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Can anyone give me some good historical examples of mutualism in practice? Or at least something that comes close?
A.1.3. WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MUTUALISM AND THE COOPERATIVE MOVEMENT?
There isn't much of a difference. Co-ops are a specific form of mutualism. Look at it this way, mutualism is a set of general principles and the co-ops are one of the practical forms that these principles have taken. Historically, the practical forms were developed by the working class before the general principles were propounded by political philosophers. The problem today is the loss of consciousness of cooperatives as the embodiment of a form of mutualist practice
patrickhenry wrote:Can anyone give me some good historical examples of mutualism in practice? Or at least something that comes close?
Most co-ops and credit unions would be considered part of mutualism as carson points out.
The time store, which played no games with profits and dividends, is an example of a more "doctrinaire" mutualism, where the principle of carrying costs is observed at every step
The Mondragon worker cooperatives in the Basque region of Northern Spain provide one of the best examples of worker cooperatives in the world today. The first industrial cooperative of the movement was established in 1956 in the town of Mondragon. Today, it is a complex of around 100 industrial cooperatives with more than 20,000 members which includes the largest producers of consumer durables (stoves, refrigerators, and washing machines) in Spain and a broad of array of cooperatives producing computerized machine tools, electronic components, and other high technology products. The cooperatives grew out of a technical school started by a Basque priest, Father Jose Arizmendi. Today, the school is a Polytechnical College which awards engineering degrees.
The financial center of the Mondragon movement is the Caja Laboral Popular (CLP), the Bank of the People’s Labor. It is a cooperative bank with 180 branch offices in the Basque region of Spain. The worker cooperatives, instead of the individual depositors, are the members of the Caja Laboral Popular. The bank built up a unique Entrepreneurial Division with several hundred professionally trained mem¬bers. This division has in effect “socialized” the en¬tre¬preneurial process so that it works with workers to systematically set up new cooperatives (see Ellerman, 1984a). The division is now split off as a separate cooperative, Lan Kide Suztaketa or LKS.
patrickhenry wrote:The time store, which played no games with profits and dividends, is an example of a more "doctrinaire" mutualism, where the principle of carrying costs is observed at every step
I imagine this being the ideal we aspire to.
Zazaban wrote:Mutualism sounds a lot like anarcho-communism, except with money.
Noleaders wrote:Zazaban wrote:Mutualism sounds a lot like anarcho-communism, except with money.
How do you mean?
Zazaban wrote:Mutualism sounds a lot like anarcho-communism, except with money.
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