Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Toward a new sectorism — #4: same old insufficient calls for a three-sector approach

Back in April, when I meant to post this, I was telling myself that I must get back to forecasting the rise of a fourth sector, and explaining how and why it can improve America’s functioning and well-being.

 

American, as a society and a system, has long had three major sectors: civil society’s community- and home-based sector(s), government’s public sector, and business’s private sector. Having these three has enabled America to be successful for over two centuries, more so than other three-sector societies, and far beyond what anyone could accomplish with far-older one- and two-sector systems.

 

But these three no longer suffice if we are to continue advancing. We need a fourth (commons?) sector. We should start enabling its emergence as the next step in long-term social evolution (à la TIMN). Doing so will improve our society’s complexity as well as simplify its functioning — a reorganization that will make everybody happier and healthier.

 

As I was musing about this back then, along came new papers by renowned theorists and activists reiterating the three-sector framework and urging ways to make better use of it. Today six months later, they are not so fresh, but they can still serve as foils for my continuing campaign. So let’s take a look:

 

  Samuel Bowles and Wendy Carlin’s “The coming battle for the COVID-19 narrative,” in a specialized journal (see URL below), dated April 10, 2020. The authors are renowned complexity scientists affiliated with the Santa Fe Institute (SFI).

[https://voxeu.org/article/coming-battle-covid-19-narrative]

 

• Otto Scharmer’s “A New Superpower in the Making: Awareness-Based Collective Action,” at a blog he heads, dated April 8, 2020. As a futurist based at MIT, Scharmer writes mostly about organizational and economic trends and prospects.

[https://medium.com/presencing-institute-blog/a-new-superpower-in-the-making-awareness-based-collective-action-83861bcb9859]

 

• Henry Mintzberg, Dror Etzioni, and Saku Mantere’s “Worldly Strategy for the Global Climate,” Stanford Social Innovation Review, Fall 2018, pp. 42-47. Mintzberg, a famed organization theorist, is based along with his co-authors at McGill University in Canada. He writes mainly about the roles of the “plural sector” — his term about what are mostly community-based civil-society actors.

[https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2246/bc715c531f724b404a4fcdd53f25504ee9b6.pdf]

 

The first two articles are motivated by institutional failures in responding to the Covid-19 health crisis, the third by wide-spread failures to come up with a world-wide strategy to deal with global climate change.

 

All three make similar points: Modern societies have civil-society (“people”), government (public), and market (private) sectors — i.e., they have three-sector systems. Policymakers keep over-emphasizing the public and private sectors as sources for policy options. But today’s health, environmental, and other crises require including civil-society actors as well. Better ways must be found to enable all three sectors to work together, as complements rather than substitutes.

 

It's good to see the three-sector argument being revived in these articles. But, from a TIMN perspective, it’s a very old argument. It would help our society if policymaking conformed to it in the near term, but it offers little new and effective for the long-term.

 

Bowles & Carlin’s three-sector framework: Their article makes good sense regarding what framework to use for addressing and resolving complex policy issues. Their paper illuminates that concern with solid reasoning as well as two elegant charts (best I’ve seen lately) about how government, market, and civil-society actors and their sectors may work together. In their words:

 

“COVID-19, for better or worse, brings into focus a third pole in the debate: call it community or civil society. In the absence of this third pole, the conventional language of economics and public policy misses the contribution of social norms and of institutions that are neither governments nor markets — like families, relationships within firms, and community organisations.”

 

“No combination of government fiat and market incentives, however cleverly designed, will produce solutions to problems like the pandemic. What we call civil society (or the community) provides essential elements of a strategy to kill COVID-19 without killing the economy.”

 

“These examples underline an important truth about institutional and policy design: the poles of the institution space — at least ideally — are complements not substitutes. Well-designed government policies enhance the workings of markets and enhance the salience of cooperative and other socially valuable preferences. Well-designed markets both empower governments and make them more accountable without crowding out ethical and other pro-social preferences.”

 

 

And their title is quite right: “a narrative battle is coming” — indeed it is already going on. Who wins it will matter for whether we end up with a two-, three-, or prospective four-sector framework. But far more illumination is needed than they have provided so far.


Scharmer’s more-or-less three-sector vision: In observing how people — people, not government or business — are responding to the pandemic, Scharmer is heartened to see “the further awakening of a movement taking shape across the planet … the activation of a deep and widely held longing for profound societal and civilizational renewal.” As a futurist, he heralds the continued emergence of “the new superpower in the making — the rise of a new pattern of collective action that operates from an awareness of the whole: Awareness-Based Collective action (ABC)” on a planetary scale.


After blaming Big Government, Big Business, and Big Tech for a “massive institutional failure connected to these issues,” he asks: “Should health and healthcare — or core parts of it — be organized by a different type of enterprise, one that is driven by a social mission instead of profit?” In reply, he calls for “rethinking the framework of public health in terms of the planet: putting planetary health and well-being first in our framing of what a good healthcare system is trying to do.” In his view, this means creating “new types of societal innovation infrastructures” — new learning infrastructures, democratic governance infrastructure, and economic infrastructures.

 

His proposal is not clear about the details, and it’s not explicitly a three-sector view. But it is in keeping with his long-standing quest to transform capitalism and society — specifically, to “upgrade our operating systems” by evolving toward “Capitalism 4.0” or “Operating System 4.0.” For our society has become so complex “you cannot solve ‘4.0 challenges’ with response mechanisms that are rooted in operating systems 2.0 and 3.0.”



Personally, I don’t cotton to his terms and categories, but his framework is quite TIMN-ish in nature. As I wrote years ago (2016), “his view maps imperfectly but surprisingly well onto TIMN — particularly in his ideas about progressions, about sectors adding together, about the old persisting with the new, and about heading toward a revival of the commons.”

[Source: http://twotheories.blogspot.com/2016/05/organizational-forms-compared-my.html]

 

Unfortunately, this recent article says nothing about that last point, which might have made it into more of a four- than a three-sector vision about the health crisis.

 

Mintzberg, Etzioni, and Mantere’s three-sector framework: They summarize their triform argument very concisely right up front:

 

“Progress in dealing with the problem of climate change will require that the institutions of government, business, and community work, not in isolation from each other, let alone at cross purposes, but by reinforcing each other’s efforts through consolidation.”

 

They then categorize various climate-strategy initiatives “by sector … because the public, plural, and private sectors seem to favor different processes.” Of these processes, “orchestrated planning” is favored in the public sector, “autonomous venturing” in the private sector, and “grounded engagement” in the “plural sector.”

 

In their definition, “The plural sector includes those formal and informal associations that are neither publicly owned by government nor privately owned by investors. Some are owned by members, such as cooperatives, while others are owned by no one, such as the Sierra Club and the Girl Scouts.” It’s a sector whose associations are often led by “social entrepreneurs.” In other words, it is mostly a civil-society sector.



In addition to showing that different climate-change initiatives may involve different sectors, and different combinations of sectors, Mintzberg and his colleagues urge that these sectors and their actors work together, not alone and especially not at cross  purposes. Indeed, what they urge is entirely in accord with TIMN dynamics:

 

“By contrast, when the three sectors work together, to constructively reinforce each other’s efforts, they can together generate an ascending spiral of consolidation. …

 

“Each activity can thus spawn more activities in the other sectors as well as in its own, so that, together, they can feed this ascending spiral of consolidation. Perhaps more significantly, there can also be constructive networks of consolidation, as the organizations of the three sectors interact with each other in many different ways—alliances, partnerships, joint ventures, and so on. …  

 

“In any event, addressing the problem of climate change will likely require that each of the sectors attends to what it does best, in conjunction with the other two. In general, communities engage, governments legitimize, and businesses invest. We believe that this is how healthy societies progress.”

 

Preferring the term “worldly” to “global,” they note that new narratives and mindsets are needed: “A worldly mindset can prepare actors to appreciate their differences, and thereby work together towards consolidated ascension, from group to globe.”

                                                                                  

[The remainder of this drafted-in-April post feels as though it may be mostly copy-pasted from earlier posts. Oh well, the points still fit here. I’m too tired to be entirely new and nonredundant right now.]

 

Limits of the three-sector framework: As these papers show, today’s policymakers, politicians, and media pundits, not to mention social theorists, mostly behave as though our society, our system, has only two sectors that matter: the public sector and the private sector. Our leaders have long relied on a two-sector framework to propose fixes for America’s mounting health, education, welfare, environmental, and other domestic problems. Some proposals call for more government programs, others for more privatization, a few for better public-private collaboration.

 

By now, this two-sector framework is deeply entrenched and tribalized. It is also just plain wrong-headed. It wasn’t true in the past. It will be even less true in the future. For it neglects two other sectors that belong in the framework: one very old, and still occasionally recognized, as these papers set out; the other so new its prospective emergence is barely discernible today.

 

Our society used to regularly recognize three major sectors — besides the public and private sectors, Americans also recognized that their society’s functioning depended on the vitality of civil society’s home- and community-based sector(s) and their arrays of voluntary groups, social clubs, charitable associations, and activist NGOs. When not acting alone, they would often assist public- and private-sector actors with all sorts of local issues. Indeed, this sector used to have a well-regarded, albeit lesser place in policymaking circles. And for decades, lots of theorists and activists have called for better recognition of civil society and its sector(s), often by new names — e.g., “social sector” (Drucker), “third sector” (e.g., Salamon; Rifkin), “people sector” (Mintzberg).

 

But lately, especially nowadays, this sector’s significance is acknowledged mostly as an afterthought. If its policymaking value could be recognized anew in Washington — if a three-sector framework were truly put back in play, as these papers urge — that would help. But this is no small goal, given the power, profit, and privilege, as well as inertia and tribalism, that are overwhelmingly concentrated in the dominant two-sector framework.

 

It usually takes a crisis to illuminate civil-society’s importance — the papers at hand are correct to emphasize this, and to call for correctives that would revitalize the three-sector framework. But many other efforts have urged likewise in the past, and so far not little if anything has changed. The Covid-19 crisis has presented a new opportunity — but political trends and rhetoric in Washington just continue to harden around the two-sector framework.

 

It will take more than this singular health crisis to prompt deep reform. Other motivating crises, including disruptive climate change, will have to come to the fore as well, and all these crises will have to be rethought, not in isolation but as interrelated and interactive. By then, people may begin to see that what’s needed is not a revitalized three-sector framework, but steps toward constructing a four-sector framework.

 

Need for a four-sector framework: Hence my key point: The three-sector framework these paper’s tout will inevitably prove insufficient — it would be better to start moving toward a four-sector (quadriform) design.

 

For long-term evolutionary reasons (i.e., TIMN), our society has grown so advanced, so complex, that adjusting the two-, three-sector framework will not work well for resolving what have become our most critical, crisis-riven social problems: health, education, welfare, the environment, and related insurance matters. They are now too immense, complicated, burdensome, and interrelated to fit any longer into a two- or three-sector framework.

 

For reasons I will keep explaining and exploring in future posts, including with points I’ve held back, our society’s complexity is moving into a phase where it will have to add a next / new / fourth sector in order to progress further. Developing such a new sector is not an idle add-on suggestion; it is a looming evolutionary imperative, drawn from the arcs and archives of history (i.e., TIMN).  

 

Best I can deduce, a particular set of matters — namely, health, education, welfare, the environment, and related insurance matters — form the bundle that will make sense to aggregate and migrate into a new sector. None are being addressed well by either government or business actors, and they are too big and complex now for civil-society actors to handle. What may explain why they can, and should, be viewed as a bundle is that they all concern collective and individual care, broadly defined to include social, economic, cultural, and environmental care — people care, life care. The cross-cutting purpose is to assure that people can do their best for themselves, for their families, neighborhoods, and communities, and for the common good of society. That’s a purpose that would suit a new “commons sector.”

 

Consolidation of such next/new/fourth sector may take decades to unfold, and may seem too far-out for immediate tasking. But it is not too early to begin considering its creation, identifying the advantages it can bring, and figuring out how to move relevant actors and activities (e.g., hospitals, schools) into it.

 

As has occurred with the long historical evolution of the prior three sectors (including the particular forms of organization, property, and information that each requires), this fourth sector will, in time, become as distinct and independent as the civil-society, government (public), and market (private) sectors are from each other. As noted above, my current sense (though I keep looking for alternative prospects) is that it will be a care-oriented “commons sector,” constructed around yet-to-be-identified information-age network designs that enable massive sharing, consisting of yet-to-be-identified organizational entities designed for collective cooperation (not like independent corporations designed for stand-alone competition), probably entirely non-profit, with properties commonly held in enormous trusts. It will not exist entirely apart from civil society, but rather in conjunction with that realm. It will not be part of the government or market realms, though it will co-exist with them. It will mean that societies have advanced from triform to quadriform systems.

 

I could go on (and will in future posts). But hopefully this is enough for now to indicate that a more radical narrative is needed than these three papers offer. They may appear to be saying something new. But from a TIMN perspective, they aren’t; they’re just reiterating and shuffling around old three-sector ideas.

 

What’s increasingly needed are quadriform ideas and arguments that can appeal to policymakers, so they at least start to wonder about the growing necessity and potential benefits of moving toward a four-sector framework.

 

2 comments:

Jim Rough said...

It is one thing to declare the need for the 4th sector. It's another thing to describe what it might look like. But even better is to facilitate this 4th sector into being globally (https://www.wisedemocracy.org/1-solving-global-issues.html). ... And nationally: (https://www.wisedemocracy.org/2-solving-national-issues.html) ... When talking over societal problems with people you will often hear them say "We need to ..." And then say some action that "We" need to do in the realm of government, economics, or civil society. These actions, solution ideas, are good. And need to be considered. But there is no "We" to consider these ideas nor to implement them. ... In our society there is a missing "We the People" conversation, where "We" face the problems and figure out together what we will do about them. And where we reach unity about what to do. ... I believe that's the 4th sector. ... And I believe the "Wisdom Council Process" can facilitate this essential "We the People" conversation into being in the short term. Both nationally and globally.

David Ronfeldt said...

Jim Rough! Oof, you offered that comment two years ago!? My apology for inexplicably not attending and replying to it long ago. I was startled to notice it a few days ago, when I revisited my long-neglected blog here while wondering what to do next.

Your ideas for Wisdom Councils and Wisdom Council Processes strike me as worthwhile. And I would wish they could be applied to furthering my TIMN-based forecast that a fourth sector will emerge.

But I have my doubts: My forecasts about the future emergence of a fourth sector and quadriform societies have so far not gained notice and traction among policy-oriented theorists and analysts. I shall continue to persist regardless. Yet, for now, I do not see that the time is ripe for a Wisdom Council Process for this matter. It remains too little-known and too far-out for such an approach, or so I sense at this time.

I see from visiting your website that you identify three forms of governance, portraying them as a Triangle-Box-Circle set of shapes, and that you favor the Circle to depict your approach. Makes sense for your purposes.

Meanwhile, I have long wondered how best to depict the four TIMN forms, say on a briefing slide. Say, use a circle for the Tribes form (as in family circle, circle of friends, social circles), a triangle or pyramid for the hierarchical Institutions form (doing so is pretty standard), a rectangle of some kind for the Markets form (as in market square, public square), and I’m not sure what for the Networks form. But in this view each form should be depicted as having more geometric sides than the prior/earlier forms. In any case, the more a society advances across the ages, the more it will need to add new forms/shapes and learn to combine them.

Again, thanks for stopping by and leaving an apropos comment. I am so slowed-down at this point that I’ve neglected my blog for nearly two years. I hope to get going anew before long, for there is still lots to be done with and said about TIMN, much of it already idling on my laptop. Onward.