consciously organize according to commons
principles. It’s small at the moment, but the
point of this book is that we should enlarge it. ...
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Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 5: Reinventing the Commons
(pages 65-78)
Thus far I’ve argued that Capitalism 2.0 —
or surplus capitalism — has three tragic flaws: it
devours nature, widens inequality, and fails to make us
happier in the end. It behaves this way because
it’s programmed to do so. It must make thneeds,
reward property owners disproportionately, and distract
us from truer paths to happiness because its algorithms
direct it to do so. Neither enlightened managers nor the
occasional zealous regulator can make it behave much
differently.
In this part of the book I advance a solution.
The essence of it is to fix capitalism’s operating
system by adding a commons sector to balance the
corporate sector. The new sector would supply
virtuous feedback loops and proxies for unrepresented
stakeholders: future generations, pollutees, and nonhuman
species. And would offset the corporate sector’s
negative externalities with positive externalities of
comparable magnitude. If the corporate sector devours
nature, the commons sector would protect it. If the
corporate sector widens inequality, the commons sector
would reduce it. If the corporate sector turns us into
self-obsessed consumers, the commons sector would
reconnect us to nature, community, and culture. All this
would happen automatically once the commons sector is set
up. The result would be a balanced economy that gives us
the best of both sectors and the worst of neither.
To be sure, building an economic sector from scratch
is a formidable task. Fortunately, the commons sector
needn’t be built from scratch; it has an enormous
potential asset base just waiting to be claimed. That
asset base is the commons itself, the gifts of nature and
society we inherit and create together. As we’ll
see, these gifts are worth more than all private assets
combined. It’s the job of the commons sector to
organize and protect these gifts, and by so doing, to
save capitalism from itself. ...
Organizing Principles of the Commons
Sector
Property rights, especially the common kind, require
competent institutions to manage them. What we need
today, then, along with more common property, is a set of
institutions, distinct from corporations and government,
whose unique and explicit mission is to manage common
property.
I say set of institutions because there will and
should be variety. The commons sector should not be a
monoculture like the corporate sector. Each institution
should be appropriate to its particular asset and
locale.
Some of the variety will depend on whether the
underlying asset is limited or inexhaustible. Typically,
gifts of nature have limited capacities; the air can
safely absorb only so much carbon dioxide, the oceans
only so many drift nets. Institutions that manage natural
assets must therefore be capable of limiting use. By
contrast, ideas and cultural creations have endless
potential for elaboration and reuse. In these commons,
managing institutions should maximize public access and
minimize private tollbooths.
Despite their variations, commons sector institutions
would share a set of organizing principles. Here are the
main ones.
- LEAVE ENOUGH AND AS GOOD IN
COMMON
As Locke argued, it’s okay to privatize parts of
the commons as long as “enough and as good”
is left for everyone forever. Enough in the case of an
ecosystem means enough to keep it alive and healthy. That
much, or more, should be part of the commons, even if
parts of the ecosystem are private. In the case of
culture and science, enough means enough to assure a
vibrant public domain. Exclusive licenses, such as
patents and copyrights, should be kept to a minimum.
- PUT FUTURE GENERATIONS
FIRST
Corporations put the interests of stockholders first,
while government puts the interests of campaign donors
and living voters first. No one at the moment puts future
generations first. That’s Job Number One for the
commons sector.
In practice, this means trustees of common property
should be legally accountable to future generations.
(We’ll see how this might work in chapter 6.) They
should also be bound by the precautionary principle: when
in doubt, err on the side of safety. And when faced with
a conflict between short-term gain and long-term
preservation, they should be required to choose the
latter.
Whereas private property is inherently exclusive,
common property strives to be inclusive. It always wants
more co-owners or participants, consistent with
preservation of the asset.
This organizing principle applies most clearly to
commons like culture and the Internet, where physical
limits are absent and increasing use unleashes synergies
galore. It also applies to social compacts like Social
Security and Medicare, which require universal
participation. In these compacts, financial mechanisms
express our solidarity with other members of our national
community. They’re efficient and fair because they
include everybody. Were they to operate under
profit-maximizing principles, they’d inevitably
exclude the poor (who couldn’t afford to
participate) and anyone deemed by private insurers to be
too risky.
Modern democratic government is grounded on the
principle of one person, one vote. In the same way, the
modern commons sector would be grounded on the principle
of one person, one share. In the case of scarce natural
assets, it will be necessary to distinguish between usage
rights and income rights. It’s impossible for
everyone to use a limited commons equally, but everyone
should receive equal shares of the income derived from
selling limited usage rights.
- INCLUDE SOME
LIQUIDITY
Currently, private property owners enjoy a near-monopoly
on the privilege of receiving property income. But as the
Alaska Permanent Fund shows, it’s possible for
common property co-owners to receive income too.
Income sharing would end private property’s
monopoly not only on liquidity, but also on attention.
People would notice common property if they got income
from it. They’d care about it, think about it, and
talk about it. Concern for invisible commons would
soar.
Common property liquidity has to be designed
carefully, though. Since common property rights are
birthrights, they shouldn’t be tradeable the way
corporate shares are. This means commons owners
wouldn’t reap capital gains. Instead, they’d
retain their shared income stakes throughout their lives,
and through such stakes, share in rent, royalties,
interest, and dividends. ...
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