没有钱的生活

IF 0.8 4区 社会学 Q3 ECONOMICS
T. Trainer
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引用次数: 1

摘要

《没有钱的生活》安妮特拉·尼尔森和弗朗茨·齐默尔曼主编。全球金融危机、欧洲“去增长”运动、占领华尔街和过渡城镇运动,似乎都是对体制不可接受性的不满和寻求替代方案的长期逾期激增的一部分。因此,这是一本及时的书,在关注金钱替代品的当代背景下重新考虑了一些经典主题。11章探讨了一系列有趣而重要的主题,大致分为对资本主义和消费主义的批评,以及行动主义和实验。主题包括非市场社会主义、自我管理、Twin Oaks公社的劳动信用制度、西班牙擅自占用者的无货币经济、工作和工资的消除以及礼物经济。有很有帮助的介绍和总结章节的编辑。尽管所有章节对非专业读者来说都很清楚,很容易理解,但对政治经济学专业的学生来说,讨论也可能是有价值的复习。这本书的中心论点是,一个令人满意的社会需要摒弃市场、国家和货币。对第三个主张的强调是特别独特和有争议的。很明显,消费资本主义社会的许多最荒谬和最离谱的方面都直接归因于货币体系,特别是它想当然地认为,货币必须以信贷的形式存在,必须有利息偿还,必须由私人银行发行。但关键问题是,由此产生的影响是由于货币的使用,还是仅仅由于消费资本主义社会中使用的货币形式?另一种形式能否保留货币的优势,同时避免这些影响?我对这本书的主要怀疑在于,废除所有形式的货币的必要性是否令人信服。我坚信,我们正在进入一个由资源和生态问题造成的严重和不可补救的匮乏的时代,在这个时代,特别是富裕国家将被卷入对完全不同的社会制度的争夺。这些国家不会以重工业化、全球化、经济增长或富裕的生活方式为特征,它们即使不能完全消除市场,也必须至少严格控制市场。新的地方经济将无法令人满意地运行,除非它们主要处于居民委员会和镇议会层面的参与性社会控制之下,而残余的“国家”的作用相对较小。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Life without Money
LIFE WITHOUT MONEY Anitra Nelson and Franz Zimmerman, Eds. Pluto Press, 2011, 244 pp. The GFC, the European 'de-growth' movement, Occupy Wall St, and the Transition Towns movement, all seem to be part of a long overdue surge in discontent with the unacceptability of the system and the quest for alternatives. Thus this is a timely book, reconsidering some classic themes in a contemporary context focused on alternatives to money. Eleven chapters explore a range of interesting and important themes, loosely divided into critiques of capitalism and consumerism, and activism and experiments. Among the topics are non-market socialism, self management, the labour credit system of the Twin Oaks commune, the money-free economy of Spanish squatters, the elimination of work and wages, and the gift economy. There are helpful introductory and concluding chapters by the editors. Although all chapters are clear and easily understood by the non-specialist reader, the discussions are also likely to be valuable refreshers for professional students of political economy. The book's central thesis is that a satisfactory society requires the scrapping of markets, the state and money. The emphasis on the third of these propositions is particularly distinctive and debatable. It is obvious that many of the most absurd and outrageous aspects of consumer-capitalist society are directly due to the monetary system, especially its taken for granted assumption that money must take the form of credit which has to be repaid with interest, and which has to be issued by private banks. But the key question is, are the resulting effects due to the use of money or just due to the form of money used in consumer-capitalist society? Could a different form retain the advantages of money while avoiding these effects? My main doubts regarding the book are to do with whether the case given for the need to scrap all forms of money is convincing. I firmly believe that we are entering an era of intense and irremediable scarcity brought on by resource and ecological problems, in which the rich countries in particular will be jolted into a scramble for radically different social systems. These will not be characterised by heavy industrialisation, globalisation, economic growth or affluent lifestyles, and they will have to at least heavily control markets if not entirely eliminate them. The new local economies will not function satisfactorily unless they are mostly under participatory social control at the level of the neighbourhood committee and town meeting, with a relatively minor role for the remnant 'state'. …
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CiteScore
3.20
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