Moral economy: A different way of thinking about the future
You know something is grotesquely wrong when the 80 richest people in the world have as much wealth as the poorer half of the worlds population, when the combined wealth of the 1,000 richest people in the UK is nearly five times the size of the annual NHS budget, and when unending growth is assumed to be possible in a finite, rapidly overheating planet. But conventional approaches to economic matters cant explain what is wrong.
To understand these problems we need a radically different approach that goes back to basics. Most basic of all is this: the point of economic activity is simply to enable us to live well. Economies are systems of provisioningways of providing us with the wherewithal to live a decent lifeand of course some ways of doing this are much better than others. Provisioning involves two kinds of relations:
1- Relations between people, whether as buyers and sellers, employers and employees, lenders and borrowers, landlords and tenants, citizens and governments, or as providers and beneficiaries of unpaid work.
2- Our relations to the environment, as all material wealth ultimately depends on this. Looking after the environment should make economic sense, degrading it does not.
MORE HERE: http://yonside.com/moral-economy-a-different-way-of-thinking-about-the-future/