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Mar 19, 2010

Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered
By Barbara O'Brien, in About.com Guide, click here 
In his book Small Is Beautiful:A Study of Economics As If People Mattered, Schumacher promoted the idea of "enoughness" ... instead of ever-increasing consumption. 
The economic models and theories that prevailed through the 20th century are rapidly falling apart. Economists scramble to offer explanations and solutions. However, much of what has gone wrong was anticipated years ago by E. F. Schumacher, who proposed a theory of "Buddhist Economics."
Schumacher was among the first to argue that economic production was too wasteful of the environment and non-renewable resources. But even more than that, he saw decades ago that ever-increasing production and consumption -- the foundation of the modern economy -- is unsustainable. He criticized policy makers who measure success by the growth of GNP, irrespective of how the growth comes about or who it benefits.
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Ernst Friedrich "Fritz" Schumacher (1911-1977) studied economics at Oxford and Columbia University and for a time was a protégé of John Maynard Keynes. For several years he was the Chief Economic Adviser to Britain's National Coal Board. He also was an editorialist and writer for the Times of London.
In the early 1950s Schumacher became interested in Asian philosophies. He was influenced by Mohandas Gandhi and G.I. Gurdjieff, and also by his friend, the Buddhist writer Edward Conze. In 1955 Schumacher went to Burma to work as an economic consultant. While he was there, he spent weekends in a Buddhist monastery learning to meditate. The meditation, he said, gave him more mental clarity than he had ever had before.
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The Meaning and Purpose of Life vs. Economics
While in Burma he wrote a paper called "Economics in a Buddhist Country" in which he argued that economics does not stand on its own feet, but instead "is derived from a view of the meaning and purpose of life -- whether the economist himself knows this or not." In this paper, he wrote that a Buddhist approach to economics would be based on two principles:
 1. The ideal is sufficiency, not surfeit.
"Economic 'progress' is good only to the point of sufficiency, beyond that, it is evil, destructive, uneconomic."
 2. A Buddhist economy distinguishes between renewable and non-renewable resources.
A civilization built on renewable resources is superior to one built on non-renewable resources. The second principle might not seem original now, but in 1955 it was economic heresy. I suspect the first principle is still economic heresy.
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"Standing Truth on Its Head"
After his return to Britain, Schumacher continued to study, think, write, and lecture. In 1966 he wrote an essay in which he laid out the principles of Buddhist economics in more detail. This essay, "Buddhist economics," can be read in full online.
Very briefly, Schumacher wrote that western economics measures "standard of living" by "consumption" and assumes a person who consumes more is better off than one who consumes less. He also discusses the fact that employers consider their workers to be "cost" to be reduced as much as possible, and that modern manufacturing uses production processes that require little skill. And he pointed to discussions among economic theories about whether full employment "pays," or whether some amount of unemployment might be better "for the economy."
"From a Buddhist point of view," Schumacher wrote, "this is standing the truth on its head by considering goods as more important than people and consumption as more important than creative activity. It means shifting the emphasis from the worker to the product of work, that is, from the human to the subhuman, a surrender to the forces of evil." 
  ...Schumacher argued that an economy should exist to serve the needs of people.
But in a "materialist" economy, people exist to serve the economy.
He wrote that labour should be about more than production. Work has psychological and spiritual value also (see "Right Livelihood"), and these should be respected.

Small Is Beautiful
In 1973, "Buddhist Economics" and other essays were published together in a book called Small Is Beautiful: Economics As If People Mattered. Schumacher promoted the idea of "enoughness," or providing what is sufficient. Instead of ever-increasing consumption, the emphasis should be on meeting human needs with no more consumption than is necessary, he argued.
From a Buddhist perspective, there is a great deal more that could be said about an economic system that sustains itself by stoking desire and reinforcing the notion that acquiring things will make us happier. We end up with no end of entertaining consumer products that soon end up in landfills, but we fail to provide for some basic human needs, like health care for everyone.
Economists scoffed when Small Is Beautiful was published. But although Schumacher made some errors and miscalculations, on the whole his ideas have stood up very well. These days they look downright prophetic. 

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Posted: Mar 19, 2010 1:46pm
Jun 24, 2009

What’s in Your Bag? Ideas To Help You Waste Less
adapted from an article by Dave Chameides 23 June 2009
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1. STEEL WATER BOTTLE.
The reasons for this are myriad, and I won’t go into them here. This cost me about $15 over a year ago and compared to the money I would have spent on plastic water bottles, I’m way ahead of the game. I went with steel because aluminum and plastic are a little bit scary leaching-wise. And in case I decide to hit the spelunking craze again, I can always use it as a tool to pull myself up into tight spaces.
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2. REUSABLE COFFEE MUG. Bought this for about $10 over three years ago. With coffee shops giving me 10 cents back per fill up, this paid for itself a long time ago so essentially it was free. Make sure to use a good sturdy one that will last.
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3. REUSABLE BAG. I have a small bag that folds into a little pouch, but any will do. I get 5 cents back every time I use it, and will keep heading to the store, so again, its paid for itself and I never have to take another plastic bag.
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4. CUTLERY. Nothing special here, just an old set of metal utensils in a travel toothbrush holder I wasn’t using. I’ve never understood the idea of using a plastic spoon for five minutes and then putting it in some landfill where it will sit for 500 years. If you don’t have an old toothbrush container that fits, you can always just wrap it in an old towel, which I also carry so I don’t’ have to use paper towels when out and about.
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5. REUSABLE BOWL. This one is probably the biggest crowd-pleaser. Its called an Orikaso bowl and sadly the company doesn’t make them anymore. That said, head to any camping supply store and they are chock full of bowls and plates that fold, smoosh, and contort into small spaces.
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So there you have it. The list of things you can carry is endless and only limited by your ingenuity. Take a week and make a mental list of what you are using and disposing of on a daily basis and my guess is you’ll come up with reusable alternatives in no time.
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...Post up about what you carry along in order to waste less and we’ll see who’s got the best ideas.
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VIMEO: What's in Dave's bag...
Whats in Dave's Bag from Sustainable Dave on Vimeo.

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Posted: Jun 24, 2009 6:06pm
May 19, 2009

(May 14) Eco-Libris balanced out so far over 77,500 books, resulting in more than 100,000 new trees that are being planted!

More than 30 million trees are being cut down every year to produce the books sold in the U.S. alone.

Learn more...

Eco-Libris homepage

"They kill good trees to put out bad newspapers."
~James G Watt

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Posted: May 19, 2009 4:51pm
Mar 29, 2009

Take Action
Online, in your own community, or even just when you’re buying chocolate! If every single one of us takes just a minute or two for an online fax action or more time to take action in our communities, together we WILL end child slavery in the cocoa fields.

Links
How/Where to Buy Fair Trade Chocolate 

News Updates
World news updates related to the global fair trade movement.

For now, chocolate is a bitter sweet…

  • 284,000 children toil in abusive labour conditions in West Africa’s cocoa fields
  • Cocoa companies pay prices so low that many cocoa farmers cannot meet their families’ basic needs

But we can fix all that...with Fair Trade certified chocolate:

  • Forced and abusive child labor are prohibited
  • Farming families earn a price that is adequate to meet their basic human needs
  • Environmentally sustainable production methods are required
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Posted: Mar 29, 2009 7:02pm

 

 
 
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Thubten Chokyi
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