Common Good Collective

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This Reader is an expression of Common Good Collective, a vision for an alternative way, rooted in the act of eliminating economic isolation, the significance of place, and the structure of belonging. Whether you come at this from a place of economics, social good, or faith, we hope these reflections help orient your day in fresh, provocative, courageous ways. And most importantly, we hope these lead you into the sharing of gifts in particular communities—into co-creating a common good.

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Poetry for Building Community by R.S. Thomas & Mary Oliver

“Lore” by R. S. Thomas

Job Davies, eighty-five
Winters old, and still alive
After the slow poison
And treachery of the seasons.

Miserable? Kick my arse!
It needs more than the rain’s hearse,
Wind-drawn to pull me off
The great perch of my laugh.

What’s living but courage?
Paunch full of hot porridge
Nerves strengthened with tea,
Peat-black, dawn found me

Mowing where the grass grew,
Bearded with golden dew.
Rhythm of the long scythe
Kept this tall frame lithe.

What to do? Stay green.
Never mind the machine,
Whose fuel is human souls.
Live large, man, and dream small.

Thomas, a Welsh priest, and poet wrote this eulogy in honor of a neighbor. This meditation on Jacob Davies’ life is full of natural imagery. Davies was clearly a man of his place, as the images of the poem confirm: wind, winter, peat, grass, and so on.

Thomas was fond of upending conventional wisdom, and in the last line, he does so perfectly. Against a world that demands scale and limitless growth – whose accepted dogma is to cultivate limitless appetite – Thomas offers an alternative for living into the world’s abundance. Small, fine-grained dreams will transform us, so that we can live large – lustily, joyously, heartily – on our blocks and with our neighbors.

For reflection: Consider how you might dream smaller in your work and in your neighborhood. What are the little details that you have not yet paid attention to? Who are the overlooked people that could turn out to be the missing link to the thriving of the place?

“The Summer Day” by Mary Oliver
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Making Space for Restorative Justice

Over the past few years, statistics on how the U.S. justice system is failing its citizens have come fast and hard. With more than 2 million people detained in jails and prisons, we have the highest rate of incarceration in the world—a rate that’s increased 500% in the past five decades Possibly as many as 482,000 people currently held in local jails are there simply because they’re too poor to pay bail; they haven’t been convicted of a crime.

African Americans are three times more likely to be killed by police than White people, and Black men have a 1-in-3 chance of being imprisoned at some point in their lifetimes. And two-thirds of those who’ve been incarcerated are rearrested within three years of their release.

Those numbers paint a picture of a justice system that’s anything but just—or effective. Rather than focusing on rehabilitation, our police, courts, and detention systems are aimed at retribution, particularly toward people of color; they harshly punish those who break the law instead of addressing the real reasons crimes occur, experts say.  Read more

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Children And Elders Need To Know One Another

Photo by Robyn Budlender

Communities are built on connections across differences. Among the most important connections are between elders and children. For stories, for wisdom, for laughter, and for gentleness, children and elders need to know one another. Books help build those connections.

Here are some favorite children’s books our team likes, with selective annotation. And, a reminder: children’s books are not just for children.

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This Is How Scandinavia Got Great by David Brooks

Almost everybody admires the Nordic model. Countries like Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland have high economic productivity, high social equality, high social trust and high levels of personal happiness.

Progressives say it’s because they have generous welfare states. Some libertarians point out that these countries score high on nearly every measure of free market openness. Immigration restrictionists note that until recently they were ethnically homogeneous societies.

But Nordic nations were ethnically homogeneous in 1800, when they were dirt poor. Their economic growth took off just after 1870, way before their welfare states were established. What really launched the Nordic nations was generations of phenomenal educational policy.

The 19th-century Nordic elites did something we haven’t been able to do in this country recently. They realized that if their countries were to prosper they had to create truly successful “folk schools” for the least educated among them. They realized that they were going to have to make lifelong learning a part of the natural fabric of society.

They look at education differently than we do. The German word they used to describe their approach, bildung, doesn’t even have an English equivalent. It means the complete moral, emotional, intellectual and civic transformation of the person. It was based on the idea that if people were going to be able to handle and contribute to an emerging industrial society, they would need more complex inner lives.

Today, Americans often think of schooling as the transmission of specialized skill sets — can the student read, do math, recite the facts of biology. Bildung is devised to change the way students see the world. It is devised to help them understand complex systems and see the relations between things — between self and society, between a community of relationships in a family and a town.

As Lene Rachel Andersen and Tomas Bjorkman put it in their book “The Nordic Secret,” “Bildung is the way that the individual matures and takes upon him or herself ever bigger personal responsibility towards family, friends, fellow citizens, society, humanity, our globe, and the global heritage of our species, while enjoying ever bigger personal, moral and existential freedoms.”

The Nordic educators worked hard to cultivate each student’s sense of connection to the nation. Before the 19th century, most Europeans identified themselves in local and not national terms. But the Nordic curriculum instilled in students a pride in, say, their Danish history, folklore and heritage.

“That which a person did not burn for in his young days, he will not easily work for as a man,” Christopher Arndt Bruun wrote. The idea was to create in the mind of the student a sense of wider circles of belonging — from family to town to nation — and an eagerness to assume shared responsibility for the whole.

The Nordic educators also worked hard to develop the student’s internal awareness. That is to say, they helped students see the forces always roiling inside the self — the emotions, cravings, wounds and desires. If you could see those forces and their interplay, as if from the outside, you could be their master and not their slave.

Their intuition was that as people grow, they have the ability to go through developmental phases, to see themselves and the world through ever more complex lenses. A young child may blindly obey authority — Mom, Dad, teacher. Then she internalizes and conforms to the norms of the group. Then she learns to create her own norms based on her own values. Then she learns to see herself as a node in a network of selves and thus learns mutuality and holistic thinking.

The purpose of bildung is to help people move through the uncomfortable transitions between each way of seeing.

That educational push seems to have had a lasting influence on the culture. Whether in Stockholm or Minneapolis, Scandinavians have a tendency to joke about the way their sense of responsibility is always nagging at them. They have the lowest rates of corruption in the world. They have a distinctive sense of the relationship between personal freedom and communal responsibility.

High social trust doesn’t just happen. It results when people are spontaneously responsible for one another in the daily interactions of life, when the institutions of society function well.

In the U.S., social trust has been on the decline for decades. If the children of privilege get to go to the best schools, there’s not going to be much social mutuality. If those schools do not instill a love of nation, there’s not going to be much shared responsibility.

If you have a thin educational system that does not help students see the webs of significance between people, does not even help students see how they see, you’re going to wind up with a society in which people can’t see through each other’s lenses.

When you look at the Nordic bildung model, you realize our problem is not only that we don’t train people with the right job skills. It’s that we don’t have the right lifelong development model to instill the mode of consciousness people need to thrive in a complex pluralistic society.

Published originally on the New York Times.

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Five-star reviews, one-star profits: The devaluation of businesses in Black communities

Photo by Chris Knight on Unsplash

The Metropolitan Policy Program at Brookings and Gallup released a new report, Five-star reviews, one-star profits: The devaluation of businesses in Black communities, showing that businesses in Black-majority neighborhoods experience annual losses in business revenue between $1.3 billion and $3.9 billion.

Written by Brookings fellow Andre Perry, Gallup principal economist Jonathan Rothwell, and Brookings research analyst David Harshbarger, the report studies the financial performance and customer ratings of private enterprises in 86 metropolitan areas across the country with large Black populations, and is part of a larger project to understand how assets are valued (and undervalued) in America’s Black neighborhoods.

Based on first-ever findings, the authors emphasize in the new report that the drag of racism on an economy not only cuts into individual owners’ profits, it robs local consumers and municipalities of the amenities and services neighborhoods gain from increased revenues. Further, a biased market cuts into the heart of the American Dream by negating the hard work, agency, and self-determination of business owners.

The report’s methodology matches Yelp data at the establishment level to financial performance data from the National Establishment Time-Series (NETS) Database.

“It’s clear that business quality is not what is holding back profit growth,” said Andre Perry, Brookings fellow and lead author of the report. “Distorted views and old stereotypes are drags on local economies that hurt everyone, especially those living and operating businesses in Black-majority neighborhoods.”

Key findings include:

  • Black people represent 12.7% of the U.S. population but only 4.3% of the nation’s 22.2 million business owners. Black-owned businesses start with approximately one-third less capital than their white peers and have difficulties raising private investments from mainstream investment systems. Only 1% of Black business owners obtain loans in their founding year, compared to 7% of white business owners.
  • Businesses with higher consumer ratings on Yelp or a larger number of reviews experience faster revenue growth. The report estimates that a one-star increase in Yelp reviews predicts an increase in revenue growth of 1 to 2 percentage points over a three-year period. Moreover, the report finds that for every 10 reviews a business receives, it experiences an additional 2 percentage points of revenue growth on average, regardless of the quality of the reviews. Businesses with four to five stars on Yelp experienced an average growth rate of 8.8% from 2016 to 2019. This compares to growth of just 6.2% for businesses with fewer than four stars.
  • Businesses in Black-majority neighborhoods receive lower Yelp ratings and fewer reviews than other businesses. Businesses located in a Black-majority ZIP code garner consistently lower ratings from consumers (on the order of 0.2 fewer stars). Additionally, the number of reviews per business sharply falls as the ZIP code’s Black population increases, with businesses in Black-majority neighborhoods receiving 50 to 100 fewer reviews than businesses in mostly white neighborhoods.
  • Highly rated businesses located in Black-majority neighborhoods earn less revenue than businesses with similar quality ratings outside of Black-majority neighborhoods. In non-Black- majority neighborhoods, businesses with high Yelp ratings grew, on average, between 8.5% and 9% between 2016 and 2019, and poorly rated businesses grew significantly less (between 5% and 7.5%). Yet, in Black-majority neighborhoods, 7% growth was the norm for both highly rated and poorly rated businesses.
  • Highly rated businesses in Black-majority neighborhoods experience annual losses in business revenue as high as $3.9 billion. When all factors are included, the report’s full model suggests a 0.2% annual revenue gap between businesses in non-Black-majority neighborhoods and Black-majority neighborhoods, amounting to $1.3 billion in unrealized revenue each year. This gap jumps to $3.9 billion when comparing highly rated businesses in Black-majority neighborhoods with highly rated businesses in other neighborhoods.

“Great businesses should be rewarded with more customers and higher revenue growth, but years of racial discrimination and neighborhood disinvestment has distorted that relationship in Black neighborhoods,” said Jonathan Rothwell, Gallup principal economist and co-author of the report. “State and local governments are quick to offer huge subsidies to multinational corporations, but citizens should ask if they are paving roads and maintaining streetlights near high-performing businesses in Black neighborhoods.”

The report is available here: https://brook.gs/2OP1XQ1.

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