Article #CuraDaTerra

What Indigenous Wisdom Can Teach Us About Economics


This article is part of the #CuraDaTerra essay series, focused on Indigenous perspectives and alternatives to industrial capitalism.

The crises of the modern world verify what Indigenous cultures have always known: that all phenomena are inextricably interconnected. As the Amazonone of the most vital organs of the Earthis razed to fuel the global economy, a virus borne of disrupted ecosystems assaults the lungs of human beings. As economic policies are enacted in Washington, Brussels, and Beijing, people are uprooted and ecosystems destroyed thousands of miles away.

Over the past 40 years, awareness of our interdependence with the natural world has steadily seeped into the dominant cultural narrative, and with it has come a greater appreciation for non-Western cultures and Indigenous peoples. In virtually every sphere, ecological and socially conscious initiatives have sprouted from the grassroots. From ecopsychology to ecological architecture, from human rights campaigns to support for the underprivileged, people have demonstrated their desire to develop kinder, gentler, more sustainable ways of living.

However, in this same period, the global economyinitially propelled by colonialism, slavery, and racist genocidehas continued on its same trajectory. Just as colonisation accumulated wealth primarily for global traders, the relentless globalisation of the economy is serving an ever-smaller handful of multinational corporations and banks. Under the seductive guise of “progress,” this system continues to undermine land-based economies of interdependence, replacing them with anonymous and unaccountable global supply chains.

As this system rapaciously invades Amazonia, the resulting humanitarian and ecological tragedy ripples out across the globe. With the rainforest giving way to industrial agriculture and desertification, massive amounts of carbon are being released and the global hydrological cycle is breaking down.

As Yanomami leader, Davi Kopenawa, memorably puts it: There is only one sky and we must take care of it, for if it becomes sick, everything will come to an end.

This message has not yet reached our political leaders. Instead, some are becoming demagogues spouting fairy-tales of endless economic growth. Their message is “your job depends on growing the economy, and we will do whatever is necessary to make that happen.”

This can be appealing to the expanding ranks of people made economically insecure and left psychologically insecure by the omnipotent propaganda for consumerism. Frustrated and confused, many have become vulnerable to the xenophobic rhetoric of those who point the finger of blame toward “greenies,” leftists, immigrants, black and people-of-colour, and any cultural “other” rather than the out-of-control economic casino in the hands of the power elite. In their framing, bulldozing the Amazon for its resources becomes a reasonable price for our economic survival.

Heads of state and business elites on both left and right have remained blind to the social and ecological effects of the global economy. As the system has expanded across the entire world, and as econometric thinking has become more and more narrowly specialised, almost no one has recognised the true costs of globalisation.

The truth is that globalisation doesn’t improve the lives of the majorityeven in the short-term, let alone the long-term. Of all new income from global growth, only five percent actually goes to the poorest 60 percent of the global population. Look beneath the figures of GDP, and the situation is even more dire: thanks to the global economy, the majority of the world’s people have actually been made poorer in real terms.

In the less industrialised world, the process of “development” has pushed and pulled people out of self-reliant, community-based, local economic systems onto the lowest rung of a very unstable ladder. Generally, they become involved in producing for the global North, whether on monocultural plantations or in sweatshop factories. While they might be making a cash income of a few dollars a day, they are, by and large, experiencing greater deprivation than they did in their village economies.

Even in the so-called ‘rich’ countries, the middle classes have to compete ever more intensely and work ever longer hours just to stay afloat. All the while a propaganda industry pummels them with thousands of advertisements a day making them feel unworthy and perpetually desirous of more.

How has this happened?

Over the past 35 years, in the name of globalization, “free trade” treaties have dramatically increased the power of multinational corporations and banks to take advantage of cheap labour and resources anywhere across the entire planet. The deregulation of these multinationals has worked to the disadvantage of job-rich, place-based businesses, because it has resulted in overregulation, over-taxation and unemployment at the local, regional, and national levels. Global banks and corporations have become the most powerful entities on the planet, effectively giving national governments their marching orders.

To reverse these trends, we need to link hands with our Indigenous brothers and sisters to build up broad, peoples’ movements, united in their call for a renegotiation of trade treaties, this time with civil society at the table. We need to insist that governments stop using taxes, subsidies, and regulations to favour high-tech, resource-intensive industries that concentrate wealth and power in the hands of global monopolies, and instead direct those supports toward more localised businesses.

Reaching out across the left-right divide is critical. The people who vote for Bolsonaro and Trump do so largely because of the cultural and economic marginalisation imposed by economic globalisationa process that has reduced many once-cohesive communities into isolated backwaters plagued by depression, addiction, and unemployment.

Now is the time to offer new political narrativesinspired by Indigenous ways of knowing, living, and beingthat speak to a flourishing of ecologically-rooted communities and genuine prosperity. Now is the time for economic localisation. It is the way human beings can become part of the Cure of the Earth, the Cura da Terra, as Indigenous peoples have been since time immemorial.

By strengthening local economies, we keep wealth circulating within the community where it boosts local businesses and jobs, instead of allowing it to be siphoned off to distant corporate bank accounts. By shortening the distances between producer and consumer, we prioritise diversified production for local needs rather than standardised commodities for export.

In this way, we move away from monoculture toward diversity on the land. This is essential for genuinely ecological stewardship, for restoration of the soil and for increased productivity. At the same time, we decrease our reliance on centralised, fossil fuel-dependent, automated systems, in favour of employing people with diverse skills. And, most importantly, through economic localisation we support long-term, intergenerational relationships and deep community tiesthe cornerstones of psychological security and wellbeing, as traditional cultures have always known.

There are already countless grassroots localisation projects, from São Paulo to Sydney, that are demonstrating the way forward. From farmers’ markets and consumer-producer cooperatives to local business alliances and community finance schemes, people are reweaving the fabric of local interdependence from the ground up. Out of common sense and heartfelt intuition, they are finding innovative ways to step out of the consumer rat race to live local lives at a human pace and scale.

These projects demonstrate that, by scaling down and localising economic activity, we can reduce our ecological impact, create more meaningful relationships and livelihoods, restore our relationship with nature, and increase the accountability of business. We can re-embed ourselves in intimate connections with the complex, animate world around usa process which not only leads to greater individual fulfillment and joy, but also informs wiser, more humble decision-making.

Just as Indigenous wisdom is rooted in a myriad of complex and reciprocal interactions with the community, the land and water, the animals and plants, localising makes visible the threads of interdependence that hold the living world together.

About Helena Norberg-Hodge

Helena Norberg-Hodge is founder and director of Local Futures (International Society for Ecology and Culture). A pioneer of the “new economy” movement, she has been promoting an economics of personal, social, and ecological well-being for more than thirty years. She is the producer and co-director of the award-winning documentary, “The Economics of Happiness,” and is the author of Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh. She was honored with the Right Livelihood Award for her groundbreaking work in Ladakh, and received the 2012 Goi Peace Award for contributing to “the revitalization of cultural and biological diversity, and the strengthening of local communities and economies worldwide.”

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