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Small Is Beautiful Revisited For Learning Something

Picture Credit: Sneha Cecil on Unsplash

 

Schumacher warned about the brave new world!

 

 

 

OPINION . . . 

E. F. Schumacher’s classic book "Small is beautiful" was a product of the times. 

 

 

The Club of Rome had been warning of the consequences of pursuing economic growth without limits. 

 

 

The measure of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) was being questioned by liberal economists for not counting externalities like the consumption of natural resources, and not factoring in wellbeing. Likewise, there was growing criticism of the roles of trans-national corporations and questioning of the basic wisdom of foreign aid.

 

 

Schumacher questioned the wisdom of big government at a time the European Community was nurturing a mega-government that imposed regulation upon the smallest village. Schumacher was one of the early questioners of growing regulation, which was being accompanied by massive increases in bureaucracy to enforce regulations. 

 

 

Schumacher also incorporated the workplace and organisational values developed at the Tavistock Institute, at a time when they were considered radical.

 

 

Schumacher was ground-breaking in his concepts of scarcity, finite resources, and the need for environmental sustainability, a forerunner of the modern environmental movement.

 

 

Most importantly, Schumacher challenged the basic notion of economic growth, pursued under the illusion that the Earth has infinite resources. He challenged the very core of the economic problem postulated within the logics of Keynesian economics.

 

 

Schumacher critiqued current habits of consumerism, which are based on wants rather than needs, postulating that the invisible hand was too important for society’s choices being based on fate.  

 

 

 

Weaknesses In Development Economics . . .

Schumacher was damming about economic development in the third world, and the West’s role in it. Standard development strategies have primarily emulated the Western industrial practices for creating employment.

 

 

However, this meant the creation of mega-cities and  massive drain upon rural communities, as people entered cities for employment. This decimated rural communities and public infrastructure development became skewed in favour of cities. Crowded mega-cities created slums, industry created unabated pollution, while quality of life declined.

 

 

Foreign investment increased development, but at the cost of environmental degradation. 

 

 

The technology multi-nationals transferred didn’t enhance workforce skills. 

 

 

Respective education systems focused on producing industrial fodder, rather than focus on creating pool of skilled craftsmen, and educated professional class. 

 

 

Education distinctly lacked any substance for developing critical thinking, creativity, and innovation. The local education system did little for nurturing indigenous enterprises.

 

 

Foreign aid wasn’t crafted for developing the economies of recipient countries, and hence enhanced the agenda of donors. This hasn’t been in the interests of recipient countries.

 

 

Rising prosperity and advertising encouraged mass-consumerism based on wants rather than needs. This time and time again created markets for imported luxuries, rather than local products.

 

 

Foreign investment brought inappropriate solutions for developing countries, where new solutions specific for the situational nature of the country was needed.

 

 

Even though the above observations about development economics were made back in 1974, almost 50 years ago, there are distinct analogies for development in the new century. Many rural and even urban areas around the world, including many within post-industrial societies, urgently require revitalisation. This was particularly the case after 40 years of globalisation where low labour cost countries became the factories for the developed world.    

 

 

 

Schumacher Hypothesis . . . 

 

Schumacher saw that under the current economic system, the poor would get poorer and the rich would get richer, increasing the wealth divide.

 

Consequently, Schumacher published the alternative manifesto, calling for a new direction in development.

 

 

One of the biggest problems were mega-metropolises which soaked up national resources, became home for isolated conclaves, were unsustainable and generated the majority of a nation’s pollution. Schumacher believed cities over 500,000 people were undesirable and there should be progressive decentralisation.

 

 

Focus could then be put back into revitalising communities built upon sustainable numbers, as per the quality and sparsity of available hinterlands. 

 

 

These communities would engage in creating enterprises and food production that would sustainably serve immediate communities. These enterprises could vary in the way they were owned, organised, and operated, based on empowering people and maximising members’ wellbeing. Appropriate technology that could be constructed locally, that was affordable, and connected people with their work and enterprises was much more important than the established concept of economies of scale. Appropriate technology would create value and bring economic wellbeing to local communities.

 

 

 

Some Legacies . . . 

Schumacher’s work brought refocus on sustainable and organic farming after the world became dominated by fertiliser production from the green revolution. This allowed for the formation of many boutique farming enterprises around the world, and there are now host of organic food products on the market.

 

 

Companies like the Bodyshop and Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream were formed and developed using Schumacher’s community principles, but were eventually bought-out by multinational corporations. Japan’s One Village One Product (OVOP) and later Thailand’s One Tambun One Product (OTOP) programs were based upon Schumacher’s principles and successful in their time.

 

 

Schumacher’s educational principles were taken up by academicians like Peter Senge in the 1990s in the seminal book "The Fifth Discipline: The art and practice of the learning organization". The ideas were incorporated directly into education in the 2000s with "Schools that Learn: A Fifth Discipline Fieldbook for Educators, Parents and Everyone Who Cares about Education".

 

 

Schumacher highlighted the illusion of economics as resources were infinite, creating movement for utilising renewable inputs in products. Schumacher noted the tendency of humans for accumulating perception of unlimited powers, and an assumption that humankind’s mastery over science, gave control over the environment.

 

 

 

Schumpeter And “The Great Reset” . . . 

Schumacher questions Keynesian economics, socialism, and conventional forms of ownership in society. He also questions the public benefit of trans-national corporations, and the dehumanising aspects of displacement technologies. Large centralised governments don’t make the best decisions for communities, and we are now in a vacuum of virtue, wisdom, and morality within leadership and bureaucracy.

 

 

The World Economic Forum’s Great Reset was the anti-thesis of Schumacher’s Small is Beautiful concepts. Many critics of The Great reset claim it was being imposed upon societies by stealth, rather than after open discussion and debate.

 

 

The centralisation of government, participation in government of corporations, science based upon forecasts rather than evidence-based research, the introduction of capital-intensive Industry 4.0 technologies that the poor cannot afford, and the rise of top down authoritarianism, are all against what Small is Beautiful argued.

 

 

This was about the brave new world that Schumacher warned us. 

 

 

Murray Hunter takes a trans-disciplinary view of issues and events, trying to relate this to the enrichment and empowerment of people in the region. He's member of the Center for Policy Initiatives (CPI) Council and Editor at Large for the CPI website.

 

 

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed by the author/contributor do not necessarily represent those of the Center for Policy Initiatives (CPI). 

 

This Article first appeared here . . . 

https://murrayhunter.substack.com/p/revisiting-small-is-beautiful-97a?utm_campaign=post&triedRedirect=true