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by David Korten from YESMagazine Website � �
� � � � Photo by Shangarey - iStock � �
is an obsolete question. Local initiatives across the world are looking for maturity instead as they rebuild caring, place-based
communities and economies.
� You will hear a well-established and rarely challenged narrative.
Grow. Grow. Grow... �
It is time to reframe the debate to
recognize that we have pushed growth in material consumption beyond
Earth's environmental limits. We must now shift our economic
priority from growth to maturity - meeting the needs
of all within the limits of what Earth can provide. �
Contrary to the promises of politicians
and economists, this growth is not eliminating poverty
and creating a better life for all. It is instead creating
increasingly grotesque and unsustainable imbalances in our
relationship to Earth and to each other. � Corporate profits as a percentage of GDP are at a record high. The U.S. middle class is shrinking as most people work longer hours and struggle harder to put food on the table and maintain a roof over their heads. Families are collapsing, and suicide rates are increasing. � The assets of the world's 62 richest individuals equal those of the poorest half of humanity - 3.6 billion people. � In the United States, the 2015 bonus pool for 172,400 Wall Street employees was $25 billion - just short of the $28 billion required to give 4.2 million minimum wage restaurant and health care workers a raise to $15 an hour. � Humans now consume at a rate 1.6 times what Earth can provide. Weather becomes more severe and erratic, and critical environmental systems are in decline. � These distortions are a predictable consequence of an economic system designed to extract Earth's natural wealth for the purpose of maximizing financial returns to those who already have more than they need. � On the plus side, as this system has created the imperative for deep change, it has also positioned us to take the step toward a life-centered planetary civilization. � It has:
We cannot, however, look to the economic institutions that created the imbalances to now create an economy that meets the essential needs of all in balanced relationship to a living Earth. � Global financial markets value life only for its market price. And the legal structures of global corporations centralize power and delink it from the realities of people's daily lives. � Restoring balance is necessarily the work of living communities, of people who care about one another, the health of their environment, and the future of their children. � The step to maturity depends on rebuilding caring, place-based communities and economies and restoring to them the power that global corporations and financial markets have usurped. � Local initiatives toward this end are already underway throughout the world.
The questions relevant to this moment in history are,
Living organisms have learned to self-organize as bioregional communities that create and maintain the conditions essential to a living Earth community. � We humans must take the step to maturity as we learn to live as responsible members of that community. � � � |
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