Please . . . It's important to
keep in mind that what I am presenting here is a new and different way of
organizing the economy. It would be a relatively simple economy, but, as anyone
who has ever tried to hit a golf ball straight can attest, just because
something's simple doesn't necessarily make it easy. The subject matter doesn't
help. Even someone very good at explaining things would have a hard time making
any economic model easily understood. I'm trying to suggest, as gently as
possible, that it will be hard enough to get an accurate picture of this new
kind of economy in one's mind without attempting, while reading about it, to
convince oneself that it really isn't anything new (for example, "It's
really just socialism") or trying to visualize how it would function while
looking at it through the prism of the capitalistic economy that we all know.
So, if you would, take a deep breath, let go of familiar ideas and experiences,
and prepare to be exposed to something really new and truly wonderful.
The last great advance in the
affairs of humankind, I'm saying, was the advent of political democracy.
Political democracy represents the conscious organization of the process of
effecting choices for a community according to the democratic principle. I submit
that the time has come for the next great advance in the principled
organization of human affairs, to apply democracy to the capitalistic economy.
Both the spirit of that proposition and its timing have
perhaps been made more viable since capitalism has vanquished Marxism and in
the process more or less conquered the world.
Democratizing capitalism can in
no way be equated with its destruction. Capitalism is an economy with private
property and freedom of choice regarding how one wishes to participate in it,
in which the economy is divided between public and private sectors, with the
latter predominant, and there is no limit on how much income anyone may earn or
how much property one may accumulate. Applying democracy to capitalism would
require the establishment of a democratically distributed income. (Please note:
That is not the same thing as democratically distributing incomes.) Doing so
would in no way violate any of the above characteristics of capitalism. It
would, however, create an economy with economic security for all, environmental
sustainability, no involuntary unemployment, no poverty, and...get this...no taxes.
It would retain private property. It would also increase personal liberty and
enhance political democracy. (Also, all debts owed purely financial
institutions, such as banks, would go away.)
It will be seen that the economic
model being presented herein is not a 'managed' economy, much less
micro-managed, much less 'commanded.' Rather, it is a rationally designed
economy...as opposed to capitalism as we know it, undemocratic capitalism, which
developed via random social evolution (though the rich and powerful have sought
at every twist and turn along the way, with
more
success than not, to shape it for their benefit). A democratically capitalistic
economy would have in place a small number of rules that would define its
structure and make the economy function appropriately, just as the
constitutions of the U.S.
and other nations lay out the basic features and rules of a democratic
political process.
Structure and functioning are the
two fundamental aspects of any economic system--or, indeed, any kind of system
at all. The functioning of the demand economy is in some respects more
speculative than is its structure, and at all events follows from its
structure. So, I'll start with the structure of this economic system. In
discussing its functioning I'll limit myself to those areas that are less
speculative and therefore less debatable.
I first got to this economic
model by asking myself how we could have an economy as just in its structure as
political democracy is in its structure. The obvious answer is to consider that
money is to the economic system as rights are to the political system: No one can participate in the political
system of one's community without the rights relevant to participation in it,
and no one can participate in the economic system of one's community without
money. At the same time, every member of a community will be affected by the
choices made available through its political system...whether one wants to be
affected by them or not...and no one has any choice but to participate in the
economy. So, for the same reasons that justice requires an equitable
distribution of political rights, justice also requires an equitably distributed
income.
A just distribution is a
democratic distribution. A democratic distribution is one in which whatever is
being distributed is equally available to all, but for objective restrictions
(not based on personal whim and independent of any creed, ideology, etc.),
universally applied. Briefly put, the only valid restriction on earning the
democratically distributed income would be that one have a job that pays it (or
be retired or be genuinely too incapacitated to make a productive
contribution), and the only valid restriction on being allowed to get a job
earning that income would be age. Of course, particular jobs would still
require specific skills, knowledge, training, etc., but there would be a job
earning the democratically distributed income for everyone who wanted one
(without its costing anyone anything). I want to stress that the existence of a
democratically distributed income does not mean that anyone would be required
to accept a job earning it; the only limit on devising other ways of earning an
income would be people's imaginations. All this is getting us ahead of
ourselves, though, and justice (and its relationship to democratic capitalism)
is the subject of much of the remainder of this book. So, let's turn to the
economic model itself, beginning with a brief overview. [Note: I present the
model as much as possible in the present tense, but for no other reason than to
keep the syntax as simple as possible.]
Those who earn the democratically
distributed income are "employees of capital," or "capital
employees," retirees, and those who are too incapacitated to make a
productive contribution, to perform any job in the economy. The total of their
incomes is the supply of money for the economy. It is because all money enters
the economy in the form of incomes to potential consumers that I refer to this
economic system, this particular form of a democratically capitalistic economy,
as the demand economy. The democratically distributed income is paid by a
monetary agency. That agency has no discretionary power whatsoever; it is a
purely administrative body, the 'paymaster' for those earning democratically
distributed income. Beyond that, this economy works the way capitalism is
supposed to work: All other outcomes get decided by the workings of free
markets.