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building local economies
    Newsletters

"EXUBERANT EPISODES OF IMPORT-REPLACING"

April 27, 2006

Jane Jacobs died on Tuesday, just short of her ninetieth birthday, her son
by her side.

The 1983 Annual E. F. Schumacher Lecture program was my first introduction
to the extraordinary intellect of Jane Jacobs. In her talk "The Economy of
Regions," she argued for regional economic diversity, complexity, and
interdependence. She imagined a myriad of small industries producing for
regional markets – small industries that depended on local materials, local
labor, local capital, local transport systems, and appropriately-scaled
technology to conduct business. She pictured the fruits of this regional
industry spilling over to support a rich cultural life in the city at the
hub of the region. This bustling creative energy would then foster new
innovation and industry, filling in the "niches" of the economy.

"Cities don't work like perpetual-motion machines. They require constant new
inputs in the form of innovations based on human insights. And if they are
to generate [vibrant] city regions, they require repeated, exuberant
episodes of import-replacing, which are manifestations of the human ability
to make adaptive imitations . . . "

In the question period following the talk, Jane Jacobs was asked how best to
foster these regional economies. Her answer was "regional currencies." She
called regional currencies one of the most elegant tools for stimulating and
regulating production and trade in a region.

Bob Swann's eyes flashed and his knees trembled. He was a staunch advocate
for local currencies. Was Jane Jacobs a partner with him in this advocacy?
He could not wait to query her more.

He had his chance on the drive back to the airport after the lecture,
talking eagerly about the role of regional currencies in shaping regional
economies. We described the SHARE micro-credit program that the Schumacher
Society had helped to launch in Great Barrington as a way for a citizen
group to gain experience in making productive loans to small businesses.
SHARE was our first step in an initiative to launch a local currency.

As she got out of the car, Jane Jacobs turned to Bob and to me and said,
"You know that $500 honorarium for speaking? Would you take it and open a
SHARE account for me? I want to participate and so stay informed about what
you are doing." She said it with a twinkle. She knew how it would delight
us.

That was when I first experienced the great warmth of spirit of Jane Jacobs.
She championed the "ideas that matter," but she also championed the people
putting the ideas into practice. In her book "Systems of Survival" one of
her characters describes the details of the SHARE program, and in "Dark Age
Ahead" she points to the E. F. Schumacher Society's work with community land
trusts as one of the positive indicators of the renewal of American culture.

During Bob Swann's last years, as he struggled with his health, hand written
notes from Jane Jacobs cheered him on. And unexpected phone calls have
cheered and encouraged me.

The world has lost a great intellect. At the Schumacher Society, in
addition, we have lost an advisory board member and a dear friend. I can
think of no finer way to honor her than for us all to foster "exuberant
episodes of import-replacing" in our local communities.

Susan Witt
For the Board of Directors and Staff
E. F. Schumacher Society
140 Jug End Road
Great Barrington, MA 01230 USA
(413) 528-1737
www.smallisbeautiful.org

* * * * *

Excerpts from:

The Economy of Regions, by Jane Jacobs
Third Annual E. F. Schumacher Lectures, October 1983

Like most of you, I assume, I see much hope in the use of the small and
intermediate technology Schumacher advocated. Furthermore, small and
intermediate technology is quite as necessary, valuable, and constructive in
the economic life of cities as it is in rural and village life and in
currently rich countries as well as poor ones. The use of large and
expensive capital-intensive equipment has become so mindless and rococo that
it leads to mechanization poverty, meaning that it actually doesn’t pay its
way in direct and indirect costs but makes us poorer. Nuclear power plants
are an extreme example, but in principle so are many types of equipment now
being used for agriculture.

The standard diagnosis of the trouble with supply regions, abandoned
regions, and clearance regions as well as stagnated and declining cities is
“not enough industry.” To be sure. But the standard prescription for the
deficiency is “attract industry.” What are these industries that can be
lured and hooked? Where do they come from and why?

For the most part they are industries that originally developed in cities
or city regions but are no longer tethered there by localized markets or by
everyday dependence upon multitudes of producers and services close by…. The
very freedom of location that enables these industries to leave city regions
for distant regions means freedom from local markets and freedom from
symbiotic nests of other producers. Therefore, their presence does nothing,
or little, to stimulate creation of other, symbiotic enterprises. This
outcome becomes starkly obvious whenever these transplants pull up stakes
and leave for yet a different location, perhaps one with still cheaper labor
or still lower electric rates. What they leave behind when they move are
merely economic vacuums, very different from what they left behind
originally in the cities or city regions of their origin. And as long as
they remain in a region with a transplant economy of this sort, they produce
only little and only narrowly for the local economy itself. Their markets
are distant. In effect, such transplants shape a kind of industrialized
supply region incapable of producing amply and diversely for its own people
and producers as well as for others….

Many of the processes at work in natural ecologies and in our own economies
are amazingly similar. I shall mention only two, although many other
similarities are obvious. In a natural ecology the more niches that are
filled, the more efficiently the ecology uses the energy it has at its
disposal and the richer it is in life and means of supporting life. Just so
with our own economies. The more fully their various niches are filled, the
richer they are in means for supporting life. . . .

In a natural ecology the more diversity there is, the more stability, too,
because of what ecologists call its greater numbers of homeostatic feedback
loops, meaning that it includes greater numbers of feedback controls for
automatic self-correction. It is the same with our economies . . . .

Cities are the open-ended types of economies in which our human capacities
for open-ended economic creation are not only able to establish new and
initially tentative little things but also to inject them into everyday life
in a practical way. Cities don't work like perpetual-motion machines. They
require constant new inputs in the form of innovations based on human
insights. And if they are to generate city regions, they require repeated,
exuberant episodes of import-replacing, which are manifestations of the
human ability to make adaptive imitations...

Any region with an innovative and import-replacing city of its own becomes
capable of producing amply and diversely for its own people and producers as
well as for others, again no matter what its given natural attributes.

* * * * *

The full text of Jane Jacobs 1983 E. F. Schumacher Society Lecture, "The
Economy of Regions" may be purchased in pamphlet form for $5 from the
Schumacher Society or may be read for free at the publications section of
our web site: http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/publications/jacobs_83.html

The E. F. Schumacher Society is a tax-exempt, educational organization.
Membership donations support the Society's programs. Donations may be made
on-line at http://www.smallisbeautiful.org/membership.html

 


 

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