Capitalism vs. ParEcon
Comparing Capitalism & ParEcon Class Relations
Classes are groups of people who share sufficiently similar economic situations to have similar motivations, conditions, and interests vis a vis other such groups, or classes. Class membership impacts power, income, wealth, status, identity, etc. This page compares the class structure of capitalism and parecon.
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"The Tragedy" by Pablo Picasso |
"Composition 8" by Vassily Kandinsky |
Introducing Capitalist Class Relations
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Introducing ParEcon Class Relations
In a parecon, there simply are no classes. Every participant in the economy has the same position relative to its structures as every other participant. Each has a balanced job complex -- none has superior or inferior working conditions. Each has an income governed by their own choice of how long and how hard to work, none being in any way exploited to the advantage of others. And each has an influence over outcomes proportional to the degree they are affected by them, no one having more or less than proportionate say. The capitalist class is absent due to their being no private ownership of productive assets. The coordinator class is absent due to their being no monopolization of empowering circumstances, tasks, or information. The institutions that produce class divisions (also including markets and central planning) are all replaced by institutions producing classlessness. So the class map is mono tonal. There is only the one class -- whatever one might wish to call it. |
Evaluating Capitalist Class RelationsCapitalist class relations produce disparities of income, wealth, influence, status, culture, and power, that in turn ensure constant struggle and divergence of energies and talents from useful production to maintaining class hierarchy. The disparities are grossly immoral as in millions being homeless, many more millions being poor -- and a relative few owning vast stores of items allowing comfort and status. The divergences are grossly inefficient. Society loses much of the productive capacity of the working class due to its being robbed of initiative and "dumbed down" so it cannot manifest its actual talents and due to its struggling and witholding rather than producing by virtue of its opposition to those above. Society also loses even quite a lot of the productive capacity of the coordinator class due to its spending much effort defending its prerogatives and seeking to expand them even against the greater good. |
Evaluating ParEcon Class RelationsParecon class relations have no implications as they make no differentiations. The features ordinarily characteristic of class difference and enforced by dominant classes -- elite advantage and rule -- are absent. |
Some Relevant Links
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Some Relevant Links
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