Going beyond the growth cult: evaluation
of wealth factors for creating a model of
social and sustainable development
The economy of solidarity is in the process
of moving from the phase of localised and
sector-specific alternatives that fill the
gaps left by the dominant economic system
into another way of looking at economics,
which focuses on the human being. With this
in mind, the Alliance has chosen to discuss
the socioeconomy of solidarity.
The socioeconomy of solidarity is characterised
by alternative forms of services (directed
at people, at inhabitants, families, the elderly
and the young, etc), of finance and saving
(microfinance, social finance), of distribution
(fair trade, ethical consumerism), of production
(sustainable and clean), of exchange (local
and social currencies, local barter systems),
and of new relations between State and civil
society (based on contracts, covenants and
agreements, delegation of services, etc.)
But in the absence of a shared vision, the
risks of fragmenting and trivialising the
socioeconomy of solidarity increase, with
each sector looking for its niche in an attempt
to catch up with or adapt to the market or
State.
But are the agents and firms of the social
economy really able to include their activities
in a project for society or propose a different
model of development? If they are, the necessary
evaluation of the economic and social performance
of the socioeconomy of solidarity must not
be shy of criticising a market society in
which development is reduced to GDP growth,
where share capital companies are the only
legitimate form of economic organisation and
where the market is the only effective principle
for producing, exchanging and distributing
wealth.
[read more]
[download entire text]