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Originally Posted by Kizzi
What are the pro's and con's of a society based on Money compared to a society not based on money?
KiZzI 
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That’s a very serious question, one that some pretty clever people think human society may need to come to grips within the next few decades.
The literature on the subject, fictional and nonfictional, mainstream and fringe, is vast. If I may try to condense its conclusions into a few hundred words, here they are:
There are 2 fundamental kinds of economies:
In a scarcity economy, things needed and desired by people are so scarce that not everyone who wants a particular thing can have it. In an abundance economy, things needed and desired by people are so abundant that everyone who wants a particular thing can have it.
Money, barter, whatever – some system of fair exchange – is useful in a scarcity economy – it provides a (usually) peaceful and (hopefully) orderly way to determine which people get scarce things. In an abundance economy, money is not useful – there’s no need to determine who gets a particular thing, when everybody gets it.
Human society has had, probably since its prehistory, and continues to have, predominantly a scarcity economy – too many people, not enough things.
Technological progress tends to reduce scarcity. What only a few wealthy people could afford when it was made by hand by a few skilled artisans, can be had by practically everyone when it made by an efficient, automated factory. Jewelry, books, and computers are all examples of this tendency.
Members of a class of people, “the wealthy”, tend to be aware of the importance of scarcity in preserving the comfort and enjoyment of their lives relative to “the poor”. People in this class tend to try to prevent things from becoming too abundant. Due to the influence their wealth give them, they are frequently successful. The restricted production of crops, energy, and consumer electronics are examples of this tendency.
IMHO, an abundance economy in which everyone has what they need and desire is to be preferred to a scarcity economy, in which they do not.
To change our current society from having a scarcity economy to having an abundance economy, however, is not a simple matter of choosing not to have money. In a scarcity economy, money is
needed. Eliminating it by law, etc. won’t work – out of practical need, people will seek to and succeed in finding replacements for any kind of money that is banned. The failure of pure socialist governments in many nations is an example of this.
To change from a scarcity to an abundance economy, I believe scarcity itself must be reduced nearly to the point of being eliminated. 2 main obstacles to this exist:
- Technical challenges – some scarce but useful things (such as solar cells and hydrogen fuel cells) are hard to make in large quantities
- The will of the wealthy – as described above, wealthy people directly oppose reducing the scarcity of many things.
A couple of common objection to the viability of an abundance economy are:
- If people can get everything they need and want without spending money, they will have no incentive to work, nothing will get done or manufactured, and there will be scarcities
- If the amount of a thing a person wants is not limited by the amount of money they have, many people will take extravagant quantities of things (eg: hundreds of cars, thousands of guitars and stereos), and there will be scarcities.
The common answers to these 2 objections are:
- Many people work because they enjoy it, not because it is necessary. Although, in an abundance economy, the percentage of people who work will likely be smaller than in a scarcity economy, sufficiently efficient and advance technology (automation) will allow them to produce more than is needed by the total population;
- Most people are not extravagant, and will not take more than they need. Those who do will need to be prevented from doing so – that is, even an abundance society must police itself.
There are many other objections and rebuttals to this subject, but, IMHO, the pros for an abundance economy outweigh the cons.