Tragedy of the Commons
The Cost of Wealth Creation
The
enables an enormous array of activities and organizations within the private sector—itself within a civil society at arms length from the state apparatus., in the institutions of the or , are there values and institutions to protect markets (as required by )? And what about protecting other common goods (e.g. air, water) used by businesses?
The human desire for power and wealth does not weaken one jot as we move through the What alters is how that power and wealth is generated and used—and by whom.
. Why should it?At this Stage the are no longer automatically wealthy and yet want wealth as much as ever. The political class regards private business wealth as a challenge—both to their power and to their ability to tax as much as possible.
The bigger and more powerful players in any market are ruthless. They not only seek to crush competitors by fair means or foul, they are ready to take on governments via the weaknesses of their politicians and officials. Some combination of money, sex, drugs and hospitality usually does the trick.
Politicians in societies at this stage of development will be more than willing to be bought off to provide support and immunity for such players. Despite attempts to hide favours given in return for campaign finances and bribes, there are regular public scandals.
How the Tragedy Develops
Enterprise and wealth-generation are inherent progenitors of social problems, rather than an unalloyed good:
- as firms increase in size or number, they produce a variety of undesirable «side-effects»
e.g. air pollution, noise pollution, toxic wastes, congestion. - to keep costs down, workers or consumers may be exposed to physical, emotional or mental harm
e.g. via cheap components, poor hygiene, over-work, ignoring simple safety rules. - damage to the ethical order and social stability may occur
e.g. via inequalities due to excessive pay at Board level, or by exploiting human frailties as with fast-food, gambling, tobacco growing, and liquor production.
Garrett Hardin popularized the phrase «tragedy of the commons» to refer to the social reality that «any resource free for all to use is invariably downgraded and destroyed by individuals acting independently in search of their own good».
More generally, production of goods and services for profit invariably uses commons-type resources like air, water, space, natural beauty, roads, money and labour. Markets are also a commons.
There is no doubt about the existence of this tragedy. All over the world businesses do degrade and even destroy common resources. Currently the focus is on the environment, but this is just one example of the tragedy.
Three Solutions & One Non-Solution
The Requirement: Any solution requires considerable understanding and knowledge of the commons, as well as of the existing or potential users, to devise a viable implementation of the chosen solution. In general, distant government bureaucrats are more expensive and less effective than local users who are more committed and more knowledgeable.
Self-regulation is never a solution:
It can be rather difficult to know what is appropriate (
) and fair ( ) in dealing with a commons.
- Continue now to the third maturational transition.
Originally posted: July 2009; Last updated: 27 Jan 2010