Thneeds
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 1: Time to Upgrade (pages
3-14)
What’s more, many negative externalities
aren’t even the result of meeting genuine human
needs. The word thneed doesn’t appear in any
economics text, but it’s symbolic of our modern
predicament. The word was coined by Theodor Geisel
— better known as Dr. Seuss — in his
children’s fable The Lorax. A thneed is a
thing we want but don’t really need. As many
parents will recall, The Lorax pits a dynamic
entrepreneur (the Once-ler) against a pesky Lorax who
“speaks for the trees.” The Once-ler makes
thneeds by cutting down truffula trees. When the Lorax
protests, the Once-ler replies:
I’m being quite useful. This thing is a
Thneed.
A Thneed’s a
Fine-Something-That-All-People-Need!
Economists have no technical term for thneed; they
assume that all “demand” in the economy is
equivalent, as long as it’s backed with money. Yet
surely it would be helpful to differentiate. One can
imagine an axis running from needs to thneeds. On one end
are such things as food, shelter, basic transportation,
and health care. On the other end are Coca-Cola, iPods,
and Hummers. (Significantly, needs are generic, while
thneeds are typically branded.) Filling needs contributes
more to human well-being than does selling thneeds, yet
our economic system increasingly devotes scarce resources
to thneeds.
Why do we have so much illth and so many thneeds?
Because our economic operating system is far out of
balance. On one side, representing owners of capital, are
powerful profit-maximizing corporations. On the other
side, representing future generations, nonhuman species,
and millions of humans with unmet needs, are —
almost nothing. The system lacks institutions that
preserve shared inheritances, charge corporations for
degrading nature, or boost the “demanding”
power of people whose basic needs are ignored. Hence the
system generates ever more illth, waste, and
ever-widening disparities between rich and poor. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 2: A Short History of
Capitalism (pages 15-32)
Why isn’t economic growth making us
happier? There are many possibilities, and
they’re additive rather than exclusive.
- One is that, once material needs are met,
happiness is based on comparative rather than absolute
conditions. If your neighbors have bigger
houses than you do, the fact that yours is smaller
diminishes your happiness, even though your house by
itself meets your needs. In the same way, more income
wouldn’t make you happier if other people got
even more. That’s why an affluent country can get
richer without its citizens getting happier.
- A second reason is that surplus capitalism
foments anxiety. Millions live one paycheck,
or one illness, away from disaster. When disaster
strikes, the safety nets beneath them are thin. And
everyone sees jobs vanishing as capital scours the
planet for cheap labor.
- Another reason is that surplus capitalism
speeds up life and creates great stress.
Humans didn’t evolve to multitask, sit in traffic
jams, or work, shop, and pay bills 24/7. We need rest,
relaxation, and time for companionship and creativity.
Surplus capitalism can’t give us enough of those
things.
- Similarly, its nonstop marketing message
— you’re no good without Brand X —
breeds the opposites of gratitude and contentment, two
widely acknowledged precursors of happiness.
According to the Union of Concerned Scientists, the
average American encounters about three thousand such
messages each day. No wonder we experience envy, greed,
and dissatisfaction. ...
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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. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 8: Sharing Culture (pages
117-134)
Mind-time is precious to me. I resent it when random
outsiders, trying to sell thneeds, get inside my brain. I
resent it even more when they get inside my
children’s brains. What they claim is free speech,
I experience as mental trespassing, and so do millions of
others. As Kalle Lasn has written, “Our mental
environment is a commons like air or water. We need to
protect it from unwanted incursions.”
Advertising — and by this I mean all forms of
commercial attention-seeking — is part of the dark
side of surplus capitalism. (I say this as one who,
during my own career, modestly added to the din.)
It’s one of those borderline activities
that’s necessary, or at least acceptable, in
moderation, but becomes dangerous when it spirals out of
control. The trouble is that advertising escalates
inexorably. Every new product needs to announce itself.
Moreover, the greater the ambient noise, the more each ad
has to shout in order to be heard. If anything is a
“tragedy of the commons,” this is it (though
here, again, the commons is victim, not cause).
Here are a few statistics that confirm what everyone
knows. Children in America see, on average, one hundred
thousand television ads by age five; before they die
they’ll see another two million. In 2002, marketers
unleashed eighty-seven billion pieces of junk mail,
fifty-one billion telemarketing calls, and eighty-four
billion pieces of email spam. In 2004, a Yankelovich poll
found that 65 percent of Americans “feel constantly
bombarded with too much advertising and
marketing.”
Advertising isn’t just an occasional trespass of
one person against another; it’s a continuous
trespass of relatively few corporations (the one hundred
or so that do the most advertising) against all the rest
of us. These companies want to — indeed have to
— increase their sales, and for this they need
access to our minds. But mind-time is a scarce resource.
We have only so many hours of it a day, and so many days
in our lives. Because of this scarcity, every
neuro-minute occupied by an ad is one less neuro-minute
available for our own thoughts and feelings. Every ad
thus has an opportunity cost, a cost we experience but
advertisers don’t pay.
Ads also have other side effects. They bias us to
high-priced branded products, to junk foods rather than
healthy foods, and to spending rather than saving. They
diminish our self-esteem by suggesting that we never have
enough or look good enough. And ultimately, they diminish
our natural wealth by increasing pollution and depleting
resources.
As individuals, we can do a few things to protect
ourselves against ads: we can turn off our television,
delete email spam, and toss junk mail in the recycling
bin. But that doesn’t dampen the collective noise,
or do much to reduce the external costs of ads. To do
that we need economy-wide volume controls.
At present, there are no such controls. Though the
airwaves belong to the people, no public agency limits TV
advertising time. Until 1982, the major networks adhered
to a voluntary code limiting ads to 9.5 minutes per hour
in prime time. Then, profit maximizing took over, and the
networks dropped their code. Today, a typical
“one-hour” prime-time show has about
forty-two minutes of content and eighteen minutes of ads
and promotions, nearly twice the advertising intensity of
two decades ago.
What if we managed advertising as we manage, or could
manage, physical pollution? If corporations want to
pollute our minds, they’d have to pay for the right
to do so. As with physical pollution, the transactions
could be brokered by a trust. This guardian of our inner
commons would set caps on total trespasses and sell
tradeable advertising permits to corporations. Our
psychic costs would then show up as advertisers’
monetary costs. There’d be less advertising, more
peace of mind, and if we so earmarked the revenue, more
money for commercial-free broadcasting and the arts.
An advertising cap-and-trade system could have another
benefit as well. At present, there’s only one
macroeconomic valve for regulating the pace of economic
activity: the Fed’s handle on money. If the economy
is too hot, the Fed raises interest rates; if it’s
too cool, the Fed lowers them. The trouble with this
valve is that it has unpleasant side effects. When
interest rates go up, so do credit card bills and
mortgages, and millions of households suffer. But if we
dampened an overheated economy by lowering the volume of
advertising, we’d get the benefits of higher
interest rates without the pain. In fact, households
might save money by buying less. ...
read the whole chapter
Peter Barnes:
Capitalism 3.0 — Chapter 10: What You Can Do (pages
155-166)
What’s also nice about the new operating system
is that, once installed, it can’t be easily
removed. That’s because it relies on property
rights rather than government programs that are subject
to political ebb and flow. If you have any doubt about
this, consider the staying power of Social Security and
the Alaska Permanent Fund, both of which distribute
periodic payments that have attained the status of
property rights. Social Security is over seventy years
old and has never been cut once; in 2005, it survived a
privatization campaign led by President Bush. Similarly,
the Alaska Permanent Fund, now more than twenty-five
years old, repelled an attempt in 1999 to divert part of
its income to the state treasury.
This third version of capitalism is a logical
successor to the first two. In Capitalism 1.0 we had a
shortage of goods, in Capitalism 2.0 a surplus. In
Capitalism 3.0 we’ll have plenty, but not too much.
We’ll have more things we truly need —
healthier ecosystems, communities, culture — and
fewer thneeds. We’ll have a proper balance between
our “me” and our “we” sides.
We’ll be more connected and less isolated, more
secure and less stressed. Overall, I’d venture,
we’ll be happier.
We’ll have some new traffic rules on this road.
Rights now enjoyed exclusively by private capital will be
matched, or even trumped, by rights held in trust for
future generations. Similarly, the ability of private
wealth owners to receive income and inheritances will be
matched by the ability of everyone to receive them. And
risks we now face individually, such as illness, will be
tempered by shared risk pools that exclude no one.
The biggest change will be in the third algorithm I
described in chapter 4: the price of nature will no
longer be zero. Instead, the price of nature — or
at least, of the scarcest and most endangered parts of
nature — will gradually rise. This will compel
corporations (and consumers) to internalize many of the
costs they now externalize.
This, in turn, will drive them to invest and consume
in ways that, over time, do less harm to nature.
Businesses will invest in clean and renewable energy
technologies. Farmers will use fewer chemicals, and local
food will outcompete food grown far away. Consumers will
shift from driving alone in gas-guzzlers to more
convivial forms of transport and less dashing about.
Housing will move from sprawling suburbs to small towns
and tall cities. ...
read the whole chapter
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