BUDDHIST
ECONOMICS
E.F.
Schumacher
“Right Livelihood’ is one of the requirements of the
Buddha’s Noble Eightfold Path. It is clear, therefore, that there must be such
a thing as Buddhist Economics.
Buddhist countries, at the same time, have often stated that
they wish to remain faithful to their heritage. So Burma: “The New Burma sees
no conflict between religious values and economic progress. Spiritual health
and material well-being are not enemies: they are natural allies.” Or: “We can
blend successfully the religious and spiritual values of our heritage with the
benefits of modern technology.” Or: “We Burmans have a sacred duty to conform
both our dreams and our acts to our faith. This we shall ever do.”
All the same, such countries invariably assume that they can
model their economic development plans in accordance with modern economics,
and they call upon modern economists from so-called advanced countries to
advise them, to formulate the policies to be pursued, and to construct the
grand design for development, the Five-Year Plan or whatever it may be
called. No one seems to think that a Buddhist way of life would call for
Buddhist economics, just as the modern materialist way of life has brought
forth modern economics.
Economists themselves, like most specialists, normally
suffer from a kind of metaphysical blindness, assuming that theirs is a science
of absolute and invariable truths, without any presuppositions. Some go as far
as to claim that economic laws are as free from ‘metaphysics’ or ‘values’ as
the law of gravitation. We need not, however, get involved in arguments of
methodology. Instead, let us take some fundamentals and see what they look like
when viewed by a modern economist and a Buddhist economist.
There is universal agreement that the fundamental source of
wealth is human labour. Now, the modern economist has been brought up to
consider ‘labour’ or work as little more than a necessary evil. From the point
of view of the employer, it is in any case simply an item of cost, to be reduced
to a minimum if it cannot be eliminated altogether, say by automation.
From the point of view of the workman, it is a ‘disutility’; to work
is to make a sacrifice of one’s leisure and comfort, and wages are a kind of
compensation for the sacrifice. Hence the ideal from the point of view of the
employer is to have output without employees, and the ideal from the point of
view of the employee is to have income without employment.
The consequences of these attitudes both in theory and in
practice are, of course, extremely far-reaching. If the ideal with regard to
work is to get rid of it, every method that ‘reduces the work load’ is a good
thing. The most potent method, short of automation, is the so-called ‘division
of labour’, and the classical example is the pin factory eulogised in Adam
Smith’s Wealth of Nations. Here it is not a matter of ordinary
specialization, which mankind has practiced from time immemorial, but of
dividing up every complete process of production into minute parts, so that the
final product can be produced at great speed without anyone having had to
contribute more than a totally insignificant and, in most cases, unskilled
movement of his limbs.
The Buddhist point of view takes the function of work to be
at least threefold: to give a man a chance to utilize and develop his
faculties; to enable him to overcome his ego-centredness by joining with other
people in a common task; and to bring forth the goods and services needed for a
becoming existence. Again, the consequences that flow from this view are
endless. To organize work in such a manner that it becomes
meaningless, boring, stultifying, or nerve-racking for the worker would be
little short of criminal; it would indicate a greater concern with goods than with
people, an evil lack of compassion and a soul-destroying degree of attachment
to the most primitive side of this worldly existence. Equally, to strive for
leisure as an alternative to work would be considered a complete
misunderstanding of one of the basic truths of human existence, namely, that
work and leisure are complementary parts of the same living process and cannot
be separated without destroying the joy of work and the bliss of leisure.
From the Buddhist point of view, there are therefore two
types of mechanization which must be clearly distinguished: one that enhances a
man’s skill and power and one that turns the work of man over to a mechanical
slave, leaving man in a position of having to serve the slave. How to tell the
one from the other? “The craftsman himself,” says Ananda Coornaraswamy, a man
equally competent to talk about the Modern West as the Ancient East, “the
craftsman himself can always, if allowed to, draw the delicate distinction
between the machine and the tool. The carpet loom is a tool, a contrivance for
holding warp threads at a stretch for the pile to be woven round them by the
craftsmen’s fingers; but the power loom is a machine, and its significance as a
destroyer of culture lies in the fact that it does the essentially human
part of the work.” It is clear,
therefore, that Buddhist economics must be very different from the economics of
modern materialism, since the Buddhist sees the essence of civilization not in
a multiplication of wants but in the purification of human character. Character,
at the same time, is formed primarily by a man’s work. And work, properly
conducted in conditions of human dignity and freedom, blesses those who do it and
equally their products. The Indian philosopher and economist J. C. Kumarappa
sums the matter up as follows:
“If the nature of the work is properly appreciated and
applied, it will stand in the same relation to the higher
faculties as food is to the physical body. It nourishes and enlivens the higher
man and urges him to produce the best he is capable of. It directs his freewill
along the proper course and disciplines the animal in him into progressive
channels. It furnishes an excellent background for man to display his scale of
values and develop his personality.”’
If a man has no chance of obtaining work he is in a
desperate position, not simply because he lacks an income but because he lacks
this nourishing and enlivening factor of disciplined work which nothing can
replace. A modern economist may engage in highly sophisticated calculations on
whether full employment ‘pays’ or whether it might be more ‘economic’ to
run an economy at less than full employment so as to ensure a greater mobility
of labour, a better stability of wages, and so forth. His fundamental criterion
of success is simply the total quantity of goods produced during a given period
of time. “If the marginal urgency of goods is low,” says Professor Galbraith in
The Affluent Society, “then so is the urgency of employing the last man
or the last million men in the labour force.”
And again: “If… we can afford some unemployment in the interest of
stability — a proposition, incidentally, of impeccably conservative antecedents
— then we can afford to give those who are unemployed the goods that enable
them to sustain their accustomed standard of living.”
From a Buddhist point of view, this is standing the truth on
its head by considering goods as more important than people and consumption as
more important than creative activity.
It means shifting the emphasis from the worker to the product of work,
that is, from the human to the sub-human, a surrender to the forces of
evil. The very start of Buddhist
economic planning would be a planning for full employment, and the primary
purpose of this would in fact be employment for everyone who needs an ‘outside’
job: it would not be the maximization of employment nor the maximization of
production. Women, on the whole, do not
need an ‘outside’ job, and the large-scale employment of women in offices or factories
would be considered a sign of serious economic failure. In particular, to let mothers of young
children work in factories while the children run wild would be as uneconomic
in the eyes of a Buddhist economist as the employment of a skilled worker as a
soldier in the eyes of a modern economist.
While the materialists is mainly interested in goods, the
Buddhist is mainly interested in liberation.
But Buddhism is ‘The Middle Way’ and therefore in no way antagonistic to
physical well-being. It is not wealth
that stands in the way of liberation but the attachment to wealth, not the
enjoyment of pleasurable things but the craving for them. The keynote of Buddhist economics,
therefore, is simplicity and non-violence.
From an economist’s point of view, the marvel of the Buddhist way of life
is the utter rationality of its pattern—amazingly small means leading to
extraordinarily satisfactory results.
For the modern economist this is very difficult to
understand. He is used to measuring the
‘standard of living’ by the amount of annual consumption, assuming all the time
that a man who consumes more is ‘better off’ than a man who consumes less. A Buddhist economist would consider this
approach excessively irrational: since consumption is merely a means to human
well-being, the aims should be to obtain the maximum amount of well-being with
the minimum of consumption. Thus, if
the purpose of clothing is a certain amount of temperature comfort and an
attractive appearance, the task is to attain this purpose with the smallest
possible effort, that is, with the smallest annual destruction of cloth and
with the help of designs that involve the smallest possible input of toil. The less toil there is, the more time and
strength is left for artistic creativity.
It would be highly uneconomic, for instance, to go in for complicated
tailoring, like the modern West, when a much more beautiful effect can be
achieved by the skillful draping of uncut material. It would be the height of folly to make material so that it
should wear out quickly and the height of barbarity to make anything ugly,
shabby or mean. What has just been said about clothing applies equally to all
other human requirements. The ownership
and the consumption of goods is a means to an end, and Buddhist economics is
the systematic study of how to attain given ends with the minimum means.
Modern economics, on the other hand, considers consumption
to be the sole end and purpose of all economic activity, taking the factors of
production—land, labor, and capital—as the means. The former, in short, tries to maximize human satisfactions by
the optimal pattern of consumption, while the latter tries to maximize
consumption by the optimal pattern of productive effort. It is easy to see that the effort needed to
sustain a way of life which seeks to attain the optimal pattern of consumption
is likely to be much smaller than the effort needed to sustain a drive for
maximum consumption. We need not be
surprise, therefore, that the pressure and strain of living is very much less
in, say, Burma than it is in the United States, in spite of the fact that the
amount of labour-saving machinery used in the former country is only a minute
fraction of the amount used in the latter.
Simplicity and non-violence are obviously closely
related. The optimal pattern of
consumption, producing a high degree of human satisfaction by means of a
relatively low rate of consumption, allows people to live without great
pressure and strain and to fulfill the primary injunction of Buddhist teaching:
“Cease to do evil; try to do good.” As
physical resources are everywhere limited, people satisfying their needs by
means of a modest use of resources are obviously less likely to be at each
other’s throats than people depending on a high rate of use. Equally, people who live in highly
self-sufficient local communities are less likely to get involved
in large-scale violence than people whose existence depends on world-wide
systems of trade.
From the point of view of Buddhist economics, therefore, production from
local resources for local needs is the most rational way of economic life,
while dependence on imports from afar and the consequent need to produce for
export to unknown and distant peoples is highly uneconomic and justifiable only
in exceptional cases and on a small scale. Just as the modern economist would
admit that a high rate of consumption of transport services between a man’s
home and his place of work signifies a misfortune and not a high standard of
life, so the Buddhist economist would hold that to satisfy human wants from
far-away sources rather than from sources nearby signifies failure rather than
success. The former might take statistics showing an increase in the number of
ton/miles per head of the population carried by a country’s transport
system as proof of economic progress, while to the latter—the Buddhist
economist—the same statistics would indicate a highly undesirable deterioration
in the pattern of consumption.
Another striking difference between modern economics and
Buddhist economics arises over the use of natural resources. Bertrand de
Juvenal, the eminent French political philosopher, has characterized ‘Western
man’ in words which may be taken as a fair description of the modern economist:
“He tends to count nothing as an expenditure, other than human
effort; he does not seem to mind how much mineral matter he wastes and, far
worse, how much living matter he destroys. He does not seem to realise at all
that human life is a dependent part of an ecosystem of many different forms of
life. As the world is ruled from towns where men are cut off from any form of
life other than human, the feeling of belonging to an ecosystem is not revived.
This results in a harsh and improvident treatment of things upon which we
ultimately depend, such as water and trees.”
The teaching of the Buddha, on the other hand, enjoins a reverent
and non-violent attitude not only to all sentient beings but also, with great
emphasis, to trees. Every follower of the Buddha ought to plant a tree every
few years and look after it until it is safely established, and
the Buddhist economist can demonstrate without difficulty that the universal
observance of this rule would result in a high rate of genuine economic
development independent of any foreign aid. Much of the economic decay of
South-East Asia (as of many other parts of the world) is undoubtedly due to a
heedless and shameful neglect of trees.
Modern economics does not distinguish between renewable and
non-renewable materials, as its very method is to equalize and quantify everything
by means of a money price. Thus, taking various alternative fuels, like coal,
oil, wood or water power: the only difference between them recognized by modern
economics is relative cost per equivalent unit. The cheapest is automatically
the one to be preferred, as to do otherwise would be irrational and ‘uneconomic’.
From a Buddhist point of view, of course, this will not do; the essential
difference between non-renewable fuels like coal and oil on the one hand and
renewable fuels like wood and water-power on the other cannot be simply
overlooked. Non-renewable goods must be used only if they are indispensable,
and then only with the greatest care and the most meticulous concern for
conservation. To use them heedlessly or extravagantly is an act of violence,
and while complete non-violence may not be attainable on this earth, there is
none the less an ineluctable duty on man to aim at the ideal of non-violence in
all he does.
Just as a modern European economist would not consider it a great economic achievement
if all European art treasures were sold to America at attractive prices, so the
Buddhist economist would insist that a population basing its economic life on
non-renewable fuels is living parasitically, on capital instead of income. Such
a way of life could have no permanence and could therefore be justified only
as a purely temporary expedient. As the world’s resources of non-renewable
fuels—coal, oil and natural gas—are exceedingly unevenly distributed over the
globe and undoubtedly limited in quantity, it is clear that their
exploitation at an ever increasing rate is an act of violence against nature which must almost
inevitably lead to violence between men.
This fact alone might give food for thought even to those
people in Buddhist countries who care nothing for the religious and spiritual
values of their heritage and ardently desire to embrace the materialism of
modern economics at the fastest possible speed. Before they dismiss Buddhist
economics as nothing better than a nostalgic dream, they might
wish to consider whether the path of economic development outlined by modern
economics is likely to lead them to places where they really want to be.
Towards the end of his courageous book The Challenge of Man’s Future, Professor
Harrison Brown of the California Institute of Technology gives the following
appraisal:
“Thus we see that, just as industrial society is
fundamentally unstable and subject to reversion to agrarian existence, so within
it the
conditions which offer individual freedom are unstable in their ability to
avoid the conditions which impose rigid organization and totalitarian control.
Indeed, when we examine all of the foreseeable difficulties which threaten the survival of
industrial civilization, it
is difficult to see how the achievement of stability and the maintenance
of individual liberty can be made compatible.”
Even if this were dismissed as a long-term view—and in the
long term, as Keynes said, we are all dead—there is the immediate question of
whether ‘modernization’, as currently practised without regard to religious and
spiritual values, is actually producing agreeable results. As far as the
masses are concerned, the results appear to be disastrous—a collapse of the
rural economy, a rising tide of unemployment in town and country, and the
growth of a city proletariat without nourishment for either body or soul.
It is in the light of both immediate experience and
long-term prospects that the study of Buddhist economics could be recommended
even to those who believe that economic growth is more important than any
spiritual or religious values. For it is not a question of choosing between ‘modern growth’
and ‘traditional stagnation’. It is a question of finding the right path of
development, the Middle Way between materialist heedlessness and traditionalist
immobility, in short, of finding ‘Right Livelihood’.
That this can be done is not in doubt. But it requires much more than
blind imitation of the materialist way of life of the so-called advanced
countries.’ It requires above all, the conscious and systematic development of
a Middle Way in technology, as I have called it, a technology more productive and powerful than the
decayed technology of the ancient East, but at the same time non-violent and
immensely cheaper and simpler than the labour-saving technology of the modern
West.
Vol 1 No 11, Jan-Feb 1968. This
article became a chapter in Small is Beautiful.