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AN OPERATIONAL MODEL OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITIES

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Title: AN OPERATIONAL MODEL OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITIES


1
AN OPERATIONAL MODEL OFSUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
COMMUNITIES
  • by Sixto K. Roxas

2
Gross National Product
  • National development strategy and policy are
    based on theories built around growth in Gross
    National Product.
  • That growth is the declared objective of strategy
    and policy and the measure of success or failure

3
GNP accounting has operational relevance because
  • Its components are traceable to unit
    responsibility centers for whom GNP accounting
    components are a measure of performance
  • There is an operating theory that guides actual
    management practice based on functional linkages
    between specific instrument variables (prices,
    costs, production functions, demand functions)
    and the performance variables (incomes,
    employment, consumption levels, savings,
    investments, exports, imports, foreign reserves,
    net worth)

4
  • The enterprise has been the unit of
    responsibility, organization, management and
    accounting in both neo-classical and
    Marxist-Leninist economic theory and strategy
  • The polemic between them has polarized around the
    ownership of these units

5
The problem and status quaestionis
  • There is a theory and measurement of growth
    implicit in the UN statistical series of national
    income accounts
  • Not a good measure of welfare
  • Nor does the existing method measure the
    environmental cost

6
UN statistical series of national income accounts
  • The basic accounting unit is the enterprise
  • GNP starts from the enterprise profit and loss
    statement
  • Converts this into a net value added account by
    factor distribution
  • And consolidates the accounts by industry and
    sector

7
  • The use of the enterprise as the primary unit of
    is
  • Partly supported by neoclassical theory
  • Partly an operational convenience, since
    enterprises are a sector that keeps formal
    accounts of their transactions

8
Failures
  • The method fails to capture productive,
    consumption and capital formation activities
    which do not go through the formal enterprise
    accounting network
  • Unpaid work in the family (home cooking, sewing,
    personal services, and home improvements)
  • Farming activities of peasant proprietors
  • Subsistence food gathering, fishing and
    agriculture
  • And services and transactions of non-profit
    institutions, churches, foundations, etc.

9
  • Country national income estimates attempt to
    compensate for some of these by imputations, but
    coverage will differ. These are divided into
    five main groups
  • Foods and other goods produced on the farm for
    the farmer's own consumption.
  • Unpaid personal services of housewives and other
    members of the family or of broader social
    groups.
  • Unpaid services of owner-occupied dwellings.
  • Unpaid services of other consumer durable goods
    owned by households.
  • Unpaid services of tangible wealth owned by
    governments and by benevolent organizations.

10
Operational significance of the measurement system
  • The accounts are consistent with the way modern
    economies are organized. The entries into the
    aggregated accounts are traceable to
    responsibility units whose transactions determine
    the values the entries will assume.
  • Strategy, investment, fiscal and monetary policy,
    programs, projects and budgets are formulated on
    the basis of expected impacts on the variables
    they monitor.
  • At the micro level, individual corporations
    assess their own growth in relation to the
    performance of the over-all economy as measured
    by the national income accounts.
  • At the macro level, national development strategy
    and policy are based on theories built around
    these measurements.
  • The goals are narrowly defined to encompass sheer
    quantitative growth in GNP.
  • Growth in GNP does not necessarily mean change,
    or development or progress.

11
  • In our contemporary society, the business
    enterprise is the dominant mode of organization.
  • The decision-logic for enterprise is rigorously
    clear and widely standardized.
  • The balance sheet and income statement
    imperatives are part of modern culture.
  • At the level of the business organization, the
    variables of human development and ecological
    integrity are not mainstream values.
  • Deliberate government programs to redistribute
    social services and incomes, provide safety nets
    for the poorest sectors.
  • These will always be marginal for as long as the
    modes by which society organizes production,
    consumption and investment activity relies
    primarily on enterprises as the dominant units.
  • This is the logic behind the concept of
    communities as unit of organization, of
    management, of accounting and are structures to
    become market-players.

12
Shifting to a community paradigm
  • The objective is to flesh-out an operational
    model of a self-reliant community
  • Two reasons dictate that it should be
  • Enterprise management excludes responsibility for
    the ecology
  • An authentic sustainable development program must
    be designed as a consolidation of sustainable
    development programs at the level of these
    self-reliant local communities.

13
Theory of the Community
  • Develop a theory of the community that can serve
    for the community managers and all the ancillary
    technical and professional manpower supporting
    them, what the economic theory of the firm has
    done for enterprise management and
    enterprise-based development
  • Orienting the processes of change and development
    towards making community culture emerge as the
    dominant leaven in societies. This force must be
    powerful enough to overcome the 19th century
    enterprise culture
  • Its power of organic re-integration and of
    symbiotic linkage among peoples and between
    society and nature must prevail over the opposite
    effects of the enterprise-culture which is now
    the overarching agent in planetary change and
    development and is responsible for the
    stomization of society into sector-specialized,
    disintegrative micro-organizations, and the
    opposition of man to nature.

14
Technical Protocol for Specifying the Systemic
Characteristics of a Community as an Operating
Organization
15
The Planning Framework for the Local Community
  • The Social Accounting Matrix depicts
  • The wealth-structure
  • The production and income-generation anatomy, and
  • The consumption-investment patterns of the
    community.

16
1. The uses of the framework To define more
precisely
  • The structure and anatomy of the community's
    economy
  • The productive value of its resources
  • The pattern of their usage
  • The production and income flows derived from them
  • The distribution of costs and benefits between
    members of the community and outside individuals
    and institutions, and among social groups and
    institutions within the community
  • The interventions of national and local
    government units in the system.

17
2. The uses of the framework To define more
precisely
  • The present structure and performance of the
    local economy structure
  • The performance desired for the system at a
    future "terminal" period
  • The vision of the future may then be translated
    into the variables and parameters of the
    framework which become specific and internally
    consistent targets and budgets
  • Actual performance may be monitored using the
    same framework now as the accounting and
    management information system.

18
The principle of subsidiarity
  • The community will use its resources first to
    satisfy its own needs directly and resort to
    production for trade only where the advantage to
    it is evident, or to fill needs that cannot be
    satisfied from local production
  • This contingency is then translatable into a
    schedule of exportable commodities and an import
    demand schedule.

19
.
  • These parameters fully specify the bioeconomic
    district
  • The system condition can be described in a set of
    simultaneous equations
  • The baseline situation is the actual one which is
    based on
  • Present resource disposition
  • The actual capital in place
  • The current production, consumption, trade and
    capital formation levels and pattern.
  • This should be depicted in an appropriate SAM
    for the base period.

20
Highest and Best Use (HBU) condition for the
bioeconomic district
  • We distinguish between
  • The logic or the algorithm for determining the
    HBU valuation technical process that can be
    done by technocrats
  • And the process by which the decision parameters
    are arrived at requires a planning process in
    which the community roust become the principal
    determinant.

21
The SAM provides several "bottom line" figures
for the community
  • The gross value added (GVA) total income
    accruing to the community from current production
    activity
  • Distribution of GVA by factor or income classes
  • The level and composition of household
    consumption by factor or income class.
  • The level of community investments in capacity
    increasing capital
  • The flow of export sales that measure the
    community's capacity to pay for its import needs,
    and the level and composition of imports of two
    categories
  • Those that do not compete with any local
    production and
  • Those which have locally produced counterparts.
  • The community savings-investment level which
    equals GVA minus consumption plus exports minus
    imports.
  • The export of savings or the leakage of capital
    represented by an excess of local savings plus
    exports over imports of the community.
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