Andrew Francis

Oikos: God’s Big Word for a Small Planet


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them to pay their due taxes with “render to Caesar . . .” (Mark 12:17). We return to the question of “just taxation” in chapter 2.

      “Commodification”

      In his life-enhancing novel The Alchemist Paulo Coelho said, “Everything in life has its price,” which is daily misquoted by nearly everyone. In today’s labor markets, there is a salary to catch every worker whereas people-traffickers know that even their sisters and brothers have a market value! Whether it’s a new fridge or the latest SUV, we understand that everything even natural resources have their ultimate price—whatever their scarcity. This is the frightening contemporary construct/practice which is known as “commodification.” Part of Marx’s helpful analysis was to remind us that society becomes a danger to itself when it commodifies labor, people or those goods which traditionally did (and even should) not have a price put upon them.

      The “global monetocracy”

      The mind-blowing 2003 book Gaian Democracies first coined and thus popularized the phrase “the global monetocracy,” which has easily slipped into mass-media usage. The “global monetocracy” concept is the worldwide phenomenon that now money talked and commercially was acting transnationally. Just like General Motors, Coca-Cola, and—how many more would you like to name?

      Recognizing the new players

      UK economics professor Jim O’Neill began inventing acronyms for the recently developing circles of countries as serious economic players. His first was BRIC, referring to Brazil, Russia, India, and China. Consider all the media furor about social and economic conditions surrounding the high spending for the 2016 Rio Olympics or the challenges created by Russia’s GazProm in the Arctic (1) or the increasing economic influence of the world’s one billion-plus nations of India and China. O’Neill’s second acronymic circle, MINT, meaning Mexico, Indonesia, Nigeria, and Turkey, are just entering the global stage. O’Neill’s circles of shared economic development are now challenging the supremacy of former key players, such as the USA or Germany, in determining global economic policy.

      The bottom line

      It is the transnational corporations and the mega-sized (both in population size and financial clout or growth) nations who now “rule the roost.” As Keith Hebden, the director of the UK’s Urban Theology Unit has prophetically written:

      In terms of the global oikos, the USA, UK, Eurozone, and Australasia no longer “call the shots.” Many of the new players do not believe as we Westerners believe, nor value human lives as we do. Some have better worldviews about their natural resources or native animals and plants than Westernized nations do. The world that Western economists have created for us will not be the one which our grandchildren inherit—if we still have a planet by then. We have to look afresh at what happens when that (meaning “our”) kind of economic system goes awry. Then what we can do is to start building a better world for those yet unborn—as well as ourselves.