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  • Posted July 27th, 2024
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    Solving the housing crisis via the commons, Part 2: the Housing Commons

    Solving the housing crisis via the commons, Part 2: the Housing Commons

    This is Part 2 of a two-parter, about how the housing crisis causes debt-bondage and wage-slavery, and how the housing Commons can release people from debt and give them freedom to do what they know needs to be done.

    Part 1: the housing crisis.

    Let’s look now at the Housing Commons:


    How the housing commons can solve the housing crisis

    In Stroud, there’s a larger than usual fraction of the population that a) understands the mess we’re in, and b) is prepared to do something about it. As usual, though, we are significantly constrained in what we can do by access to resources. The first, most critical resource in these efforts is human life hours – we’re all stretching what we can achieve on that front.

    Why? Because the system we live in acts to use up the life hours of humans in efforts to achieve safe housing, care for their nearest and dearest, and securing the basic necessities of life. It achieves this trick by enforcing the money system on us. The claims we have on others – in order to secure the basics, and the methods we use to confirm our own willingness to help secure the basics for others – have all been abstracted away from real life, into the money system.

    We cannot easily build a life for ourselves that is significantly outside the existing money system (at least, not one which does not condemn us to disconnection from friends and family and community). It encroaches everywhere, at an increasing pace. Worse, that money system is, very obviously, degrading the biosphere – the foundation of all life. The money system has us locked down into short-termism, while it violently degrades our long-term prospects.

    So far, so gloomy, and not news – although perhaps this analysis does a couple of things which seem useful to me. First, there are no ‘baddies’ in it (there are baddies in the world of course, but they’re no longer the issue – only an aspect); and second, there’s no ‘culture’ in the analysis – nothing about ‘dualistic worldview’. Again that perspective is not ‘wrong’, it’s just, in my view, a symptom, not a cause. A post rationalisation that helped lock us in.

    So, what’s the point of this analysis? It’s a story to set up an argument for action. I happen to think it’s a well-grounded story, which is robust from many angles, but in the end it’s a story.

    What’s the argument for action? Of course, it’s ‘Build Commons’. But I want to think about the ‘how’. How can we do such a mammoth job, when we’re so constrained? How do we find the time?

    In a sane system, the question, ‘how do we find the time to save the world?’ would make no sense. If the world is at stake, you drop other things, because they’re irrelevant if the world is lost. The analysis shows us, though, how we’re trapped. How we’re forced, instead, to ask the question, ‘How do we find the money?’ Human time has been captured by money.

    Happily, though, the mechanism of the trap offers a way out. Because the mechanism is debt: ‘I owe, I owe, it’s off to work I go’. And the biggest debt, the tightest trap, is mortgage debt. The property system. In order to have a safe place to live, to be, we are forced into debt bondage. Remember, the ‘mort’ in ‘mortgage’ means ‘death’. When you take out a mortgage, you stake your life on it. And boy does it eat your life.

    If we aren’t yet in debt bondage, we must become time slaves – wage slaves –  in order to achieve debt bondage – to ‘get on the housing ladder’, in the search for a secure place to live. They won’t even let you stake your life, unless you show willing, by becoming a slave (you get paid in arrears, of course, not up front, so you start your working life in debt).

    What this means, and again with reference to Stroud, is that many people have built up a significant asset, through time/wage slavery (working). However, the asset is locked-down – really part of the finance system, not really yours. Your house may be worth a lot of money on paper, but you can’t have that money without either selling your house or going back into debt bondage (remortgage). And you can only sell it to someone who can get a mortgage – guaranteeing another doubling for the finance system. So what to do?

    There is no possible ‘ great awakening’ and no effective one either. That’s not the route. That’s the ‘fault in our culture’ thinking trap. 

    I don’t think people are asleep. I think they’re trapped, and have no obvious agency – either as individuals, or as community, to achieve anything that seems likely to build something better, for the simple reason that (intuitively rather than rationally) they understand that if they challenge the money system, their children suffer, and their old age looks bleak. So they do what life does in times of trouble, and reduce the time horizon they worry about. They do what works now and cross their fingers about a future they don’t feel they can influence.

    What they need – and perhaps this would be a kind of awakening – is evidence of agency from working together. Agency that builds security and reduces future risk. And again, that is Commons. But they need working examples, not words or stories. We’re building in Stroud. But it’s slow – mainly because of constraints on our time and the money to engage the time of others with.

    And here’s the way through. We need to build the Housing Commons model, in particular, to arrive at the point where we can see that putting our own houses in makes sense. This will liberate us from time slavery and liberate lots of cash too.

    But please don’t think that this is either a moral call, or one for collectivisation! I’m emphatically not saying ‘put your family on the line to save the world’. What I am saying is that we need to concentrate on the Housing Commons model, on getting it to viability, on reaching the point where it looks like the obvious and safe thing to do to opt your house in, for tens, hundreds, thousands of people.

    Because it will both liberate us from time/wage slavery and give us better security. And it will drive change like nothing else you will ever see. The UK housing market is driven by individual families making tough choices. We need only offer them better choices. The model works financially; all we have to do is make it work experientially. And the great thing is that we get to liberate ourselves early on – both those of us lucky enough to already own, and those of us in precarity.

    The world in a decade from now will be shockingly different (as well as apparently the same). It’s building Commons that matters for security. And rent vouchers bring cash out of pension funds, which build the system, and into our hands, to build more Commons. That’s the point.

    The more Commons we build, the safer we are, and the more of our basics are in our control, and the less debt we have, and the more time we have to heal the world, as best we can

    No other Commoning activity currently has the same power to do this as the Housing Commons, which is why it must be pushed hardest. Which is the greatest precarity people experience? Where is the debt-bondage? Which is the thing which drives people into wage-slavery? Where is all the product of their work locked away? It’s all housing. Forty years ago the answer would have been different. Weirdly, Margaret Thatcher built the conditions we can exploit.

    The Housing Commons is like Aikido; it uses the force of the attack – the insane and dangerous cruelty of ever-increasing house prices – to provide the force whereby we preserve ourselves

    — Dil Green, Mutual Credit Services.


    And you?

    In Stroud Commons, we’re looking to find ways to speed up the building of the commons – especially the housing commons, which we were talking about in terms of ‘the rock on which the commons can be built’ before we’d even formed the core group in Stroud. Dil Green of Mutual Credit Services (who design models for the commons in all sectors), posted a message in our chat group, giving his take on the housing crisis, and how we might speed up the housing commons by allowing / helping / encouraging people to put their house into the commons, and carry on living in it for the rest of their life – and pass it on to their family, too. They’d be able to free up cash (like equity release, but without having to go into more debt), they could retire early, maintenance of the property would be taken out of their hands, and as they get older, commoners will visit regularly to chat, check they’re OK and see if they need anything. Freed from debt-bondage and wage-slavery, and with greater security, people will have more time. And they would spend it on things they know need to be done.

    Putting their home into the commons, and continuing to live in it could be very attractive to people as they get older. Dil said that he wasn’t sure how many people would go for it, but within 10 minutes, a couple of people in the group said they might – so it could be a winner. Let us know what you think (or ask questions) in the comments (including whether this approach would be attractive to you).


    The views expressed in our blog are those of the author and not necessarily lowimpact.org's


    1 Comment

    • 1Dave Darby July 27th, 2024

      I think you’re right in your analysis, and also that there is no chance of a ‘great awakening’. It took a lot of bullying to stop people smoking, even though they knew it was killing them. But the bullying isn’t going to happen when it comes to warming/biosphere destruction, because it needs capitalism to be challenged (which goes against the interests of anyone capable of doing the bullying). And yes, I think that the housing commons is the ‘rock that the rest of the commons can be built on’ – because housing is so fundamental, and so completely screwed. For older people, putting their house into the commons is a good deal I think. 25 years worth of credits that their kids can inherit, guarantee that they can continue to live in the house for the rest of their life, maintenance of the property is not their problem any more, and a commitment from commoners to look after them – visits, chats, taking dog for walk, shopping, work in the garden, making sure they’re ok etc. all the benefits of an intentional community without having to live in the same house as other people.


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