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By Mark Anielski
There are two fundamental flaws of misplaced concreteness
in economics. First, is the obfuscation of the Greek root
word "oikonomia", which refers to study of the well-being
and stewardship of the household, habitat or natural environment.
Instead economics has become more aligned with "chrematistics"
(a word almost forgotten in modern dictionaries) which refers
to the study of wealth or a particular theory of wealth as
measured by money. The second greatest error in economics
is the confusion of wealth, which is a magnitude with an irreducible
physical dimension, with debt (money), a purely mathematical
or imaginary quantity (Daly, 1996). The shortcomings of measures
of oikonomia, such as the GDP and national income accounts,
have long ago been acknowledged by many. The emergence of
new measures of economic, societal and ecological well-being
is evidence that some of these shortcomings are finally being
addressed.
Yet even these important reforms in national accounting towards
a more honest assessment of the oikonomia of the nations will
be meaningless without understanding the fundamental root
of the economic growth paradox, that is the nature of money
and how its creation (and destruction) affects the well-being
of nations. Money is the lifeblood of all economies yet few
understand how it is created and how this process leads to
destruction of living capital (human, social, and natural)
and the real wealth of nations. Only fundamental reform of
monetary policy and the process of money creation will the
chrematistic world of virtual wealth (stock markets, currency
markets) become aligned with oikonomia - stewardship of the
physical world and human experience of quality of life. This
paper challenges both economics and business disciplines to
explore not only the reform of national accounting systems
to provide a more meaningful barometer of the oikonomia but
also the reform of traditional financial and management accounting
systems to measure social, environmental and financial performance.
Most importantly, the paper calls for a fundamental reform
of monetary policy, the elimination of fractional reserve
banking, and the alignment of money creation to oikonomia
objectives of improving or sustaining the real wealth of nations.
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