Generated with assistance of perplexity A "democratic distributist stakeholder economy" would combine key elements from several economic ideas:
- Distributism: An economic philosophy advocating widespread ownership of productive property (land, tools, businesses) broadly across society to avoid concentration of wealth or state control. It supports many small owners, family businesses, cooperatives, and guild principles rather than large corporations or full state ownership. Distributism accepts property rights but wants them widely held and linked with social responsibility.
- Stakeholder Economy: Focuses on balancing interests of all stakeholders in business decisions—workers, customers, communities, the environment, shareholders—rather than simply maximizing shareholder profit. It calls for responsible, sustainable business practices and governance that include social and environmental impact considerations.
- Democratic: Emphasizes participation and accountability in economic governance such that decision-making power is more inclusive and broadly shared, potentially involving democratic institutions or councils overseeing resources or enterprises.
Now, regarding whether this resembles Star Trek's Earth economy "but with money":
- Star Trek depicts a post-scarcity economy largely without money within the United Federation of Planets (including Earth), where advanced technology like replicators and near unlimited energy renders most material goods abundant, and people work out of passion or social contribution rather than for wages or profit[previous conversation].
- A democratic distributist stakeholder economy is not post-scarcity; it assumes scarcity still exists and that ownership, business decisions, and wealth distribution remain key economic issues. Money or currency would still exist as a medium of exchange and capital allocation, but economic justice is pursued through widely distributed ownership and stakeholder-focused governance.
- So, while both models share values like broad participation, social responsibility, and economic cooperation, a democratic distributist stakeholder economy is more like a money-based, property-distributing, socially-oriented mixed economy—whereas Star Trek’s Earth economy is a more idealized, post-scarcity, largely moneyless society.
In short, the distributist stakeholder model is somewhat like Star Trek’s Earth economy philosophically in encouraging social inclusion and broad ownership, but it operates with money and scarcity instead of post-scarcity abundance without money.
If you want, I can provide further details comparing economic governance structures or practical implementations of distributist and stakeholder ideas.