Arruda is an economist and veteran popular educator, who has worked closely with Brazilian labour, co-operatives and solidarity economy movements for many years. Arruda has served as an advisor to local governments and as visiting professor in universities in Brazil and abroad. He is a facilitator for the Gaia Education Program and is active in the Ecovillage and the Transition Towns movements. He is also active in the Jubilee South Network, working on issues related to the debt crisis and alternatives, economy and ecology, public budget management and socio-economic development planning.
Solidarity Economy and the Rebirth of a Matristic Human Society
Solidarity Economy and the Rebirth of a Matristic Human Society Workgroup on Solidarity Socio-Economy In reality, I am here to share with you the conviction of millions of us, who work for an economy based on cooperation and solidarity around the world, that UNLESS WE MAKE ANOTHER ECONOMY POSSIBLE, ANOTHER WORLD WILL NOT BE POSSIBLE. I will address four questions.
1. What Are The Factors Contributing To The Birth And The Growth Of A Solidarity Economy? Historic factors are at the origin of the Solidarity Economy (SE) movement and they include a deep human yearning for happiness, which cannot exist without self-respect, mutual respect and loving bonds. They also include two failures. One is the failure of the System of Capital to provide the material basis for a meaningful and dignified existence for all human individuals and societies. The other is the failure of Statism and all forms of hierarchical "communism" to provide a meaningful and viable alternative to the System of Capital. Let me briefly speak about each of them. i.Today's global system of Capital is configured in the following manner:
ii. Statism is characterized by:
2. What Are The Visions And Goals Implied In The Idea And The Practice Of A Solidarity Economy? i. The Age of Neoliberalism is heavy with contradictions. Massive planetary alienation, structural unemployment, deep inequality and corporate oppression have been countered by a growing movement that started as antiglobalization (critique, denunciation, pressure for regulations and reforms) and developed into an alterglobalization movement whose basic motto is that of the World Social Forum: another world is possible, another globalization is possible. In this adverse environment, we have seen the emergence of various forms of Popular Economy as an alternative to unemployment and exclusion, aimed at mere subsistence, a job and an income. We have also seen the emergence of various forms of Solidarity Economy as a new proposal to organize the economy and society around the conviction that Another Global Socioeconomy is possible, another Human Being is possible. It aims at overcoming alienation with holistic individual and collective self-development. ii. Let us look more attentively at the vision of a Solidarity Economy. For some, it is simply a means to compensate for unemployment and exclusion. For a growing number of activists and thinkers, it is also the basis for a new form of organization of economic life, from local to global: it is economic activity organized for individual and collective self-development, which implies the shared satisfaction of needs and wants and the co-management of the houses people share in common. It is an ethical, reciprocal and cooperative way of consuming, producing, exchanging, communicating, educating, developing which fosters a new way of thinking and living.
3. The Strategic Challenge To Develop A Solidarity Economy I envisage three stages in the development of a Solidarity Economy. The first stage is expanding the SE in unfavorable national and global contexts - Solidarity enterprises and cooperatives should, under the current hegemony of neoliberalism, develop a three-pronged strategy: (1) competing in the capitalist market, while seeking to overcome the patriarchal mode of relationship based on power as competitiveness, domination and submission; (2) developing solidarity collaborative networks and markets in which cooperation and solidarity can be fully practiced, and (3) participating in national and global networks that struggle for regulations and controls on capital, and for improved public policies and democratic rights for the working majority. In the solidarity networks the profit motive is replaced with the satisfaction of those needs considered a priority by the majority as the driving force of the economy; the concept of wealth encompasses material, emotional, mental and spiritual wealth - having is seen as a means for being and doing; and competition gives place to cooperation in diversity and in mutual respect. Three concerns are crucial in the process of self-development in solidarity: (1) increase and diversify the number of associative initiatives and the socioeconomic sectors they cover; (2) create solidarity synapses among them, that is, economic, commercial and financial interconnections based on the matristic values of mutual care, collaboration, reciprocity, mutual respect and self-respect; and (3) introduce cooperation and solidarity as central elements of the education of children, youth and adults in the school system and in the solidarity networks. The second stage is that of a mixed Socioeconomy - Gradually, as they develop locally, nationally and internationally, these networks begin to constitute a new system and a new culture. Cultural change is characterized by a change in the language flow and in the flow of emotions that make up the mode of inter-relations among the members of a community. It embodies a set of values that inspire attitudes, behaviors, aspirations and modes of relation. The patriarchal culture developed in history, first, as appropriation or privatization of common resources and goods (withholding from others the normal access of something that is legitimately theirs), second, as dominating power and obedience (negation of oneself and the other in order to conserve something) and, third, as hierarchy and authority (negation of the other and of oneself made acceptable by rational, abstract or transcendental arguments). The matristic culture developed in history was based on the care, total trust, mutual respect and collaboration in solidarity that marked the conviviality of our first ancestors and the relation child-mother in our infancy and childhood. Translated into economic and political relations, the matristic culture fosters economic and political democracy understood as cooperation, sharing and co-participation as parts of the fundamental emotions that inspire action to overcome scarcity, as participatory distribution instead of appropriation. This is the stage of what can be called a mixed economy, in which two different modes of production co-exist, one informed by the patriarchal culture, the other by the matristic culture. The third stage is that of a Local-Global Solidarity Socioeconomy - A neomatristic culture may gain hegemony as the outcome of the conservation of the positive consequences of socioeconomic agents interacting with each other on the basis of cooperation, sharing and co-participation. The means to achieve this are to create educational and practical dynamics that foster the awakening in people and communities of their deepest yearning and most profound aspiration to achieve forms of co-existence that are mutually caring and liberating, from childhood to adult life. This includes the concrete establishment of a collaborative equality in the socioeconomic relations as well as in the relations man-woman and the relations human being-nature. Collaborative equality means sharing in collective abundance according to needs and wants, instead of private appropriation and chronic scarcity. This collaborative equality is the only capable to generate the psychic space that enables men and women of all ages and occupations to become equal collaborators in the common livelihood of social life. If we succeed in making these collaborative socioeconomic networks a living reality, they may be strong enough to operate a cultural change of enormous magnitude and consequences for human history: the birth of a neomatristic economy and culture, now transformed into a planetary ethos. 4. Challenges In Latin America 1) Pseudo-socialist governments who opted for the capitalist neoliberal or the populist pattern of capital accumulation are responsible for a loss of credibility of alternative proposals and modes of government. How can social movements make sure that elected socialist parties abide by their programmatic commitment to social change? 2) Social movements are becoming stronger and better organized in Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia, Ecuador, Venezuela and elsewhere in the continent. But the peoples of Latin America have not yet understood that the challenge is that they empower themselves to become the main subject of their own individual and collective development. They are the force that can constitute democratic State institutions (local, national, global) aimed to facilitate the empowerment and the development of human civil society in dynamic harmony with the rest of Nature. How can social movements and democratic governments play a more effective role in fostering the awareness and empowerment of the working grassroots - employed, marginalized, excluded? 3) Innovative practices are multiplying in the continent: cooperatives constituted by families or by indigenous groups working in solidarity (Mexico and Brazil...); solidarity financial agencies and solidarity micro credit (Bolivia, Mexico, Peru, Brazil); solidarity commercial markets (without currency or using community currency, Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Brazil); eco-consumption cooperatives (Uruguay, Argentina, Mexico, Brazil); ecovillages using permaculture, co-management and self-reliance as bases of socioeconomic activity (Brazil); equitable trade networks (all over the continent); cooperative education (Venezuela, Colombia, Argentina, Brazil); and public agencies and policies aimed at fostering a Solidarity Economy (Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina). How can their successes and their mistakes become shared collective knowledge and the basis for qualitative progress in building a Solidarity Socioeconomy? 4) However, innovative practices at the micro level can only be viable and structurally effective if they interweave with one another to form always-broader collaborative networks and solidarity chains of production-finance-distribution-consumption-education-communication. This is one important challenge facing the Latin American SE movements. How are participants of this Panel responding to this challenge? 5) Another challenge is a systematic endeavor to expand the networks by reaching all sectors of society who may be sensitive to the democratic practice of cooperation in solidarity - trade unions, social movements, professional associations, churches and the ecumenical alliances, democratic governments etc. How are participants of this Panel responding to this challenge? 6) Finally, a key challenge is to overcome the culture that fosters consumerism and dependence with regard to the State, to dominant technical patterns of production and to financial markets. An all-embracing process of education for self-reliance and for self- and co-management is needed, associated with raising awareness about our inner yearning for freedom and mutual respect as bases for sustainable, gratifying conviviality. How to make cultural change that recovers the deep yearning for a life of self- and mutual respect and conscious solidarity, a daily practice in the lives of our families, firms and networks? I thank you and invite you to discuss these questions. |
Also by Marcos Arruda
- Public Debt, Regional Integration and The South Bank March 2012
- President Dilma: Let Brazil set an example for a new ecological economy January 2011
- What can we expect to see in 2011? January 2011
- When world recession knocks at the door it's time to change October 2010
- Penser et pratiquer le développement autrement September 2009
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