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Economic Systems and Forms of Exchange. Economic systems. Production and allocation of material goods and services Do not operate independently of other aspects of society Especially closely associated with political systems which are concerned with the allocation of power and authority.
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Economic systems • Production and allocation of material goods and services • Do not operate independently of other aspects of society • Especially closely associated with political systems which are concerned with the allocation of power and authority
economic systems – three interrelated aspects • Patterns of subsistence – the means by which environmental resources are converted for human use • Systems of distribution – the means by which goods and services are made available to members of a particular group • Patterns of consumption
Non-Western Economic Systems • Are there any? • Anthropological approaches to the study of economic systems of production, distribution, and consumption • The Formalist vs. Substantivist Debate • The birth of economic anthropology
Formalist Approach: the Neo-Classical Toolkit • Adam Smith (19th cent.) and the descriptive analytics of western capitalism • Profit motive as human universal • Maximizing utility • Scarcity, cost/benefit, price • Market governed by laws of supply and demand • Rational economic behavior – human universal
Formalist Approach: Marxism and Neo-Marxism • Karl Marx (19th cent.) • Marxist and Neo-Marxist approaches • How economic systems and economic relations sustain relations of power and control over labor • The “mode of production” • Means/Forces of production • Relations of production • Superstructure (ideology)
Marx’s Modes of Production • Emphasizes social relations & conflict within the system • Emphasizes role of economy (a system of production, distribution, and consumption) in establishing and maintaining social relations • Substantivist concern with the social embeddedness of the economy
Smith, Marx and Political Economy • Both Smith and Marx grappling with the meaning of emerging industrial system • Rational economic behavior – everyone will work to further his or her own individual interests (Hobbes) • Neo-classical economists (Formalists) see the profit motive as universal
Anthropologists and the formalist approach • look at activities in societies without a market system, or that do not use money in ways that make sense in a system like a capitalist market • using language of formal economic theory • emphasizing universals of economic behavior
Substantivist Economic Theory • formal neoclassical theory cannot be used to explain economic activities in non-western societies • patterns of economic exchange must instead be interpreted within a society's cultural context • rationality is culturally, not universally defined
The Substantivist Approach • Studying the cultural particulars of any group and economic system • Economic maximization and cultural specificity • Economizing: the rational allocation of scarce means (or resources) to alternative ends (or uses) • Idea of the moral economy • Socially embedded economy with other values than profit and maximization
Forms of Exchange (Polanyi) • Formalist approach ignores some forms of exchange • Reciprocity • Redistribution • Market forms of exchange (contract)
What Can be Exchanged or Distributed? • Material goods • Symbolic goods • Labor • Money • Services • Rights • People
Reciprocity • two individuals or groups pass goods back and forth with the aim of: • helping someone in need by sharing goods with him or her • creating, maintaining, or strengthening social relationships • obtaining goods for oneself
Forms of Reciprocity (M. Sahlins) • generalized - those who give goods or services do not expect the recipient to make a return of goods and services at any definite time in the future • balanced - goods and services are given to someone with the expectation that a return in goods and services of roughly equal value will occur • negative - both parties attempt to gain all they can from the exchange while giving up as little as possible
Reciprocity and Social Distance • In time and space • Establishes and maintains social distance • Can change already established social distance
Reciprocity and “the Gift”(M. Mauss) • Obligatory & interested exchanges • The gift received has to be repaid • The persons represented are moral persons (relational) -- clans, tribes, families, etc
Redistribution • the members of an organized group contribute goods or money into a common pool or fund • usually a central authority has the privilege and responsibility to make decisions about how the goods or money later will be allocated among the group as a whole • i.e. taxation
Market or contract exchange • forces of supply and demand determine costs and prices, goods or services are sold for money, which in turn is used to purchase other goods, with the ultimate goals of acquiring more money and accumulating more goods • Disinterested • Legally defined
KULA RING - TROBRIAND ISLANDERS, Papua New Guinea • kula ring: a system of ceremonial, non-competitive, exchange practiced in Melanesia to establish and reinforce alliances
Kula Ring as System of Exchange • Classic example of balanced reciprocity • ceremonial exchange of valued shell ornaments • scheme for trading food & other items with people of neighboring islands • trading between trading partners • Malinowski's study of the Kula ring exchange system was influential in shaping the anthropological concept of reciprocity
Kula Ring Objects of Exchange • Bagi and Mwali - traditional trading items used in the Milne Bay Kula Ring • white arm shells (mwali) and red shell necklaces (bagi)
Kula Shells and Exchange • Kula shells traditionally move through a series of islands, along a particular path • mwali move in a counterclockwise path through the villages in which the various kula partners live • bagi pass through the same hands, but move clockwise, or the opposite direction to the mwali
shell armbands and necklaces makes this circuit in anywhere from two to five years mwali and bagi are both assessed for their value based on size, colour, and how well they are polished or finished shells increase in value with age and both men and shells gain prestige in their association with one another man may gain fame and notoriety for having possessed a particularly fine armband similarly, a necklace may be highly regarded for having been owned by a great man
Kula Exchange Relations • kula partners • Important social bonds • Inter-generational relationships • Peace pact • basic rule is that one cannot keep a valuable bagi or mwali indefinitely nor withdraw it from circulation unless one owns it personally
Ceremonial Exchange • balanced reciprocity - goods and services are given to someone with the expectation that a return in goods and services of roughly equal value will occur (armbands and necklaces) • fit with myths of adventure, ritual history, continued repossession of valued things
Ceremonial Exchange and Other Forms of Exchange • during ceremonial trading "real" trading goes on, gift giving, exchange or barter • different islands differing resource availability, some no food resources, build canoes, other islands surpluses of yams, taro, pigs • scheme for trading food & other items with people of neighboring islands
Balanced Reciprocity and Unequal Exchanges – The Lese and Efe of the Congo, W. Africa
Consumption • Not just what we eat but the resources we use • Modes of consumption • Minimalism vs. consumerism • Demand (consumption) and desire • Consumption is an aspect of the overall political economy (Baudrillard & Marx)
Consumption (A. Appadurai) • Consumption, demand, desire • Not culture free • Collective regulation of demand/consumption • Social regulation of the desire for goods and services • Free trade • Ethos of limited good
Consumption • A way of sending and receiving messages (M. Douglas) • Goods and services consumed circulate regimes of value (Appadurai) • Prestige group, class, and taste/demand/consumption (Bourdieu) • The social life of things (Appadurai)