Work Without Wages: Roles, Assignments, and Coordination in Micro-Utopias
🧱 1. No wages, bosses, or traditional jobs
Inside the core system:
- there are no wages (because essentials aren’t bought/sold internally)
- no boss–employee hierarchy
- no fixed “job positions” tied to income
So instead of:
“I work to earn money to survive”
the logic becomes:
“I contribute to the system that directly meets everyone’s needs (including mine)”
🔄 2. What replaces jobs: assignments and roles
Rather than permanent jobs, people take on:
- assignments (specific tasks or responsibilities)
- roles (broader areas of contribution)
Examples:
- food production
- cooking
- maintenance
- education
- healthcare support
These are:
- flexible
- adjustable over time
- based on need and capability
🔁 3. Do people rotate roles?
Yes—but not in a rigid, forced way.
Rotation exists to:
- prevent burnout
- avoid power concentration
- distribute knowledge
- increase system resilience
However, it’s balanced with:
- individual preference
- skill and competence
- continuity where needed
So it’s:
guided rotation, not constant reshuffling
🧠 4. How contribution works without pay
Contribution is coordinated through:
- visibility of needs (what must be done)
- social responsibility
- participation in decision-making
- cultural norms of reciprocity
People are not “paid,” but they:
- directly benefit from the system
- have guaranteed access to essentials
🏢 5. What happens to “businesses”?
Inside the core layer, traditional businesses don’t really exist.
Instead, you have:
- functional groups (e.g. food, housing, healthcare)
- organized around meeting needs, not generating profit
So:
- no ownership in the conventional sense
- no profit extraction
- no competition between internal units
🎨 6. Optional market layer (important nuance)
The framework can allow a secondary, optional layer where:
- creative or specialized activities operate more like markets
- people can produce and exchange non-essential goods
Examples:
- art
- software
- crafts
- niche services
This layer:
- is not required for survival
- does not control essential resources
👥 7. How are activities governed?
Instead of “who rules the business,” governance works like this:
Within each domain:
- people involved in that area coordinate decisions
- discussions are open and visible
- others can give input
At the community level:
- major decisions are collective
- handled via consensus or voting when needed
So control is:
distributed, not centralized
⚖️ 8. No bosses—but still coordination
The absence of bosses doesn’t mean chaos.
Coordination still exists through:
- experienced individuals taking guiding roles
- trust and reputation
- agreed processes
- community oversight
But these roles are:
- not permanent power positions
- not tied to income or authority over others
⚠️ 9. Real-world constraints
This system depends on:
- active participation
- shared norms
- sufficient skill distribution
Challenges can include:
- uneven contribution
- conflict over responsibilities
- need for strong coordination in complex tasks
🧠 Bottom line
In Solon Papageorgiou’s micro-utopias:
- jobs → assignments and roles
- wages → direct access to shared resources
- businesses → cooperative functional groups
- bosses → distributed coordination
With:
- role rotation (balanced with skill and preference)
- collective governance instead of hierarchical control
So the shift is:
from working for a system
to
participating in a system that directly sustains everyone