Is prosperity with ‘no one left behind’ really possible?

I enjoyed reading a a blog post recently published in ProPinoy.net authored by a certain “bill” (quoted as it appears on the site — not capitalised). In his article, “reThinking Soriano“, “bill” makes an intriguing statement that got me thinking…

So the question is not, “English or Filipino?” The question is how to live and prosper as one without leaving any group behind or setting them aside. How can they be brought along as equal in status and opportunity without stripping away their uniqueness.

It got me thinking because it raises an even more fundamental question:

SUPPORT INDEPENDENT SOCIAL COMMENTARY!
Subscribe to our Substack community GRP Insider to receive by email our in-depth free weekly newsletter. Opt into a paid subscription and you'll get premium insider briefs and insights from us.
Subscribe to our Substack newsletter, GRP Insider!
Learn more

Is prosperity possible without one person or a number of them being “left behind”?

The most politically-correct answer to that question is this: It depends on how you define “prosperity”.

The model of “prosperity” we are most familiar with is the Western model — accumulating a surplus of production that enables us to both (1) re-invest the surplus to build capital, and (2) spend this surplus on indulgence. I use the word “indulgence” here to refer to stuff that are not essential to basic living (i.e., food, shelter, health, clothing, education, and procreation). For us in our consumerist society, to be prosperous means an ability to buy stuff beyond those basic essentials — that branded shirt, the latest gadget, off-season fruit, a weekend in Hong Kong, etc.

But is this definition of prosperity the only definition? From a purely biological perspective, an organism that “prospers” is one that comes to dominate its environment with its sheer numbers and persistence as a distinct genetic subset over time. Under that definition, cockroaches are a prosperous species. They dominate their niche in the environment and persist despite all efforts to eradicate or even simply “control” them.

Step back from that definition and return to our comfy human-centric perspective and we will dismiss cockroaches as a species “left behind” by evolution as we self-described masters of planet Earth evolved our superior intellects.

In short, prosperity is relative.

More importantly, prosperity is definitely not (and never was) a universal virtue and certainly not an entitlement. As we have shown so far, even when we swing from one relative notion of “prosperity” to the other, we will find winners and losers. Ultimately, someone is left behind when the other prospers.

In our most familiar sense of the term, the “winners” in today’s world order are those societies that come out tops when measured using the metrics of the Western (surplus economics) notion of “prosperity” and the losers are those who continue to live under a subsistence (zero-surplus, hand-to-mouth) economy. When regarded from a biological perspective, on the other hand, cockroaches with their sheer numbers and unmatched resilience come out as one of the clear winners while big-brained high-maintenance beasts such as ourselves who fall utterly helpless when attacked or infested by small and often invisible “bugs” are the clear losers.

It’s all relative.

And everything being relative is as close to a natural dogma as one will ever get.

5 Replies to “Is prosperity with ‘no one left behind’ really possible?”

  1. I would define prosperity in the way a society can treat it’s poor and disenfranchised.

    Pensions for the old, education for the young and medical care for the sick, at point of need.

    All that should be the base minimum that a society should strived towards.

    Everything else is a luxury.

  2. I would define prosperity in the way a society can treat it’s poor and disenfranchised.

    These should be the base minimum that a society should strived towards. Pensions for the old, education for the young and medical care for the sick, at point of need.

    Everything else is a luxury.

    It would be wonderful to have a city that is clean and has internet wifi access at all times… might take awhile.

  3. The Legatum Prosperity Index captures necessary economic and welfare parameters that areused to compute for country-level prosperity. And similarly, i would like to side with their definitions of the different prosperity sub-indices such as: economy, entrepreneurship & opportunity, governance, education, health, safety & security, personal freedom and social capital.

    The Nordic countries, in this case, enjoy a great amount of prosperity according to Legatum. And the Philippines might well learn to benchmark how these northern countries (who may not be world powers by themselves) give importance to their people’s economic participation coupled with balanced internal governance.

    Although prosperity evolves, the models employed by Legatum is still worth a look: http://www.prosperity.com/default.aspx

  4. When regarded from a biological perspective, on the other hand, cockroaches with their sheer numbers and unmatched resilience come out as one of the clear winners while big-brained high-maintenance beasts such as ourselves who fall utterly helpless when attacked or infested by small and often invisible “bugs” are the clear losers.

    Pinoys are fond of bragging about their resilience using the bamboo to illustrate this perceived virtue. Resilience is a trait that Pinoys share with, though not as good as that of, cockroaches.

  5. The entire history of the Human race shows that this simply is not possible. Someone always gets left behind. The question we should ask is “how far behind?”

Leave a Reply to Rinko Ogasawara Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.