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Five benefits of not having money continued from previous
page 11 ...leads
to the second
topic for consideration,
2.
Increased Leisure Time
With
so many extra hands on deck working hours will be able to be
considerably reduced which, with the knowledge that one's work is not
tied to the ability to feed and clothe the family, to house them and
provide all the other requirements of life, is to remove the stress
at a stroke.
Decreased
time, but working for the common good rather than increased time
working only for personal remuneration. Less working time was the
oft-repeated refrain in the early days of the technology era. Workers
were to benefit from machine-operated production systems, computers
would be able to handle many of the mundane operations previously
done manually, the working week would be much reduced, maybe even
leading to job-sharing and part-time employment. In fact this state
of affairs never materialised and more employees found longer working
hours became part of their conditions of employment, earlier
agreements having been gradually eroded to the benefit of the
employers.
In
socialism, with millions released from wage slavery in the then
redundant financial sector free to be a part of the production,
distribution and services sectors, with the black economy and
“illegals” no longer threatening paid workers (pay being
redundant) there will be a huge reduction in individual necessary
work time. When there is no profit incentive the emphasis will be on
the production of quality goods from quality materials and no one
need choose an inferior item based on cost. Providers of utilities
such as electricity and gas, water and communications will be able to
have sufficient workers to install, service, repair and develop their
installations more efficiently and effectively. If there is work that
no one is prepared to undertake then an alternative will need to be
found democratically.
Without
the constraints that we have today the workplace will become a
different place, one of cooperation not competition, where we work
for the benefit of all, not for the profit of a few. The lines
between work and leisure may well be much more blurred than in
today's scenario. People will have time, time to be creative,
to learn different and multiple skills and to enjoy the time they
spend working. Leisure activities seen as hobbies now – vehicle
maintenance, gardening, DIY home improvements, baking, the making of
all kinds of hand-made items, giving or receiving educational and
training courses – could well form part of one's service to the
community, bringing a greater satisfaction and contributing to
individual development generally, one of the aims of socialism. With
more leisure time available it is also highly likely that more 'work'
would be created in the leisure area, whether sports complexes,
theatrical and music productions and educational courses in the
widest sense and with unlimited opportunities for the active
participation of those who choose it.
3.
Housing
Adequate
shelter, a “right” for all enshrined in the United Nations
Charter, is still unavailable to millions (billions, probably). There
is absolutely no automatic right to housing within the capitalist
system. All must pay. To pay, all must work. It is no matter that you
work long and hard and that your children work long and hard and
don't go to school. All that matters is that you have enough to buy
or rent or build. Maybe you did have enough before the housing market
bubble burst and the “worth” of your house went down while the
interest rates went up. Well, tough! Look around you. See the empty
houses and FOR SALE and foreclosure signs. These people must be
living somewhere now. There is always housing stock available
– if you can pay the going rate.
This
is one very obvious benefit of not having money. The recent economic
crisis has focussed many home-owners' minds. Why should anyone be
secure one month and the next find themselves in queer street? Can anybody
justify one individual's multiple home
ownership while
others live in slums, in cars, in cardboard boxes on the streets?
Please! When the majority of us have eventually decided that this
scenario is unacceptably obscene we can at last begin to move to a
humanitarian way of ordering our societies. Housing for all. Decent
housing for all. Materials that are free and belong to all of us. Our
architects, builders, plumbers, plasterers, electricians, etc. etc.
will all work for free – they also need homes to live in. New
housing can be built to the best specifications using appropriate
materials, incorporating adequate insulation and services with regard
to environmental protection and best use of alternative energy.
Respect
for people and respect for the environment. Decisions made
democratically as to best use of urban space vacated by the money
businesses; by communities wanting to
refurbish or upgrade their
older stock. The balance between urban and rural will no doubt
change. In some parts of the world there will be a mass exodus back
to productive farmland, reclaimed for local use and consumption
rather than continuing to grow cash crops for export. Decisions will
be taken based on the well-being of communities and determined by the
requirements of those communities and there will be no constraints or
limitations linked to profit for a third party.
4.
Health care
As
a result of huge stress reduction, no more worrying about salary or
wages from the job, no more worrying about keeping up the payments on
the house, increased leisure time – all these various factors will
surely result in improved relationships all round and, quite soon, a
healthier workforce.
At
present there are huge variations in standards of health care around
the world and also massive discrepancies in availability and monetary
cost to the recipients, Universal health care simply dos not exist.
Again it is tied in to the ability to pay. Let's remove this barrier
to good health and care of the sick by removing the money
element and
offer all services, treatments, drugs and medicines free of charge.
Hospitals and clinics then will be free of top-heavy budget
management and will be able to access resources, whether manpower,
equipment or drugs, according to their requirements and not limited
by financial
constraints. Medical researchers, now mostly tied to
global corporations and limited by them in the areas of their
research, will be able to concentrate on eradicating disease and
providing the best remedies for all comers, not just those with
insurance. World diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and polio
will soon be a thing of the past when money, too, is history.
Work
and training in one of the many varied avenues of health care will be
open to those from the pool of post-money redundant sectors. With the
shift from a market economy to societies geared to fulfilling human
needs there will probably be more priority given to preventive
medicine and appropriate information on suitable diet and healthy
living, which leads us to consider the topic of food.
5.
Food
Currently
the growing, processing and distribution of food is largely dominated
by transnational corporations solely in the pursuit of profit. The
consumer appears to have a huge choice of goods and numerous
decisions to make at each aisle of the supermarket but often the
choices are superficial, not actually the choices being sought. For
instance, notice the difficulty of buying a processed food which
doesn't contain soya. The soya has probably been genetically modified
and the labelling could be unhelpful. The choice becomes buy in
ignorance or acceptance, or do without.

It's
well known that products are laced with added sugar, salt, monosodium
glutamate etc. to create a certain dependency and craving for more.
Last year's problems of melamine-laced pet foods which caused animal
deaths in the importing countries were followed this year by
melamine-laced milk products causing infant deaths and multiple
illnesses in China, spreading fear to importing countries. There can
be only one reason for food to be contaminated deliberately (apart
from a mass assassination attempt or the desire to spread fear among
the population) and that is in the pursuit of greater profit.
Africa,
a net exporter of food until the post-colonial days of the 1960s,
became a victim again, indebted to the World Bank and IMF. Recipient
of highly subsidised dumping of food from rich countries (US and
Europe) the result has been that the countries there have to grow
cash crops for export in order to pay off some of the growing debt
creating food shortages for the domestic population, many of whom had
been forced off ancestral lands (for the growing of cash crops) and
who were then without the means of subsistence. There have been a
number of studies which reveal there is no problem feeding a world
population considerably larger than today's. There is an enormous
wastage of food in the rich world. The major problem for the hungry
in the poorest countries is lack of cash.
Food,
if regarded simply as fuel for the body, should be clean – free
from contaminants, chemicals and the like; fresh – the more local
the better; and nutritious. Free food for all would come with the
bonus of knowing there would no longer be any incentive to adulterate
ingredients. The question of “FAIR TRADE” wouldn't arise as all
along the line farmers, producers, pickers, packers and distributors
would have the same motivation to provide good clean food knowing
they have the same access as the consumers. This has to be a win-win
situation. Another winner in this scenario would be the environment.
JANET
SURMAN
Next
month, five more benefits from not having to have money.
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