492 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
492 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
from Libertarian Labor Review #16
|
|
Winter 1994, pages 18-23
|
|
|
|
|
|
PRINCIPLES OF LIBERTARIAN ECONOMICS
|
|
by Abraham Guillen (translated by Jeff Stein)
|
|
Part 3
|
|
|
|
Information and Self-government
|
|
|
|
This is the final installment in this three-part series. Part
|
|
I ran in LLR #14, Part II in LLR #15.
|
|
A self-managed economy will have to rationally organize the
|
|
branches of industry and, within each one, integrate the small and
|
|
medium enterprises with the big enterprises to constitute a unified
|
|
whole. For example, in the branch of industry of domestic
|
|
electronics, which seems to have no relationship with the
|
|
construction industry, it may be suitable to control home heating
|
|
and cooling not with individual refrigeration and individual
|
|
furnaces but centrally, with the goal of saving energy. In this
|
|
sense, the construction industry, to construct new housings, would
|
|
build them to work in the manner of hotels, with all included
|
|
services, so the worker would live similar to a present day
|
|
bourgeois in a great hotel. For this to happen it would be
|
|
necessary to increase the productivity of labor in the primary and
|
|
secondary sectors, so that each worker in agriculture and in
|
|
industry would be capable of producing for many people so that, in
|
|
compensation, they would proportion him the necessary services of
|
|
a sort of social hotel, as we have indicated. But for this to
|
|
happen will require a great revolution in culture and technology,
|
|
investing much in Research and Development.
|
|
The self-managed economy will have to invest a good portion of
|
|
the national income in the production of both consumer and capital
|
|
goods, particularly in its first years of operation, so that the
|
|
productivity of the labor is increased to unprecedented levels. In
|
|
this order of ideas, economic growth, with libertarian socialism,
|
|
would be greater than with private capitalism or State capitalism,
|
|
since the surplus-value wasted on the parasitic classes under
|
|
capitalism would be invested instead. Consequently, it wouldn't be
|
|
necessary to harshly tighten the belts of the workers, as did
|
|
Stalin; instead the gross national or social income would increase
|
|
annually in greater proportion than under industrialized capitalism
|
|
or bureaucratic socialism (which wastes too much in armaments, in
|
|
salaries of unproductive officials, and slows economic growth to no
|
|
greater a pace than that of the developing capitalist countries).
|
|
By means of the application of information and of computer
|
|
networks, well supplied with all types of data, the Federative
|
|
Council of the Economy would have the actual information for each
|
|
branch of production or of services. Therefore, the economic
|
|
integration of branches of production and of service would be a
|
|
positive science, which would know everything necessary in order to
|
|
avoid crisis of disproportional of growth in those branches,
|
|
without the production of excesses of personal, of goods not sold,
|
|
or of raw materials, since it would be known, at each moment, the
|
|
amount necessary to produce, to distribute or invest so that the
|
|
social economy has a law of harmonious development.
|
|
For example, the central computers of the Federative Council of
|
|
Economy, with informative contributions of the computer terminals
|
|
in local factories, provincial and regional, would make known what
|
|
was everyone's production, reserves and shipments to the
|
|
self-managed market. In the case of the industry for manufacturing
|
|
of paper containers, the central computer would register the number
|
|
of establishments, the personnel employed in each one of them,
|
|
total of work-hours, cost of the personnel in stable monetary
|
|
units, electric power consumed in the process of production, value
|
|
of the fuels and gas used, value of the consumed raw materials,
|
|
general expenses, taxes, value of the total production, value of
|
|
the employed labor, amounts destined to pay debts and for new
|
|
investments. In sum: programming the economy would be simple,
|
|
without need of bureaucrats, of capitalist managers or of
|
|
technocrats.
|
|
When we speak of taxes we don't refer to the tribute of the
|
|
western capitalist type nor to the business taxes (mainly figured
|
|
as a business expense usurped from the enterprises by the State in
|
|
the USSR and in the "popular republics that made up the COMECON),
|
|
but to the delivery of a pre-determined quota of the economic
|
|
surplus, extracted by the self-managed enterprises, transferred to
|
|
the self-governments, responsible for returning those transfers to
|
|
society in social and public services according to their ability:
|
|
sanitation, hygiene, paving of streets, highways, roads, ports,
|
|
railroads, education, public health and other responsibilities of
|
|
the self-governments which would be too great to enumerate.
|
|
Labor-Value Money
|
|
In this case we would attempt to strengthen the economy of the
|
|
free self-managed municipality, not in the traditionally Roman
|
|
[state-citizen] nor modern bureaucratic sense, but as the social
|
|
and public enterprise of the citizens; as well as the industrial,
|
|
agricultural, of research enterprise or certain global services
|
|
which would constitute the task of the associated workers with
|
|
their means of production, self-organized into Worker Councils of
|
|
Self-Management and in Basic Units of Associated Labor, where the
|
|
economic accounting should be automated by means of computers and
|
|
take as their unit of calculation, the labor-hour (LH). It would
|
|
have thus a monetary equivalence of the same value, if the money is
|
|
intended to remain stable. The LH would circulate monetarily in the
|
|
form of ticket which would give the right to consume reasonably,
|
|
always leaving an important portion in order to invest more capital
|
|
than wornout during a year, so that libertarian socialism would
|
|
enlarge the social capital, with the goal of progressing more with
|
|
self-management than under the dominance of capitalists or of
|
|
bureaucrats.
|
|
The LH, as labor-money, wouldn't lead to monetary inflation
|
|
like capitalist money or like the soviet ruble, which conceal by
|
|
being the money of class, the parasitical incomes of the western
|
|
bourgeoisie, or of the eastern bureaucracy, inflating the growth of
|
|
the gross national product (GNP), with salaries of officials or
|
|
unproductive technocrats, or with dividends, interests, rents and
|
|
surplus values received by the capitalists, according to the
|
|
western economic model, where each day there exist a growing
|
|
parasitical class at the expense of productive workers.
|
|
Every project of investment would be calculated in hours of
|
|
labor (LH), as well as in terms of personal and public consumption
|
|
required. It would be monitored that neither would be excessive in
|
|
the carrying on of a libertarian, self-managed society, of direct
|
|
associative democracy, so that a part of the global economic
|
|
surplus would be invested in achieving a greater automation of
|
|
industrial production and of agricultural production. It would thus
|
|
be possible to continue reducing the working day to a range which
|
|
would allow a more leisure time, so that all the citizens could
|
|
occupy their time in more relaxation and, above all, in better
|
|
scientific, cultural and technological preparation
|
|
The LH, as labor-money and as a quantification of
|
|
the economy, having a stable monetary value would program the
|
|
economy: to account it; to establish the costs of the goods and
|
|
services; programming the integrated branches of the division of
|
|
the labor and correct disharmonies between them; quantifying in
|
|
the products the cost of raw, energy, amortization of the
|
|
capital, value of the work, economic contributions to the local
|
|
self-governments and to the national co-government, etc. All of
|
|
this would function within a libertarian socialism of a
|
|
self-managed market, without speculators, hoarders or merchants,
|
|
in order that competition benefit the workers and the consumers,
|
|
the cooperative groups and self-managed enterprises, in the
|
|
manner similar to the way the market functioned in the Spanish
|
|
libertarian collectives during the Spanish Revolution of 1936-39.
|
|
The goal would be to avoid the bureaucracy of a centrally planned
|
|
economy, such as occurred in the USSR and China, where the
|
|
officials decided everything and the people participated in
|
|
nothing. As if that were socialism, however much they try to
|
|
introduce it thus by means of a totalitarian propaganda, as if lies
|
|
could be converted into truths by force of repeating them as the
|
|
only truth, thanks to the state monopoly of the radio, the press,
|
|
the television, the universities, the schools, so that Power
|
|
regulates knowledge according to their political convenience.
|
|
In a libertarian economy, labor-money wouldn't be money in the
|
|
capitalist sense such as we understand it and need it today, since
|
|
it wouldn't allow the individual accumulation of capital in order
|
|
to exploit the labor of other people and obtain a surplus value.
|
|
Rather it would be intended to facilitate the exchange of goods and
|
|
service, in a self-managed market, where these exchange at their
|
|
true labor value, so that it fulfill economically the law of equal
|
|
exchange in equality of condition for all the integrated branches
|
|
of the social division of the labor and the law of the cooperation
|
|
of those same branches or federations of production and of service.
|
|
If, on the other hand, there were no free operation of the
|
|
self-managed market, things would fall into economic chaos, by
|
|
trying to centrally plan everything. Prices and their economic
|
|
calculation, as well as the market that really forms them (without
|
|
maintaining bureaucratic costs) are only possible within an
|
|
indicative global programming, but which leave the day-to-day
|
|
market free, so that all the enterprises are able to produce the
|
|
best and most economically, about which the consumers must
|
|
ultimately decide. From this method, there is an invisible hand
|
|
which self-regulates the social economy, better than thousands of
|
|
officials and technocrats equipped with thousands of computers who
|
|
without liberty, order disorganization by being poorly informed or
|
|
because of the self-interests of the totalitarian bureaucracy, who
|
|
manage more like inquisitors or cruel police (as happened in the
|
|
USSR and China).
|
|
If the LH, the unit of labor-money, would have, for example, an
|
|
purchasing power of 1 hour of average social-labor and this were
|
|
equivalent, roughly speaking, to one dollar, one could establish,
|
|
among others, the following calculation of economic-accounts:
|
|
Calculation in (LH) of an Industrial Enterprise
|
|
- Costs of machinery = $1000 = 1000 LH
|
|
- Raw materials, energy, etc. = $50,000 = 50,000 LH
|
|
- Hours worked in production = 50,000 LH
|
|
- Total of LH = 101,000 LH
|
|
- Units produced during the period of work = 100
|
|
Dividing the total number of LH, spent in the process of
|
|
production, and the total of units produced in that time of work
|
|
which could be daily, monthly, or yearly, we would have an average
|
|
of labor value for unit produced of 1.010 of LH or of labor-money.
|
|
Now then, as no money could be absolutely stable, since
|
|
if the productivity of the labor increases, due to improvements in
|
|
machines, education of the workers and more efficient methods, it
|
|
would result that the LH will end up having less value of exchange,
|
|
increasing its value of use, driving this economic process toward
|
|
an economy of abundance where, overcoming venal value, the value of
|
|
use would only remain. Consequently, having reached this stage in
|
|
the economy and technology, with most of the work automated, the
|
|
value of the produced goods wouldn't be based much on living labor,
|
|
but almost everything would be labor of the past (accumulated
|
|
capital), which would determine thereby a self-regulated production
|
|
of abundance. Then the wonderful time will have arrived of
|
|
overcoming finally both money and the commodity, each man receiving
|
|
according to his necessity, although he only contributes according
|
|
to his unequal capacity, or in other words, that it would make
|
|
possible the economic equality between the men: libertarian
|
|
communism, rationally and scientifically, economically possible,
|
|
without which it must considered as a beautiful utopia.
|
|
Only a self-managed economy, rational and objective, based on
|
|
scientific laws, from the commencement of the establishment of
|
|
libertarian socialism, avoiding the fall into one phase or another,
|
|
into either the socialism of group property, into forms of
|
|
corporatism or of narrow syndicalism, but towards a condition of
|
|
always placing the general interest above the particular interest
|
|
of the professional or work groups.
|
|
The Libertarian Society
|
|
On the subject of the future of a libertarian and self-managed
|
|
society, Kropotkin warned and advised:
|
|
We are convinced that the mitigated individualism of the
|
|
collectivist system will not exist alongside the partial
|
|
communism of possession of all of the soil and of the
|
|
instruments of labor. A new form of production will not
|
|
maintain the old form of redistribution. A new form of
|
|
production will not maintain the old form of consumption,
|
|
just as it will not accommodate the old forms of
|
|
political organization.
|
|
In this order of ideas, explains Kropotkin, the private
|
|
ownership the capital and of the earth are attributes of
|
|
capitalism. Those conditions were consistent with the bourgeoisie
|
|
as a dominant class, although the public [state] ownership of
|
|
capital and of the earth is consistent with the capitalism of the
|
|
soviet-State, which elevates the totalitarian bureaucracy as a new
|
|
dominant class.
|
|
The private ownership of the means of production and of
|
|
exchange created capitalism as a mode of production and the
|
|
bourgeoisie as dominant class.
|
|
"They were", says Kropotkin, "the necessary condition for the
|
|
development of the capitalist production; it will die with her,
|
|
although some may try disguising it under form of a 'labor bonus'.
|
|
The common possession of the instruments of labor will bring
|
|
necessarily the common enjoyment of the fruits of the common
|
|
labor." (The Conquest of Bread, p.28)
|
|
If upon changing the mode of production and of distribution,
|
|
daily life doesn't change, including distribution, consumption,
|
|
education, the political system, the legal and social, in the sense
|
|
that one dominant classes are not substituted by other, then,
|
|
really, nothing essentially has changed. Thus it happened in the
|
|
Soviet Union, where the economic categories and the economic laws
|
|
of the capitalism were hardly modified, with the result that the
|
|
economic dictatorship of the bourgeoisie was replaced with the
|
|
political and economic dictatorship of the bureaucracy and, in
|
|
consequence, private or anonymous capitalism for the capitalism of
|
|
State. A revolution like this, although it is called socialist,
|
|
constitutes a great swindle to the detriment of working people, for
|
|
whom in the majority of cases, it has not meant more than a change
|
|
of master or of a saddle, to the unfortunate beast of burden. So
|
|
instead of being the proletarian of the bourgeois, they have a new
|
|
Patron, that is to say, the technocrat and the bureaucrat. In our
|
|
way of thinking, the alternative to capitalism is not Marxism
|
|
Leninism, but libertarian socialism.
|
|
The True Social Revolution
|
|
For a revolution to be true, in the sense of emancipating
|
|
working people from the oppression and exploitation of the dominant
|
|
classes, it has to establish a new mode of production, exchange,
|
|
distribution and consumption and create new social relationships;
|
|
new and more powerful productive forces; new political forms of
|
|
popular direct participation; new legal institutions having as
|
|
their basis the popular jury, new universities and technical
|
|
schools integrated with industries, agriculture, mining, energy,
|
|
fishing, the forests and other sectors; new philosophic,
|
|
political,social, artistic, and cultural doctrines; new conceptions
|
|
of national and social defense based more on the people in arms
|
|
(than on a bureaucratic professional army, expensive and wasteful)
|
|
in order to defend the society, as much inside as outside of it. It
|
|
is necessary to affirm the system of popular self-defense, since
|
|
without which there couldn't be a guarantee that self-management
|
|
will be accepted by a professional army, the latter always having
|
|
tendencies to stage a "coup" in order to take Power.
|
|
On the other hand, in order to avoid the coming to power of a
|
|
one-Party-state, which is the worst and greatest single political
|
|
wrong, as happened in the USSR, there will need to be created a
|
|
participatory socialism. This would entail a respect for the free
|
|
personality within the collective, the self-determination of the
|
|
local governments within a federalism which coherently maintains a
|
|
unified market, the social and national self-defense, diplomatic
|
|
relations with the exterior, the socio-economic system as a
|
|
relatively homogeneous regime. A federalism which keeps a national
|
|
and social accounting system in order to estimate and program the
|
|
authentic valuation of the national or social global income, making
|
|
it possible to know where we have been and toward where we are
|
|
going economically, socially, politically, scientifically and
|
|
technologically.
|
|
But a new economic system, based on self-managed socialism,
|
|
will have to have another way of estimating the annual economic
|
|
growth on the basis of short, medium and long term plans,
|
|
constructing a macro-economic picture of the national and social
|
|
economy, departing from the known figures and projecting toward
|
|
figures to be attained in the next trimesters, semesters, years.
|
|
Thus the future, in certain manner, will be anticipated by having
|
|
a Federative Council of the Economy, where each federation of
|
|
production or of services knows that which it has and that which it
|
|
wants, in accordance with the effective demand of the self-managed
|
|
market. Libertarian socialism, if it wants to distinguish itself
|
|
from authoritarian soviet communism, must respect the law of the
|
|
supply and demand, without falling into bourgeois liberalism, since
|
|
in the self-managed market the federations of production and of
|
|
social and public services act competitively. Because if the market
|
|
is suppressed, and with it the law of labor-value, the law of
|
|
economic competition, the law of formation of just prices in the
|
|
market, it would not be possible establish a rational economy of
|
|
costs and prices, necessary investments and appropriate
|
|
consumption. In its place would be a centralized and bureaucratic
|
|
planning which places the total-State above the oppressed,
|
|
exploited Society, as happened in the USSR under a planning of
|
|
economic decrees, without respect for objective economic laws.
|
|
On the other hand, libertarian socialism has to respect the
|
|
pluralism of ideas, although it wouldn't provide a space for
|
|
byzantine struggles. People would be self-organized in their own
|
|
interest in self-managed enterprises, mutual cooperatives, local
|
|
self-governments and all types of socio-economic and political
|
|
forms of direct participation. Politics would be
|
|
deprofessionalized, abolishing the political class and the
|
|
political parties as expression of antagonistic interests, since
|
|
each citizen or worker will participate in their enterprise, local
|
|
self-government, federation, daily, without falling into the trap
|
|
of electoralism, where they only participate for a day to elect a
|
|
government worse than another.
|
|
Traps of Bourgeois Economics
|
|
Libertarian socialism will have to create a new economic
|
|
doctrine and a new system of estimating the national or social
|
|
income. Actually, the concept of gross national product (GNP), of
|
|
which there is so much talk and is so little understood, counts in
|
|
unstable monetary units, the total of the goods and services
|
|
obtained by economic activity: agriculture, industry, services, as
|
|
large integrated sectors of the national economy.
|
|
If the GNP, the way it is constituted in the bourgeois economy,
|
|
were estimated in monetary units of constant purchasing power, thus
|
|
deflating the official figures, it is possible that it actually
|
|
diminishes instead of increasing. On the other hand, the GNP, in
|
|
its bourgeois form, includes the economic participation of the
|
|
unproductive "tertiary" and "quaternary" sectors, in the sense not
|
|
that this should be concealed, but that the GNP shows "growth" when
|
|
it may have diminished materially, in effective production. Thus,
|
|
for example, in many countries which are diminishing their
|
|
industrial and agricultural production during some years, but if
|
|
salaries increase and the number of tertiaries in the state
|
|
bureaucracy, commerce, the banks, and in social and public services
|
|
grow, it is said that the GNP has grown, for example, an annual 3%,
|
|
when the reality is that this macro-economic figure only represents
|
|
salaries, incomes without effective work, surplus values taken,
|
|
parasitic income , etc.
|
|
Libertarian socialism, creating a social economy based on
|
|
truthful figures, would have to estimate the GNP in a different
|
|
manner than the capitalists. It is necessary to give to the concept
|
|
of social income, units which are measured or concrete and in
|
|
constant money based on material output: agriculture, cattle
|
|
raising, forests, fishing, energy, mining, industry, or whatever is
|
|
actual production. As for the "services", only transportation,
|
|
railroads, trucking, marine and air would be included in the
|
|
concrete estimate of the effective or material income, since
|
|
although transportation doesn't add production, it transports it
|
|
from one side to another and, in consequence, it should be included
|
|
in the concrete income of one year to another.
|
|
Adding the concrete income alongside gross income
|
|
(administrative "services", commerce, banks and other social and
|
|
public services), it would be seen if these take too great a
|
|
percentage in the total income by having too many unproductive
|
|
personal who, in order to not drain the social economy, would have
|
|
to be recycled as productive personnel. Now then, in the "services"
|
|
which could be considered as productive, would be included the
|
|
personnel destined for Research and Development (R &D), without
|
|
whose presence an economy will stagnate for lack of economic and
|
|
technological progress; but the personnel of R&D should be, besides
|
|
in the Institutes or Centers (which tend to be bureaucratic and
|
|
technocratic), directly in the industrial enterprises,
|
|
agricultural, energy, forests, mining, fishing, etc., since science
|
|
and technique should be united directly to labor as immediate
|
|
factors of production and not as though the ostentation of an
|
|
academic title should make one a technocrat.
|
|
In sum, the net income of a country would have to be estimated,
|
|
in a libertarian socialism, at costs determined in relatively
|
|
stable physical and monetary units which don't mislead, deducting
|
|
the necessary investments of social capital in order to enlarge
|
|
production and not simple reproduction as happens to the bourgeois
|
|
economy in a crisis.
|
|
The estimate of the national and social income must be
|
|
transparent: from the total of the wealth created in a year must be
|
|
deducted the material consumption of people and that of
|
|
self-administration (where there should not be much bureaucracy, by
|
|
reason of better information) and to deduct, set aside or remove
|
|
the social or national saving destined for investment in order to
|
|
increase the reproduction of effective wealth, create new
|
|
enterprises, design improved and more productive machines, carry on
|
|
scientific investigation, automate industrial production and public
|
|
services, and mechanize and electrify agriculture.
|
|
Liberation of the Working People
|
|
In sum, the libertarian economy should liberate the worker from
|
|
their old employers, either private managers or from the State as
|
|
Manager, to end that the workers, by means of their Self-Management
|
|
Enterprise Councils, direct the economy which they create with
|
|
their labor upon the means of production associated, from the
|
|
bottom up, by means of the federations of production and of social
|
|
services composed in a Federative Council of the Economy; only thus
|
|
could there be planning and liberty, an associative democracy of
|
|
full participation of the working people, a self-managed socialist
|
|
society, avoiding any form of totalitarian communism (which, as a
|
|
matter of fact, is capitalism of the State).
|
|
Without economic liberty there can't be political liberty;
|
|
since with capitalism there is an economic dictatorship of a
|
|
plutocratic minority over the majority of working people; and with
|
|
capitalism of the State, in the soviet manner, the State exploits
|
|
and oppresses Society by means of the one-Party which is a bad one
|
|
for the majority and a good one for the bureaucratic, oppressive
|
|
and exploitive minority. The solution is: neither totalitarian
|
|
communism nor capitalism but self-management, direct democracy,
|
|
federalism and socialism.
|
|
|
|
An Afterword by the Translator
|
|
by Jeff Stein
|
|
|
|
Abraham Guillen has given us some useful concepts for
|
|
analyzing the economic systems of state-socialist and corporate
|
|
capitalist countries. Although these economies are no longer
|
|
dominated by individual capitalist owner-managers, they remain
|
|
exploitive, class systems. According to Guillen, ownership of the
|
|
means of production is now collective, spread across a stratum of
|
|
"techno-bureaucrats". These techno-bureaucrats are just as much
|
|
concerned with accumulating capital through exploitation of
|
|
workers, as the old "robber baron" capitalists. However, the
|
|
surplus of the system is shared (although not on an equal basis)
|
|
within the techno-bureaucratic class. Under these systems, legal
|
|
ownership means less than one's position in the state or corporate
|
|
hierarchy. Only a system of worker self-management of their own
|
|
workplaces, can eliminate this exploitation by the techno-
|
|
bureaucracy.
|
|
This does not mean Guillen's theory is without problems. His
|
|
proposals for a "market without capitalists" and the establishment
|
|
of "labor-money" are built open the assumption that the labor
|
|
theory of value can provide the basis for a libertarian socialist
|
|
economy. The labor theory of value provides a powerful argument for
|
|
the elimination of capitalists and bureaucrats, since their incomes
|
|
represent an unnecessary drag on the economy. However, in a self-
|
|
managed economy inequalities having nothing to do with labor
|
|
productivity would arise between self-managed enterprises, giving
|
|
some a competitive advantage over others. For instance, the size of
|
|
the enterprise, the availablity of scarce raw materials, the
|
|
presence or absence of strict environmental regulation by the local
|
|
municipality, etc., would all come into play, and these are not
|
|
always factors which are easily calculated in labor-hours.
|
|
Augustin Souchy, another anarcho-syndicalist who made
|
|
extensive studies of various attempts at establishing workers self-
|
|
management, observed that:
|
|
working hours as the only value determinant is
|
|
unrealistic. Experience shows that the lack of raw
|
|
material, rarity of quality, differences of consumer
|
|
goods, highly qualified services, etc. are equally vague
|
|
determinants. These factors will not change in a
|
|
socialist economy." (Beware! Anarchist!, Chicago, 1992.
|
|
p.42)
|
|
One factor which is becoming increasingly important in
|
|
determining production costs is energy. As the amount of labor
|
|
decreases due to automation, the amount of energy in terms of
|
|
fossil fuels, electricity required, etc., increases. This means
|
|
that while the labor value of many products is going down, their
|
|
energy value is going up. As long as energy is cheap and abundant,
|
|
this does not necessarily present a problem. However, in the
|
|
future, as the southern hemisphere becomes increasingly
|
|
industrialized and there is a greater demand for energy, and as
|
|
fossil fuel supplies dwindle, a purely labor-based system of
|
|
economic accounting would collapse. Energy would either have to be
|
|
rationed, or some sort of global federation would have to set a tax
|
|
on energy. Either way, the labor-exchange economy would be forced
|
|
away from an unregulated market system. On the other hand, the sort
|
|
of energy accounting based system proposed by some "green"
|
|
economists is not adequate either, since the energy theory of value
|
|
does not take into account the qualitative difference between human
|
|
energy (labor) and non-human energy.
|
|
There is no such thing as a perfectly, objective theory of
|
|
economic value. Each theory has its own hidden biases which will
|
|
tend to skew the results of any accounting system (this includes
|
|
the bourgeois scarcity-value system, which favors those who own
|
|
capital and scarce resources). The best a labor theory of value can
|
|
do is identify that part of a thing's (a good or service) value,
|
|
which is the result of social production. The rest of a thing's
|
|
value is contributed by energy, nature, the social infrastructure,
|
|
and a host of other variables. In a libertarian, self-managed
|
|
economy, the accounting of these non-labor costs and the
|
|
distribution of these benefits, therefore needs to go beyond the
|
|
individual workplaces and their labor accounts. An economic role
|
|
must be played by the free municipalities (communes), who must set
|
|
democratic controls over energy, environmental standards, and
|
|
scarce resources, in order to make sure that those exchanges which
|
|
take place do not undermine social equality or the capacity of the
|
|
earth to sustain itself. Therefore, contrary to Guillen, we should
|
|
insist that whatever exchange or currency system exists in the
|
|
future, it provide for greater community control and allow all
|
|
citizens a voice as to how value should be determined.
|
|
|