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Do
We Need Money?
Page 12
It
sounds like a silly question, doesn’t it? Of course we need money:
we need it to pay our rent or mortgage, to buy food and clothes, to
purchase cinema tickets and DVDs, and so on. There’s no question
that, with the world organised the way it is, we do need money, and
we couldn’t live without it. Credit cards and cheques make no
difference, they are just different ways of paying by money, so that
we don’t have to carry huge amounts of notes and coins around with
us.
But
let’s step back a bit and ask ourselves, why do we need
money? It’s because we can’t get hold of the food, clothes,
tickets or DVDs, or occupy our house or flat, unless we have the
money to pay for them. We can try to take food or whatever without
paying, but if we’re caught we will very soon be told that this is
theft and it’s against the law, and we’ll be punished for it in
some way. Basically, it has been decided (but by who?) that people in
general cannot get hold of things (more formally, cannot gain access
to them) unless they pay. The payment transfers ownership from the
shop or supermarket or manufacturing company to the customer. Once
you’ve bought something, you can then do more or less what you like
with it.
So
the money is just a means of saying ‘This is mine, not yours’.
And that’s what the shop is saying too: ‘Unless you pay us, you
can’t use this.’ Now, from some points of view, this is a strange
way of going about things. In the first place, some areas of our
lives aren’t arranged like this at all. Many people do things for
other people — lend or give them something, or perform some service
— without expecting any payment: they do this out of friendship or
for their neighbours or family members. Furthermore, not everything
we want to have access to requires payment. Usually we can all go to
the local park without having to pay to get in. Many towns have free
shuttle buses to transport people around the town centre, or to and
from the local railway station. But try to travel on the train
without a ticket and you’ll be in trouble.
However,
let’s just imagine that the world was run differently, that
everything was free (though in that case the concept of ‘free’
presumably wouldn’t mean anything!). Suppose you could go to the
supermarket, collect the food you wanted for yourself and your
family, and then just leave without having to queue at the checkouts.
You’d probably choose the best-quality food without having to worry
about its cost. In fact, since nobody would have to buy cheap and
nasty food, all the food available would be top quality. There’d be
no point in taking more than you needed, because you’d always be
able to go back and get more if you ran out, and it’s just wasteful
(and, in fact, daft) to take lots of milk and bread, say, if you know
you won’t be able to use them.
This
probably sounds like quite a good idea, but would this same principle
work with clothes rather then food? Wouldn’t people
just want
masses of clothes, and always from the top designers and brand names?
Well, let’s just think a bit about the implications of a world
without money along the lines I’ve just begun to describe. Nobody
will be able to show off by flaunting an expensive dress or tie, and
nobody will want brand names or designer labels since anyone can have
them (if they still exist) so a brand name won’t mean anything.
Quite probably people will still want to look smart and attractive,
but this won’t be by wearing clothes that ‘cost a fortune’. And
like food, there would be no point in having lots of clothes lying
around in a wardrobe gathering dust: people would just take from the
shops or warehouses what they wanted for their personal use, not what
would be intended to impress others. Also, since nobody would profit
from selling more clothes, there would be no relentless pushing of
new fashions each year.
So
it’s not difficult to imagine a world without money, a world where
what people consumed and enjoyed would not be limited by the size of
their wage packet, where everyone could gain access to the best of
everything. But again, questions arise. Would there, for instance, be
enough to go round? Well, think firstly, about how much effort, and
how many people’s work, goes into money and all its paraphernalia.
It’s not just the shopworkers whose work is mainly or entirely
concerned with money. There’s everyone who works for a bank or
insurance company, who deals with accounts and prices, who issues or
collects tickets. In a world without money, these people and many
others (those who manufacture guns, for instance) would devote their
labour to producing goods that people need. The money system doesn’t
just prevent people gaining access to what has been produced, it also
seriously reduces what is produced.
But
then again, would people work in a world where there was no money and
they were not getting paid? Yes, they would. The alternative, after
all, would be a life of idleness, which may be great for a two-week
holiday period every summer but soon becomes very boring. Work, too,
would be made as enjoyable as possible, which means it would be safe,
satisfying and fun. People would enjoy working with each other, never
doing one kind of work for too long but appreciating the variety that
can be provided. Producing useful things is pleasant in itself.
You
can see that a world without money wouldn’t just be like today
except that there would be no price tags on anything. Rather, it
implies a completely different way of organising things. For a start,
production would be carried on for use and not for profit. This means
goods would be produced because they satisfied people’s wants and
needs, rather than because they produced a profit. In such
circumstances, dangerous, unhealthy and shoddy goods would never see
the light of day, as there would be no reason to produce them. In
addition, the factories, offices and land would not be the exclusive
property of a small number of millionaires, which is what happens
now. Instead, they would be owned by everyone (which is equivalent
to
saying they would be owned by no one). And they would therefore be
controlled by everyone, not by a small bunch of owners.
But
it doesn’t stop there. There would be no need for governments
either, because governments exist to run the system on behalf of the
small number of people who own the lion’s share of the wealth. It’s
the government, for instance, that runs the police and court systems
that will teach anyone who takes without paying a lesson about who
owns what. Along with governments, there’d be no countries either,
because the division of the world into countries simply suits the
interests of the owners in particular parts of the world. Nor would
armies be needed, as they fight for the owners against the armies of
the owners from other countries, in disputes over access to raw
materials like oil.
A
world without money also means a world without poverty, because
that’s the flipside of money controlling access to things. ‘No
money, no chance’ is the current motto, but one that results in the
obscenity of destitution and starvation in a world that could easily
provide plenty for all.
So
doing away with money would also mean doing away with governments,
countries and armies, as well as the division into rich and poor. We,
the human inhabitants of the planet, don’t need money — it gets
in the way and stops us from enjoying this world and what we could
make of it. One word for the world without money is socialism, but
it’s not the name that matters, it’s the idea. If the idea sounds
attractive to you, then you should find out more about the Socialist
Party and our views.
Paul
Bennett
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