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Defining the Social Economy

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Defining the Social Economy Theory of the Social Economy Module BAM450 Structure of the presentation Legal EU definition Brief history of development Outline of three ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Defining the Social Economy


1
Defining the Social Economy
  • Theory of the Social Economy Module BAM450

2
Structure of the presentation
  • Legal EU definition
  • Brief history of development
  • Outline of three competing definitions
  • Moving forward social enterprise or an economy
    of solidarity?

3
The formal EU definition
  • Since 1989 the social economy has been the
    responsibility of the Commissions Employment and
    Social Affairs DG which defines it as including
  • Cooperatives
  • Mutuals
  • Associations
  • Foundations

4
Vaguely analagous alternative terms for the
social economy
  • Non-profit sector cannot make profits
  • Not-for-profit sector can make profits but not
    primary motivation
  • Solidarity economy in support of the poor, e.g.
    fair trade
  • Alternative economy motivated by, e.g. concern
    for the environment
  • Third system otherwise third sector

5
History and background of the term
  • French term economie sociale first used by
    Charles Dunoyer in 1830 in his paper called
    Nouveau traité déconomie sociale.
  • This was a paternalistic notion based in a
    Catholic attempt to counteract class conflict
  • (Westlund, 2003).

6
What was happening in Paris in 1830?
7
Anthropology of human societies
  • Side by side with family housekeeping, there have
    been three principles of production and
    distribution
  • Reciprocity
  • Redistribution
  • Market
  • Prior to the market revolution, humanitys
    economic relations were subordinate to the
    social. Now economic relations are now generally
    superior to social ones.

8
Root of social economy in workers movements
  • Various traditions--socialist, Christian, liberal
    (Owen, Saint-Simon, Fourier, Proudhon).
  • Context was industrialization, proletarianization
    and pauperization
  • Multifunctional associations aiming to create a
    micro-social space of solidarity and to step in
    as actors in the area of economic organization,
    both at the level of production and at the level
    of distribution.
  • Made some use of traditional types of solidarity
    (families, corporations), but grounded in
    principles of liberty and equality between
    members.
  • (Nyssens, 1997 178-9).

9
Social economy as the third way
  • In the conflict between capitalism and socialism
    which characterized twentieth century Europe, the
    social economy became a "third" way. (Westlund,
    2003 1193).
  • State involvement in social services ended the
    multifunctionality of the third sector.
  • mutual benefit societies specialized in social
    protection
  • cooperatives confined their activities to
    consumption
  • trade unions turned to the workers struggle.
  • Dissociation between the economic (the sphere of
    the market) and the social (the sphere of the
    state). (Nyssens, 1997 179).

10
Nyssens definition
  • Essentially seeing the social economy as filling
    gaps left by the private and public sectors
  • Generates three poles of economic activity

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12
Evolution of social economy in three stages
  1. Network-based associations with various functions
    arising to solve specific problems, with both an
    economic and a political identity.
  2. Integration into a modernization project that
    favoured the market-state synergy
    marginalization.
  3. A revitalization following the crisis of the
    market-state relationship

13
  • In the South, the popular economy turns out to be
    not only a means of survival in the face of
    economic adversity, but also a means of
    political, social and cultural resistance,
    particularly via a rekindling of the associative
    flame. . . In the North, the burgeoning of
    nonprofit organizations producing goods and
    services at the community levels appears as a
    particular response to the crisis in employment
    and the welfare state

14
Westlunds definition
  • Revolves around the nature of relationships
  • Reciprocity can be described in terms of
    give-and-take in a relationship between actors
    who, to a certain extent are equals. . .
    Mutuality is often used as a synonym for
    reciprocity. . . Reciprocity of social relations
    creates mutuality of economic relations, but
    mutuality in economic transactions is no
    guarantee of reciprocity in social relations.

15
  • Like the family economy the social economy is
    based on reciprocity unlike the family economy
    kinship is not involved
  • The market economy and public sector are based on
    monetary exchange the social economy is not
  • The public sector is based on official
    legislation, whereas the social economy is based
    on commonality of interests and values
  • The market economy and public sector are based
    primarily on material capital whereas the social
    economy is based primarily on social capital.

16
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17
Pearces definition
  • Complex and based on 'systems
  • It attempts to include all the different types of
    organization that exist in a modern economy,
    which is a strength as well as a weakness
  • Inclusion of the level, from local to global, is
    useful
  • It does not deal adequately with coops

18
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19
WIRC definition
  • A pragmatic, operational definition
  • Our defining scalpels are ownership and control
  • The following dimensions are significant
  • Ownership
  • Control
  • Values
  • Product
  • Source of finance

20
Ownership Control Product Finance Values
Tower Colliery Workers Workers/management Economic Employees/private Mutualistic
OMSCO (organic milk suppliers cooperative) Joint/workers ? Economic Private/ members Mutualistic (organic)
Local ESOP? Worker/shareholders Managers Economic Employees/private Market
Glas Cymru Trust? Managers Public good Private Mutualistic? No
Community enterprise Workers Employees? Committee? Social Public Mutualistic
Newtown Credit Union Members Members Financial Members Mutualistic
Foundation hospital State? Members Social Public Market?
Ty Hafan childrens hospice Non-profit Managers Social Charitable Philan-thropic
21
The future? Social enterprise or an economy of
solidarity?
  • Social enterprise originated in the US
  • A form of mutual activity acceptable within a
    market economy?
  • A useful tool for politicians wishing to reduce
    the role of the state? E.g. social housing

22
Social enterprise
  • referring to market-oriented economic activities
    serving a social goal. The social enterprise is
    then viewed as an innovative response to the
    funding problems of non-profit organizations,
    which are finding it increasingly difficult to
    solicit private donations and government and
    foundation grants. (Defourney and Nyssens, 2006).

23
Criteria for a social enterprise pace WISE
  • A continuous activity, producing and selling
    goods and/or services
  • A high degree of autonomy
  • A significant level of economic risk
  • A minimum amount of paid work
  • An explicit aim to benefit the community
  • An initiative launched by a group of citizens
  • Decision-making power not based on capital
    ownership
  • A partipatory nature, which involves the various
    parties affected by the activity
  • Limited profit distribution

24
An economy of solidarity?
  • The projects of an economy of solidarity have a
    tendency to reunite that which has long been
    separated and to question some presuppositions of
    the market-state synergy the separation between
    the economic and the social, the sharp dividing
    line between paid work and leisure, the states
    monopoly on solidarity, the market-state
    dichotomy, and so on.

25
Characteristics
  • Bottom-upwhat we might have called mutualism
  • Anti-capitalist? At least anti-globalisation
  • Importance of the locallevel of control
  • Reduction of consumption and respect for the
    planeta partially new concern

26
An economy of emancipation and co-operation
  • Why produce only as a function of an unjust
    market that depletes and exploits, denying us the
    chance to manage both the production and the
    economy for our own service, for the service of
    all citizens, and of all peoples of the planet,
    as well as for future generations? Our proposal
    is a socioeconomy of solidarity as a way of life
    that encompasses the totality of the human being,
    that announces a new culture and a new form of
    producing to fulfill the needs of each human
    being and of the entire humanity.
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