 So you say there are no good jobs out there. You've determined your genius:
The place where your gift (what you're really good at) intersects your
passion (what you love doing) -- areas 2 & 3 in the above diagram
-- but no one will pay you to do it, and you can't afford to do it for
free. So you're doing stuff in area 5 instead -- a job you're good at,
that someone will pay for, but which leaves you cold, angry,
unfulfilled, hating to get up in the morning, a part of the problem
instead of a part of the solution. There is a need for your gift, and
what you are offering is generous, and of use, so why is this supposedly 'free market' economy not recognizing its value by paying you to do it?

It all starts with the education system. That system is designed to make us dependent on the economic
system that finances and controls it. We are brainwashed to fear
failure, the ultimate punishment the system doles out: As artist Andrew
Campbell puts it
so eloquently: "In order not to fail most people are willing to believe
anything and not to care whether what they are told is true or false."
In order not to fail we 'learn' to toe the line, to believe and to do
what we are told, and not to question the four great myths of modern
civilization culture:
- The myth of progress: That humans are
the culmination of evolution, the crown of creation, and that life is
better now than it has ever been, and getting more so;
- The myth
of growth: That all things grow or die -- there is no stasis, no steady
state -- bigger is better, you must eat or be eaten, produce and
consume more and more or perish;
- The myth of competition and
scarcity: That society inevitably has a few winners and a lot of
losers, and if you're smart and work hard you will win the never-ending
'survival of the fittest' war against scarcity, and achieve
'competitive advantage';
- The myth of the 'free' market and
'free' trade: That the economy, the 'market', is fair and free from
distortion, and open to all -- anyone can succeed in it, the supply of
goods and services is a precise reflection of what people genuinely
want and need, and left to its own devices untrammeled 'free' markets
and 'free' trade are possible, real, and optimally efficient and
effective at distributing resources.
These are all, of course,
lies, designed to keep us all from realizing the truth: That life was
simpler, richer, happier and more resilient in 'prehistoric'
gatherer-hunter times and has, with some major ups and downs, been
getting worse for most ever since; that unconstrained growth is
unsustainable and threatens all life on Earth, and as a consequence the
sixth great extinction of life on our planet is already well underway;
that collaboration, not competition, is the rule that has always
governed healthy and diverse life on our planet, and that hierarchy and
inequality are, in nature, abhorrent aberrations; and that the economy
is grossly and deliberately distorted to perpetuate a continuous and
massive redistribution of wealth and power from the poor and
disenfranchised to the already obscenely rich and powerful.
The
education system teaches you relentlessly to accept the four
civilization myths, not to believe in yourself, to be ashamed of being
'wrong', to conform to be like everybody else, to fear failure and
hence shun risk, and therefore to be obedient and do what those in
'authority' tell you to do. It deliberately does not teach you any of
the critical skills shown in the mindmap above, because these skills
would make you dangerous, independent, self-sufficient, and out of control -- and that cannot be permitted.
Here's
some terrifying data that shows what this utter dependence and lack of
critical skills have produced in our modern economy, thanks to Paul Craig Roberts,
former US Assistant Secretary to the Treasury (it's US data but the
picture in the rest of the affluent nations is not much better):
- In
the past five years manufacturing lost 2.9 million jobs, almost 17% of
the manufacturing work force. The wipeout is across the board. Not a
single manufacturing payroll classification created a single new job.
- Communications
equipment lost 43% of its workforce. Semiconductors and electronic
components lost 37% of its workforce. The workforce in computers and
electronic products declined 30%. Electrical equipment and appliances
lost 25% of its employees. The workforce in motor vehicles and parts
declined 12%. Furniture and related products lost 17% of its jobs.
Apparel manufacturers lost almost half of their work force. Employment
in textile mills declined 43%. Paper and paper products lost one-fifth
of its jobs. The work force in plastics and rubber products declined by
15%.
- The knowledge jobs that were supposed to take the place of
lost manufacturing jobs in the globalized “new economy” never appeared.
The information sector lost 17% of its jobs, with the
telecommunications work force declining by 25%. Even wholesale and
retail trade lost jobs. Despite massive new accounting burdens imposed
by Sarbanes-Oxley, accounting and bookkeeping employment shrank by 4%.
Computer systems design and related lost 9% of its jobs. Today there
are 209,000 fewer managerial and supervisory jobs than 5 years ago.
There are no jobs for graduates. There are several hundred thousand
American engineers who are unemployed and have been for years. Offshore
outsourcing and offshore production have left the US awash with
unemployment among the highly educated.
- The total number of private sector jobs created over the last five year period is less than one eighth the net immigration during that period.
So
now most of us are caught: On the one hand, we have no 'marketable'
skills; on the other hand, the economy no longer needs us -- we are too
expensive, too demanding. We have become, like the angry, dispossessed
destitute masses in the struggling nations already bankrupted by local
corruption and complicit global corporatist theft, Disposable Citizens.
We
have become, to use Jerry Michalski's grim image, gullets whose only
purpose is to consume products and crap cash, and when we run out of
cash we are expected to keep borrowing and get deeper into debt so we
can consume even more, or else get out of the way as billions of
obedient new gullets are waiting, willing to take our place.
If
we want meaningful work we are going to have to collaborate with the
rest of the world's Disposable Citizens to create it. We are going to
have to build a wholly new economy, one that will undermine and then
replace (and be fiercely opposed by the beneficiaries of) the existing
dysfunctional 'market' economy. Are we -- are you -- ready to do this? Perhaps not yet -- there are several downsides to keep us frightened to do so:
- There
is a high likelihood of failure, at least at first -- brave or
foolhardy early pioneers often perish to pave the way for those who
come after and learn from their mistakes.
- It will take a huge
amount of work and sacrifice -- creating something from scratch, with
no foundation, can require lifetimes of effort, mostly thankless,
mostly arduous.
- You cannot straddle the new economy and the old
one -- once you walk away from the old economy and its gross practices
and addictions, there is no going back -- you'll be Living on the Edge
for the rest of your life.
- It will take enormous patience and
willingness to weather setbacks, before the seeds of this new economy
can be expected to finally take root.
The perpetrators of the
existing 'market' economy are counting on us not having the courage to
do this, and the odds are in their favour. Fear of failure is deeply
ingrained in us, and its effect is paralyzing.

We keep hoping that something will happen within the existing economy, to allow us to find meaningful work and become 'undisposable' within the system. We move back and forth between the edges of the existing society and economy (the outer circle of the diagram above) and the richer, more comfortable inner circles, gratefully
taking and constantly scrounging for the scraps tossed out by the
elite. We are addicted to consumption and debt, and will do almost
anything, demean ourselves nearly without limit, to feed our addictions.
When
I talk on this blog about making a living writing, or in innovation
consulting or environmental work, I am inundated with e-mails asking
me: How do I get a job doing this?
They don't want to hear my answer -- that the existing economy doesn't
value this work, and that they need to do the nearly impossible work
necessary to create a role for such meaningful work in an entirely new
economy.
So I ask again: Are you ready to do this?
If so, here is what we need to do, each of us, pioneers of what could
be the most rapid and astonishing change in human culture since
civilization began:
- Discover your gift:
Find the intersection of your genius (what you're uniquely good at) and
your passion (what you love doing). If you dont know how to start, read
Dick Richards' book. Don't worry if there's no commercial market for it -- the new economy we're creating will accommodate it.
- Assess how your gift can be of service: Who needs your gift now? even if they cannot 'afford' it. If your gift is selfish, instead of generous,
then it's not a gift -- keep looking. But if it is generous, don't
belittle it even if it is not 'valued' in the current economy. As long
as its intention is to be of use, then it's what you should be doing, and in the Generosity Economy it has value.
- Find the people you want to make a living with:
This is the hardest part: There is no mechanism at present to find such
people, and for now you're largely limited to those people who are,
like you, Living on the Edge, people who are ready to create the
Generosity Economy, and who know what their gift is.
- Design your offering:
This is an iterative process: You need to imagine how the combined
gifts of the people you are making a living with -- the partners of
your Natural Enterprise -- can be of value and service to others. The
genius of you and your partners (what each of you is uniquely good at)
must be mutually exclusive (no heavy overlaps) and collectively
exhaustive (no serious gaps). That means you may need to 'drop'
enterprise partners (tearfully) and find others to fill critical gaps
in your offering. These need to be people you love, who deeply share your vision and principles. And collectively what you offer must fill an unmet need -- whether or not the people who have that need can 'afford' it.
- Network with other Natural Enterprises:
Networks are the foundation and glue of any economy. In a Generosity
Economy you need to network with other Natural Enterprises whose
partners recognize the value of your offerings, and who are therefore
willing to 'generously' exchange and combine your offerings with
theirs. That means that all offerings in the network are ascribed the
same value: There is no pricing based on 'cost' or 'scarcity' --
everyone's gift is equal, and no money need be exchanged in the acts of
generosity. This is entirely consistent with existing Generosity Economy offerings:
Open source, free libraries, scientific exchange, peer production,
social exchanges, the Internet (especially blogs & wikis),
philanthropy and file sharing. These exchanges can be woven into your
networks. The fabric for such networks istrust and generosity.
- Form Natural Enterprises into Local Community Economies:
While much exchange can be virtual, there is a natural place for local
economic networks and exchanges, especially for goods that consist of
atoms, not bits. What drives Local Community Economy formation is the
compilation of a set of offerings that collectively meet all local
community members' needs, and hence make the local community
self-sufficient, resilient and fully independent of the old 'market'
economy. Together you can then Live on the Edge (the outer circle of
the diagram above), comfortably and joyfully without the need or
temptation to fall back into reliance on the old economy. Each Local
Community can then offer its surpluses to other Local Communities in
return for their surpluses. By this means, the few needs that cannot be
absolutely met locally can be met by trade that is absolutely voluntary
and not subject to extortion by the 'haves' from the 'have nots'. This
is a reflection that the Generosity Economy is an economy of inherent
abundance, not artificially created scarcity like the 'market' economy.
As such, these exchanges reinforce egalitarianism, and are a force for
sustainability and peace.
This is not easy to imagine, and
will be exceedingly difficult to do, but it is entirely natural,
modeled on the 'economy' that prevails in nature and which prevailed in
'prehistoric' gatherer-hunter cultures.
It is the only
sustainable economic model, the only economy that can allow each of us
to do exactly what we love, what we're uniquely good at, in service for
others -- what we were meant to do.
If we do it together, it need not be quite so scary. We can create the
jobs we want, and, in the process, set ourselves and our world free. |