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Rich in things, poor in time
Wolfgang Sachs
Poverty of time degrades the wealth of goods.
from Resurgence Issue 196
A TOURIST FOCUSES in on a most idyllic picture: a man in simple clothes
dozing in a fishing boat that has been pulled out of the waves which come
rolling up the sandy beach. The camera clicks,the fisherman awakens. The
tourist offers him a cigarette and launches into a conversation: “The
weather is great, there is plenty of fish, why are you lying around instead
of going out and catching more?”
The fisherman replies: “Because I caught enough this morning.”
“But just imagine,” the tourist says, “you would go out there three or
four times a day, bringing home three or four times as much fish! You
know what could happen?” The fisherman shakes his head. “After about a
year you could buy yourself a motor-boat,” says the tourist. “After two
years you could buy a second one, and after three years you could have
a cutter or two. And just think! One day you might be able to build a
freezing plant or a smoke house, you might eventually even get your own
helicopter for tracing shoals of fish and guiding your fleet of cutters,
or you could acquire your own trucks to ship your fish to the capital,
and then . . .”
“And then?” asks the fisherman.
“And then”, the tourist continues triumphantly, “you could be calmly
sitting at the beachside, dozing in the sun and looking at the beautiful
ocean!” The fisherman looks at the tourist: “But that is exactly what
I was doing before you came along!”
The story — told by writer Heinrich Böll — plays upon the hopes and fears
of the rich. The tourist, upon seeing the lazy fisherman dozing in the
sun, remembers his fears of becoming poor, of getting stuck in a situation
in which he has no options. At the same time, he instinctively projects
the hope of the rich upon the poor. Without thinking twice, he outlines
a road map to expand productivity. And at the end, holds out a promise
that is supposed to give meaning to all these efforts: achieving freedom
from one’s labour and gaining mastery over time.
What makes the anecdote so puzzling is the circular structure of the
story; the rich strive to arrive where the poor began. A paradox is offered,
which throws up a set of unsettling questions for the affluent. Why all
the pains and efforts of development, if the rich attain only what the
poor seem to have all along? Or, worse, how come that the rich, despite
all the hustle and bustle, appear never even to reach the state enjoyed
by the poor? For if the tale of development consists in progressively
acquiring a wealth of goods to attain a wealth of time, then rich societies
today have evidently missed the mark. What went wrong?
In remembrance of time
As is often noted, the economy of time is at the core of any economic
action. From Arkwright’s Spinning Jenny to Bill Gates’ web browser Explorer
we know that most of the technology employed for the pursuit of progress
is used in the belief that doing more things faster is better than doing
few things slower. Indeed, the ability to save time has always been the
hallmark of productivity revolutions, which have transformed patterns
of production and consumption over the last 200 years.
From the very start, far-sighted men and women saw the reign of freedom
rising at the horizon, a realm where toil would finally cease, vastly
increasing the ability of people to engage in activities of their own
liking. Hunting in the morning, fishing in the afternoon, raising animals
in the evening, engaging in literary criticism after dinner. This imaginary
day was an ideal not just of the young Karl Marx. But what happened to
this utopia? Where has all the time gone?
The use of the automobile can serve as a case in point. From the outset,
it was hailed as the ultimate time-saver, dramatically shortening the
time it takes to reach a desired destination. But contrary to popular
belief, drivers do not spend less time than non-drivers in moving from
one place to the other. They travel to more distant destinations. The
power of speed is converted to more kilometres on the road. And time saved
is reinvested into longer distances. As a consequence, the average German
citizen today travels 15,000 km a year as opposed to only 2,000 km in
1950.
Across many sectors — from transport to communications, from production
to entertainment — time saved is constantly transformed into greater distances,
more appointments, larger outputs and increasing activity. The hours saved
are eaten up by new growth. And, after a while, this expansion generates
new pressure for time-saving devices — starting the cycle all over again.
Gigantic gains in productivity have by no means been converted into
less work and more time. On the contrary, they have, for the most part,
been transformed into new rounds of output and commodities. It is evident
that everyone could afford to work just a fraction of today’s normal working
hours if levels of output had stayed stable over time — just as everyone
could afford to spend much less time for all kinds of daily chores if
levels of aspiration had not also changed. It is the relentless expansion
in output and aspirations that continues to eat up each generation of
productivity gains. The utopia of affluence has undercut the utopia of
liberation.
Why is there never enough?
The fisherman in our story would be amazed at the never-ending urge for
more in already rich societies. After all, he was satisfied with his morning
catch and could then afford to rest. The issue is one that has been examined
before: John Maynard Keynes, one of the master thinkers of twentieth-century
economics, wondered if an exceedingly successful economy would not at
some point reach a state of saturation. In his “Essays in Persuasion”
he speculated that the imperative of productivity might lose significance
under conditions of affluence, as abundance makes it less and less important
to allocate means optimally. But rich societies still fail to conform
to that expectation. They are hooked upon the principle of non-saturation.
Why do they ignore the notion of “enough”?
What matters in such a society is the symbolic power of goods and services;
they are less than ever simply vehicles of utility: they serve an expressive
function. What counts is what goods say, not what they do. In modern societies
goods are means of communication. They constitute a system of “signs”
through which a purchaser makes statements about him- or herself. While
in the old days goods informed about social status, today they signal
allegiance to a particular lifestyle.
Many products have by now been perfected and cannot be developed any
further; new buyers can be found only when these goods offer more symbolic
capital. Cars that cannot become faster and more comfortable are designed
to be technological wonders. Watches that cannot show the time more accurately
take on a sportive flair when they become diving watches. Television sets
whose images cannot become clearer take on a cinematic effect with wider
screens. Designers and advertisers are continually offering consumers
new thrills and new identities, while the product’s utility is taken for
granted.
In such a context, the relationship between consumer and product is
shaped mainly by imagination, which is infinitely malleable. Feelings
and meanings are anything but stable; their plasticity and ease of obsolescence
can be exploited by designers in an unending variety of ways. Imagination,
in effect, is an inexhaustible fuel for maintaining a growing supply of
goods and services. And for that reason, the expectation that rich societies
should one day reach a level of saturation has not come about: when commodities
become cultural symbols, there is no end to economic expansion.
Frugality and well-being
Beyond a certain threshold, things can become the thieves of time. Goods
have to be chosen, bought, set up, used, experienced, maintained, tidied
away, dusted, repaired, stored and disposed of. Likewise, appointments
have to be sought, co-ordinated, agreed upon, put into the diary, maintained,
assessed and followed up. Even the most beautiful of objects and the most
valuable of interactions gnaw away at our time — the most restricted of
all resources. The number of possibilities — goods, services, events —
has exploded in affluent societies, but the day in its conservative way
continues to be just twenty-four hours long. Scarcity of time is the nemesis
of affluence. The rich may have plenty of things, but are poor in time.
In fact, in a multi-option society people do not suffer from a lack but
from an excess of opportunities. While well-being is threatened by a shortage
of means in the first case, it is threatened by a confusion about goals
in the second. The proliferation of options makes it increasingly difficult
to know what one wants, to decide what one does not want, and to cherish
what one has.
Human well-being has two dimensions: the material and the non-material.
Anyone who buys food and prepares dinner has the material satisfaction
of filling his or her stomach, and the non-material satisfaction of having
enjoyed cooking a particular cuisine or partaking in good company. This
non-material satisfaction requires attention, which means time. The full
value of goods and services can only be experienced when they are given
attention: they have to be properly used, adequately enjoyed and carefully
cultivated. Having too many things makes time for non-material pleasure
shrink; an overabundance of options can easily diminish full satisfaction.
So poverty of time degrades the richness of goods. In other words, there
is a limit to material satisfaction beyond which overall satisfaction
is bound to decrease. Frugality, therefore, is a key to well-being.
Indeed, it is often the inability to exercise a certain degree of frugality
that is at the core of the problem of time. The art of living requires
a sense for the right measure. Less can definitely be more. The modern
consumer society continually squanders the wealth of time. In an age of
exploding options the ability to focus, which implies the sovereignty
of saying no, becomes an important ingredient in creating a richer life.
Without that ability, the lament of dramatist Ödon von Horvarth may become
the universal apology: “I am really an entirely different person; it’s
just that I never get around to showing it.”
It goes without saying that without a wealth of time, there is bound
to be less generosity, less compassion, less dedication and less freedom
— a sort of modernized poverty which the fisherman innately understood,
and the tourist only reluctantly became aware of.
Wolfgang Sachs is presently with the Wupertal Institute for Climate,
Environment and Energy, in Germany. His most recent book is Planet Dialectics:
Explorations in Environment and Development, to be published by Zed Books,
London, in November 1999. Wolfgang will teach at Schumacher College and
give a Schumacher Lecture in Bristol, in October.
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