The author, Jason Stoddard, claims the current financial crisis is the first step on the way toward a post-scarcity economy in which our notion of value is overturned.
But what if advances in manufacturing efficiencies make it possible to live well, simply by interacting with friends and going about your life? What if below-replacement-level birth rates and advances in biotechnology meant you could check out of the system by claiming a piece of unused desert and planting a house? This surveillance economy might be a very easy place to live.Stoddard is raising a possibility I raised in my earlier post on automation and capitalism, namely that advances in our current social networking technologies, combined with the seamless interface between computing and reality that will come with the internet of things (listen to this talk for more information), will revolutionize the way we both produce and distribute surplus-value. This will happen before we reach a post-scarcity economy.
The possibilities once we reach a post-scarcity economy (through nanotechnology or something else) are almost limitless. What few people are saying—Stoddard stops short of saying this, too—is that capitalism is unintelligible under such circumstances. If necessary labor consists in—to put it bluntly—screwing around with your friends and having a good time, if that's the way we acquire our means of subsistence, then there effectively is no barrier between ourselves and social wealth. If one can take the current emerging paradigm of decentralization emerging now and extrapolate it a decade or two into the future, a paradigm of radical democracy and effortless participation takes shape. It would be a self-sustaining, self-growing, undirected, democratic and organic communist system.