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An introduction to the relational economy. What can your friends do for you today?

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Presentation on theme: "An introduction to the relational economy. What can your friends do for you today?"— Presentation transcript:

1 An introduction to the relational economy

2 What can your friends do for you today?

3 What they can do for you in 30 years,

4 depends on what you can do for them now.

5 The Affect Machine is a market for social capital = a communicative base for a relational economy.

6 Social capital is a relation to another person

7 Social capital cannot be bought for money

8 The unit of value is one of the differences between a market economy and a relational economy.

9 Market economy Capital: Money, material, land. Relational economy Relations: Establishes through shared common ground. Develops and vanish over time. The unit of value

10 But the important difference is the attitude towards the production relations

11 Market economy Alienation between the producer and the consumer. Instead of producing for another person, the worker produces for a wage. Relational economy Instead of producing work for a wage, a direct relation is produced to another person. The relationships between the producer and the consumer

12 Market economy As the production is split into smaller parts and the worker becomes an instrument that makes a limited part of the whole, the pride and satisfaction of work is lost. Relational economy As the product is an expression of the producer, the product and the producer is one, the producer has total control over her own self-image and can feel proud of the image created. The relationship between the producer and the product of the work

13 Market economy By losing control over the product of work and thus pride in labor, the worker is deprived of the right to be a subject with agency. Relational economy When production is mainly about realizing oneself and creating one’s own market, the worker is no longer a stranger to herself. The relationships with her or himself

14 Market economy Alienation of the worker from other workers, through the competition for wages. Relational economy By working together for the common network that everyone depends on, relationships are strengthened. Relationships between workers

15 In a relational economy no one can own anyone else's work, or even their own work, as their own subject is dependent on all the others, and can therefore not exist outside of this relationship.

16

17 What your friends can do for you tomorrow,

18 depends on what others do for them now, and what they did for others yesterday

19 What can you do for your friends today?

20 Your basic means to a relational economy


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