essays-ccs/paul_cockshott_cyber_communism.md
2019-02-06 16:20:39 -08:00

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Paul Cockshott - Cyber-Communism

Taken from his book, Towards a New Socialism, audiobook here, and specifically his youtube lectures Going beyond Money, and Getting down to details.

How it works

  • Production takes place. All goods / services are valued by their composite labor time ( in labor voucher hours, see below ). Factor in depreciation and education into cost. For example, a smartphone might cost 0.5 labor hours. Goods that have neglible marginal cost ( ~ 0 labor hours ) would be free.
  • Open, publicly funded research and development is shared by all, with the goal of decreasing the labor time cost of every good.
  • Workers are paid in labor vouchers per hour work performed. Working 8 hours would earn you 8 LVH ( labor voucher hours ). Multipliers may be used if certain work is deemed more necessary, or dangerous, but most likely limited by a certain ratio to foster community.
  • Goods are sold in public shops.
  • Shop managers are instructed to adjust labor prices so that all goods are sold. While a good selling out is itself an indicator of demand, adjusting by a certain limited ratio gives more demand information, and prevents unwanted goods from going to waste.
  • Each good now has a ratio of its sold labor time to actual labor time cost.
  • If goods are selling above their actual labor cost ( ratio > 1 ), that means society wants more labor allocated to produce that good. Below that means they want less labor allocated.
  • Planners adjust output targets based on this demand.
  • Planners do material balances to derive gross output requirements ( raw materials + intermediate materials + labor ). Input-output tables are solved using linear algebra.
  • They compare these requirements with the actual resources available. Some of these might be set by environmental constraints, or limited quantities.
  • Population uses direct democracy to vote on how much labor to allocate to non-consumer goods ( see below ).
  • They see if the final output targets can be met, and if not, go back to the adjust output targets step.
  • Finally, form a detailed production plan, broadcast it over the internet to all productive facilities, monitor production ( and sales ) in real-time. Adjust plan accordingly.

Essentials

Labor vouchers

  • Earned by workers. 1 LVH = 1 Labor Voucher Hour earned per hour of work.
  • Attached to a single person / family, likely through a credit card.
  • Can only be exchanged for consumer goods. You cannot transfer them to another person. Buying absentee property is illegal.
  • Are destroyed after being used in shops.
  • Possibly destroyed after a certain amount of time ( to prevent hoarding )
  • Labor time across the economy is preserved. If there are 6 million working people in a country :
    • Labor ministry issues 6 million person-years vouchers to workers.
    • 0 = Labor hours used producing non-consumer goods ( 2 million person-years ) + labor hours used in consumer goods production ( 4 million person-years ) = cost of goods in shops ( 4 million person-years ) + ( 2 million person-years cancelled for social tax bin )
    • Workers spend 4 million in the shops, social income tax of 2 million ( to provide for social services ), and the 6 million labor hours are fully canceled.
    • This defetishizes consumer-producer relations, since you can see exactly how human labor is being allocated, and spent.

Direct democracy for non-consumer goods

  • New enterprises, entertainment, research and development, social services are all examples of non-consumer goods.
  • Society votes on how much labor to devote to social services: education, health care, child care, environmental protection, national defense. If a country has 6 million adult workers, it might allocate 2 million people to non-consumer goods.
  • Major strategic decisions taken democratically by all the interested population. Minor decisions left to planners. Information open to all, voting available to all.