PCDForum Column #17, Release Date August 15, 1991
by James Robertson
Citizen movements throughout the world are discovering the extent to which our collective social and environmental crisis stems directly from outmoded economic policies and perspectives seriously in conflict with the needs of a democratic, post-European, sustainable one-world economy. This realization has given birth to an international citizen coalition, the new economics movement. This movement is broadly inclusive of millions of people throughout the world who are exploring alternative ways of organizing society to manage its critically scarce resources. We come from many different spheres. Many of us are unknown to one another and may not even recognize that we are contributing to a new way of economic life and thought.
Our diversity is an important strength, as changes in each of these spheres contribute to changes in the others. Together they define the new economics movement, which is helping to shape a new post-modern, post-European world order for the next century and beyond.
The current modern world order began to emerge about 500 year ago with Columbus' voyage to America and Vasco da Gama's voyage to India. It eventually crystallized in the second half of the 18th century at the time of the American and French revolutions and the Enlightenment. This was a period of extraordinary human progress. Yet the world view that drove its achievements, including its ideas of value-free science and a world economy comprised of a collection of national economies competing for wealth, led to conditions that have become intolerably disabling for earth's people and damaging to its ecology.
The new post-modern, post-European approach to economic life and thought, which the new economics movement is beginning to crystallize, must be based on quite different principles.
These principles must find practical application in a variety of spheres, including:
The recent economic summit of the Group of Seven (G7) in London, demonstrated once again that leadership on these issues will not be forthcoming from the heads of the world's most powerful government's and businesses. Leadership for change must come from a broadly based movement of citizens able to see beyond the short-term interests of business and government and become active contributors to the shaping of the new economics and its practical application.
James Robertson is a patron of the New Economics Foundation in London, a leading writer on alternative economics, and a contributing editor of the PCDForum. This column was prepared and distributed by the PCDForum based on his paper "Seven Years On: The Other Economic Summit Begins Its Second Seven Year Cycle." These ideas are further developed in Robertson's most recent book Future Wealth: A New Economics for the 21st Century. Further information on the new economics movement is available from the New Economics Foundation, 88/94 Wentworth Street, London E1 7SE, U.K.