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Fair-Share
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Legislatures and Committees
News Media Subscribers Civic Clubs and Congregations Market Research Surveys Investment Groups Grant Committees Employee Funds |
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There is a great opportunity for fair-share spending in the Omnibus Transportation Bill of the U.S. Congress. Each year it allocates funds to hundreds of projects. Critics often find, hidden in the huge bill, projects designed to benefit only 1 business in 1 rep's district -- hardly a federal matter. Fair-share spending would require each item to win substantial funding from a substantial number of reps; then it would let constituents see and judge their rep's choices. Districts with powerful reps get much more money than other districts. Fair-share spending would be evenhanded to all. Voting could control a cooperative journal, video or Internet channel, called perhaps The Subscriber-Democrat. A board of directors, elected by an ensemble rule, hires and directs the management. The subscriber-voters directly allocate most of the funds for features and columnists, supplements and cartoons. This is an incentive to join because part of the subscription fee is allocated by the subscriber and only subscribers may vote. Thus it satisfies our innate desire for "strong reciprocity". (The Boston Review had a special issue on strong reciprocity, December/January 1998.) Under FS, each subscriber's "voting weight" is a fixed portion of the subscription fee. For one week the journal shows an expanded comics section with new cartoons. On Friday that section includes a ballot. Ballots received by the following Friday count in the results, published the next week. Such surveys maintain readers' interest and strengthen their sense of involvement. Neighborhood associations could use fair-share spending to speed and improve decisions for local improvements. Civic clubs might use FS to improve their selection of service projects. Buyers' clubs and environmental groups might use FS in much the same way. If a club's limiting resource is volunteer labor, budgets for labor can replace money on the ballots. Highly-responsive democratic clubs for neighborhoods, consumers and other groups may grow more popular if members know it is impossible for one interest group to dominate and control all funding. Such clubs are a form of economic organization somewhere between individual consumers and the government in terms of size, choices, and negotiating power relative to corporations. There will always be public problems and opportunities that need area-wide, government regulation. But if clubs flourish, the balance of economic power would tilt a bit less toward the competitive cultures of big corporations, politics, or individualism, and more toward cooperative, voluntary associations. Fair-share tallies can be a market research tool. For example, interview subjects might be asked to rate several computers or cars with various option packages. FS would coalesce the votes into a few models of computers or cars which the company could efficiently manufacture. Respondents can be weighted by their probability of buying in the next product cycle. Investment fund managers might use Condorcet and fair-share rules to consolidate experts' opinions on stocks. The voting weight of each expert could depend on his or her past performance. Venture capital groups might give each member a number of ballots equal to his or her investment shares. The tally finds which proposals score high on enough ballots to win funding and how much funding. Grant givers in foundations and government could use fair-share spending to spread grants well in the community of interest. This works best when the grant committee accurately reflects that community. The Evolution of FS in One CommunityA community-owned furniture maker in the U.S. was the inspiration for developing fair- share spending. For over 25 years the 80 employee- owners have voted to fund special projects -- mostly shared amenities. Over time, various voting methods have been tried, as designers made them more accurate and fair.Their problem is complicated because: 1) They want minority groups, say ten people, to own the power to fund some of their wants/needs. 2) But they don't want any individual to use this public fund for private desires. 3) Yet some items, for example, a $15 music disk, cost much less than one person's $1,000 share of the overall fund.
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