COMMUNITY-CENTERED
ECONOMY
In a community-centered economy, firms are primarily
for the sake of households and not vice-versa.
In Lonergan’s
thinking, this logically follows from the purpose of a human community that
aims at the sustainable development of its productive process. The productive process is “the aggregate of
activities proceeding from the potentialities of nature and terminating in a
standard of living” (MD-ECA p. 20). Its development for successive generations is
sustainable if it succeeds in maintaining dynamic equilibrium between
fluctuating demands of households and their supply by firms.
(The individual members of firms, whether
employees or employers, are themselves members of households. This does not change the primary status of
households and the subordinate status of firms.)
The demands of households for goods and
services.are supplied by firms. Firms
are motivated to supply these demands by payments that give them profit (or
excess of bills receivable over bills payable in the stationary state). It is possible to distinguish between
“normal profit, which can be constant, and a social dividend which varies. ...
Constant normal profit must be had if the firm is not to go bankrupt and if the
persons responsible for the firm’s emergence and continued existence are to
have a proportionate standard of living.”
(MD-ECA p. 81)
The social
dividend, or the excess over the constant normal profit, is not to be saved or
hoarded when profit starts to slow down.
It is to continue being invested.
If it is not invested, the production-rate of producer goods and
services will decelerate and thus also decelerating the production-rate of
consumer goods and services. When profit
starts to slow down and if investors are unable or unwilling to recognize the
dividing line between constant normal profit and social dividend, a recession
is bound to follow.. (See ibid. p. 82)
If investors
continue to hoard the social dividend during a recession, the recession turns
into a depression, and the depression into a crash where households (including
investors and firms’ personnel, whether employers or employees) face food
shortages. The distinction between the
social dividend and the constant normal profit is often blurred by firm
managers whose sole aim is to maximize profit.
Its importance is acknowledged only in a community-centered economy that
aims at maintaining dynamic equilibrium of the entire economy.
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