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Investing in Our Human Infrastructure

Posted by npsadmin at Jan 10, 2009 05:30 PM |

Our economic crisis is an opportunity to lay foundations for a sustainable and equitable economic system instead of just trying to patch up an economy based on unsustainable consumerism, unsustainable consumer debt, and unsustainable environmental practices. ADD YOUR COMMENTS AT THE BOTTOM

Investing in Our Human Infrastructure:

The Real Wealth of Our Nation Is Its People

Over half a million people lost their jobs last month. There’s no question we need a job-creation plan. The real question is what kind of plan will most quickly stimulate the economy and at the same time provide the best long-term investment for our nation.

We must urge President Obama and Congress to use the American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan to invest in our human infrastructure: that is, in human capacity development. The Job-Creation plan as currently crafted mainly focuses on our material infrastructure (bridges, roads, etc.) and our natural infrastructure (green jobs, etc.) That’s important. But in the new knowledge/information era, the most important economic assets are flexible, innovative, capable people. Our nation is woefully behind in developing and caring for these vital assets. We must do this – starting in childhood and continuing through life.

By creating, subsidizing, and providing training for jobs in childcare, early education, healthcare, eldercare, and other “caring industries,” as well as supporting caring work in homes, we stimulate the economy, help families, radically reduce poverty and violence, reward women’s economic contributions, save billions in crime and prisons – and develop the “high quality human capital” needed for the post-industrial economy.

Our economic crisis is an opportunity to lay foundations for a sustainable and equitable economic system instead of just trying to patch up an economy based on unsustainable consumerism, unsustainable consumer debt, and unsustainable environmental practices. The current economic meltdown is not due simply to the globalization of unregulated capitalism. The problem goes much deeper - and so must the solutions.

A proposal for a Full Spectrum Job-Creation plan is posted at www.rianeeisler.com. It shows that the immediate and long-term financial return on investment in caring jobs and home activities is huge - and not accounted for in current economic models.

  • America and the world are in the midst of a sea change. Many of the jobs being lost in manufacturing and other fields will be gone for good as we move toward more automation and robotics. Our most effective investment is in human capacity development, starting in childhood and continuing all through life.
  • A full-spectrum job-creation program will stimulate economic recovery and develop high capacity human capital capable of pioneering new frontiers of innovation across the board in every sector of society: culturally, socially, agriculturally, medically, educationally, technologically, and environmentally.
  • Neuroscience shows that the quality of childcare directly affects the development of human capacities and potentials; caregiving produces what economists call “public goods” and should be economically valued as civic work.
  • The hi-tech green jobs and infrastructure construction jobs proposed by the job-creation program as currently formulated are still largely “men’s work.” Yet the time has passed when male “heads of family” were the sole breadwinners. The majority of families are two wage-earner families or woman-headed families. An effective economic stimulus program also provides jobs, training, and subsidies where the female labor force is concentrated: childcare, education, healthcare, eldercare. Studies show that women buy 80% of household goods.

 

  •  Support of “caring work” will radically reduce poverty and violence, and their enormous economic, social, and personal costs.  In the U.S., as in most nations, the poor are disproportionately women and children.

 

  • As the Baby Boomers age, demand for eldercare is rapidly exceeding services available. The job-creation program must address this urgent need by supporting good eldercare in both the market and household economies.
  •  Millions of Americans are going uncared and undercared for. We have a huge caring gap from cradle to grave. A more broadly defined job-creation program will help close this gap at the same time that it stimulates the economy and trains both women and men for the work that is most urgently needed for a healthy economy and society.
  • Creating a new cabinet post or  advisory council for high capacity human development will facilitate the reordering of social priorities and the implementation of a new economic agenda appropriate for the post-industrial era – and a more equitable and sustainable future.

The economic stimulus plan should be a bridge to the kind of economy and society we want and need: one where caring for humans and the planet is the primary economic driver. Good care and education for children is an essential investment in our nation’s future work force, and hence our future quality of life. Investing in human infrastructure will not only stimulate our economy; it will lay foundations for a new economic era where our most precious resources - people and the natural environment - are nurtured, sustained, and thrive for generations to come.

 

Riane Eisler is author of The Chalice and the Blade: Our History, Our Future, and most recently The Real Wealth of Nations: Creating a Caring Economics. She the founder and president of the Center for Partnership Studies.

Document Actions

Thank you!

Posted by Stephanie Toby at Apr 24, 2009 10:31 AM
Thank you for laying this out so clearly! It is time for us to recognize the value and importance of caring.

caring industry

Posted by Db Kuhl at May 28, 2009 02:07 PM
I currently work in a very important "caring induistry". I am on the staff of a Women's Recovery center where women and their childrn can come in order to stop substance abuse,and, heal from domestic violence and abusive childhoods.
We will have to shut down in about two weeks becuase there are no funds for such importnat caring work. We receive at least two inquiries a day from women needing this type of help , but there are no financial resources to continue.
The women who have graduated from our program are amazing - they have turned thier lives around and now lead happy, productive lives contributing to the well being of their children and the community.

I am already grieving the loss of this program. A new vision of the economy would see this work as a priority for our nation and world!!

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