economics

The Serviceberry book coverIn Robin Wall Kimmerer’s book, The Serviceberry, she uses beautifully simple language to make some profound points and state some deep truths and observations, about: modern-day greed, hoarding, exploitation, and purely transactional interactions vs. reciprocity, giving, sharing, connection, “enoughness,” sufficiency, ecological economics, and gift economies.

One thing that I have found in my own life is that giving and sharing makes me feel really good (and I mean good as in happy and not just as in virtuous). I’ve also found that giving is somewhat addictive, in a good way. The more you do it, the more you want to do it. And giving anonymously often feels the best, even when you don’t know who the recipients of your gifts will be or how the gifts will affect their lives. It just feels satisfying and right.

Throughout the book, there is some repetition of the main themes (where Kimmerer uses different words to convey similar ideas), which I think can be helpful in allowing some of the concepts to really sink in. It’s a fairly short book; but if you don’t read the whole thing, I’ve pulled together a few excerpts that I think are among its many highlights, presenting some of Kimmerer’s best distillations of her primary points.

(Note: The page numbers listed below are from the hardcover version of the book. They might differ in the paperback version.)

“Whatever your currency of reciprocity—be it money, time, energy, political action, art, science, education, planting, community action, restoration, acts of care, large and small—all are needed in these urgent times.”  (p. 109)
[Note: Some specific examples of reciprocity and gift economies are listed at the end of this post.]

“Recognizing ‘enoughness’ [or ‘sufficiency’] is a radical act in an economy that is always urging us to consume more. Data tell the story that there are ‘enough’ food calories on the planet for all 6 billion of us to be nourished. And yet people are starving… “ (p. 12)

“Climate catastrophe and biodiversity loss are the consequences of unrestrained taking by humans.” (p.12)

“Why…have we permitted the dominance of economic systems that commoditize everything? That create scarcity instead of abundance, that promote accumulation rather than sharing? We’ve surrendered our values to an economic system that actively harms what we love.” (p. 25)

“In a gift economy, wealth is understood as having enough to share, and the practice for dealing with abundance is to give it away. In fact, status is determined not by how much one accumulates, but by how much one gives away.” (p. 32)

“Well-known examples of gift economies include the potlatches of Pacific Northwest peoples, in which gifts circulate in the group, solidifying bonds…. This ritualized redistribution of wealth was banned by colonial governments, under the influence of missionaries in the 1800s. Potlatches were seen as contrary to ‘the civilized values of accumulation’ and undermined the notions of individual property and advancement essential assimilation to the colonial agenda.” (p.35-36)

“Rebecca Solnit, in her stunning book A Paradise Built in Hell, describes how gift economies seem to arise spontaneously in times of disaster. When human survival is threatened, compassionate acts overrule market economies.” (p. 43)

“Let’s remember that the ‘System’ is led by individuals, by a relatively small number of people, who have names, with more money than God and certainly less compassion. They sit in boardrooms deciding to exploit fossil fuels for short-term gain while the world burns. They know the science, they know the consequences, but they proceed with ecocidal business as usual and do it anyway. …They’re all thieves, stealing our future…” (p. 71)

“I lament my own immersion in an economy that grinds what is beautiful and unique into dollars, converts gifts to commodities in a currency that enables us to purchase things we don’t really need while destroying what we do. The Serviceberries show us another model…one where wealth and security come from the quality of our relationships, not from the illusion of self-sufficiency.” (p. 72)

“Thriving is possible only if you have nurtured strong bonds with your community.” (p. 73)

“In ecological economics, the focus is on creating an economy that provides for a just and sustainable future in which both human life and nonhuman life can flourish.” (p. 74)

“…Natural selection favors those who can avoid competition. Oftentimes this avoidance is achieved by shifting one’s needs away from whatever is in short supply, as though evolution were suggesting, ‘If there’s not enough of what you want, then want something else.’ This specialization to avoid scarcity has led to a dazzling array of biodiversity, each species avoiding competition by being different. Diversity in ways of being is an antidote.” (p. 76-77)

“…scientific evidence is mounting that mutualism and cooperation…play a major role in evolution and enhance ecological well-being, especially in changing environments.” (p. 77)

“It is manufactured scarcity that I cannot accept. In order for capitalist market economics to function, there must be scarcity, and the system is designed to create scarcity where it does not actually exist.” (p. 79)

“It was previously unthinkable that one would pay for a drink of water; but as careless economic expansion pollutes fresh water, we now incentivize privatization of springs and aquifers. Sweet water, a free gift of the Earth, is pirated by faceless corporations who encase it in plastic containers to sell. And now many can’t afford what was previously free.” (p. 80)

“The Indigenous philosophy of the gift economy…has no tolerance for creating artificial scarcity through hoarding. In fact, the ‘monster’ in Potawatomi culture is Windigo, who suffers from the illness of taking too much and sharing too little. It is a cannibal, whose hunger is never sated, eating through the world.” (p. 81)

“An economy based on the impossibility of ever expanding growth leads us into nightmare scenarios. …It is an engine of extinction.” (p. 85)

“…the grinding system…leaves most of us bereft of what we really want: a sense of belonging and relationship and purpose and beauty, which can never be commoditized.” (p. 90)

“An investment in community always comes back to you in some way.” (p. 88)

“…the infinitely renewable resource of kindness…multiplies every time it is shared rather than depreciating with use.” (p. 91)

 “This transition from exploitation to reciprocity, from the individual good to the common good has been seen as a parallel to the transition that colonizing human societies must undergo, from hoarding to circulation, from independent to interdependent…if we are to thrive into the future.” (p. 100)

“The…economy of extractive capitalism, of abusing the gifts of Mother Earth, is a crime against Nature. I believe that theft is punishable by law, and we need to elect leaders who believe in the rule of law.” (p. 102)

“I’ve begun to think that berry-picking is the medicine we need to create a legion of land protectors.” (p. 104)

Kimmerer provides some specific examples of gift economies in action:

  • “…I routinely ask students if and how they participate in gifting networks. I learn about active circles of freecycling, repair cafes, donated mugs in the coffee shop replacing disposables, clothing swaps, the Buy Nothing movement, and campus free stores, where dorm room necessities are passed among generations of students…” (p. 45)
  • “They quickly cite access to open-source software and the existence of Wikipedia…where knowledge is freely shared on digital platforms in an information commons.” (p. 46)
  • “…I take a field trip to go foraging for videos on gift economies and find them everywhere. I learn about mutual-aid societies, alternative local currencies, money-free work exchanges, cooperative farms, peer-to-peer lending…” (p. 47)

Elsewhere in the book, she also mentions shared garden produce, front-yard giveaway piles, free food pantries, Little Free Libraries, public libraries, lending libraries, local Master Gardener programs and offerings, and as shown in an excerpt above, indigenous peoples’ potlatches.

I hope this inspires you to think about other examples of gift economies and reciprocity that you see around you or that you could create around you. We should all encourage and support these types of efforts in our own neighborhoods and communities.

 

Related posts:

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January 29, 2026
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“Hoard food and it rots. Hoard money and you rot. Hoard power and the nation rots.
— Chuck Palahniuk

“Wealth among traditional people is measured by having enough to give away.”
— Robin Wall Kimmerer

“If a man has an apartment stacked to the ceiling with newspapers, we call him crazy. If a woman has a trailer house full of cats, we call her nuts. But when people pathologically hoard so much cash that they impoverish the entire nation, we put them on the cover of Fortune magazine and pretend that they are role models.”
— Lester B. Pearson

 “Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s need, but not every man’s greed.”
— Mahatma Gandhi

“He could end world hunger. Instead, he chooses to starve children.”
— A hand-made sign at a recent protest


Shocking Facts and Stats

  • In 2024, total billionaire wealth increased by $2 trillion (source), and some billionaires are on track to become trillionaires in coming years.  Over the last decade+, there has been a growing concentration of wealth at the very top, particularly among the top 1% (source).
  • Note: A billion is 1,000 times more than a million (i.e., it takes 1,000 millions to make a billion). And a trillion is 1,000 billions
  • In 2023, the average CEO-to-worker pay ratio for S&P 500 companies was 268-to-1, meaning CEOs earned 268 times more than the average worker, a significant increase from the 1960s when the ratio was around 21-to-1. It would take more than five career lifetimes for workers to earn what CEOs receive in just one year. (source)
  • Billionaires often make the equivalent of many millions of dollars per hour in earnings (including stock investments).
  • While millionaires and billionaires’ wealth has skyrocketed in recent decades, and the cost of living (including housing cost) has gone up, the U.S. federal minimum wage has stayed at $7.25 per hour since 2009; that is now a poverty wage. A full-time minimum wage worker makes only about $15,000 per year, which was the federal poverty line in 2024. If that person has even one other person/child to support, they are living well below the poverty line and cannot meet their basic needs on that wage. (Some states have passed higher minimum wages. In California, the minimum wage is currently $16.50/hour, as of 2025. That is still not an adequate, living wage in California. Per MIT’s Living Wage Calculator, a single California adult with no one else in their household would need an average $18.66 per hour to meet their basic needs.)
  • In 2022, the living wage (the wage needed to meet basic budgetary needs, such as housing, food, childcare, and transportation, plus taxes) for one worker in a family of two full-time working adults and two children ranged between $18.75 and $40.16 per hour, for the lowest and highest cost U.S. counties, respectively. (source)
  • Billionaires contribute a million times more carbon (a greenhouse gas that causes global heating AKA climate change) to the atmosphere than the average person. 125 of the world’s richest billionaires invest so much money in polluting industries that they are responsible for emitting an average of 3 million tons of carbon a year. (source)
  • The use of private jets by ultra-wealthy people (even for very short trips) has increased substantially. And studies show that private jets emit 5-14 times more carbon dioxide per passenger than commercial airplanes. Some private aircraft models emit more carbon per hour than an average person produces in a year. (source)
  • While most ultra-wealthy people feel that their wealth is entirely or mostly “self-made,” in reality about 60 percent of billionaire wealth comes from one of three sources: inheritance, cronyism and corruption, or monopoly power (source). [I would guess that much of the rest of their wealth comes from legal but immoral exploitation of workers— via low, non-living wages and unsafe working conditions—and/or rampant extraction of natural resources, illegal tax evasion and/or insider trading, plus the investments and compounding interest that wealth affords, of course (AKA “it takes money to make money”). And for a smaller set, their wealth could come primarily from their celebrity/fame, good looks, talent, or smarts. But nobody “earns” billions or millions of dollars through only their “hard work” or their intellect.]
  • In 1975, 90% of Americans shared two-thirds of all income. As of 2023, the 90% got just 45% of all income, while the richest 10% hoard the rest. The wealthiest have extracted $79 trillion from working people since 1975. In 2023 alone, workers in the bottom 90% lost $3.9 trillion to the top 10%—that amount would have gone into the paychecks of working people if income disparity was at the more reasonable level it was at after WWII. (source)
  • Since the 1980s, due to regressive economic/financial/taxation/regulatory policies combined with sheer greed on the part of corporations and individuals, there has been a “reverse Robin Hood” upward redistribution of wealth: trillions of dollars taken from the least wealthy (the many) by the most wealthy (the few). This has turned much of the “middle class” into the “working poor” and caused much higher levels of homelessness, while the rich have become richer.
  • Wealth disparity (AKA the wealth gap, economic or income inequality, or the unequal distribution of wealth) in the U.S. is now even worse than it was in 1928, right before the 1929 stock market crash and then bank runs, which triggered the Great Depression. (source)  [Current conditions and federal policies in 2025 are setting us up for another economic crash. We should be preparing for that.]
  • You can find more statistics, graphics, and reports on income and wealth inequality at Inequality.org.

We will also be publishing a companion post in the next few months: Generosity vs Greed: How the Super-Wealthy Could Be Super-Heroes.

 

Organizations 

Economic Policy / Political Groups:

Poverty Alleviation/Aid/Assistance:

Housing and Homelessness:

Labor Rights:

Affordable/Universal Healthcare:

Fair Finance and Consumer Protection:

Responsible Wealth / Shared Prosperity / Genuine Philanthropy:

  • The Giving Pledge
  • Lever for Change
  • Patriotic Millionaires
  • Millionaires for Humanity  [NEW]
  • Resource Generation
  • Bolder Giving
  • Yield Giving
  • Also read about: Trust-based philanthropy, No-Strings philanthropy, Open Call philanthropy, Community (AKA “community-led” or “community-based”) philanthropy, and Direct philanthropy or direct cash/direct giving approaches (a few direct giving orgs are listed in the Poverty Alleviation section, above).
  • We will be publishing a companion post within the next year: Generosity vs Greed: How the Super-Wealthy Could Be Super-Heroes. Also, we offer strategic advising services to individuals, foundations, or philanthropic organizations who would like guidance in identifying important groups and programs to fund.

New Economics & Ecological Economics:

Universal Basic Income (UBI):

 

Related Media/Articles/Resources

Books  

Some people to follow online: Robert Reich, Rev. Dr. William Barber, Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis, Chuck Collins, Elizabeth Warren, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC), Bernie Sanders; Kate RaworthGabriel ZucmanNick Hanauer, Jason Hickel, Wendell Potter, Rutger Bregman, Joseph Stiglitz, Claudia Sahm, Kathryn Ann Edwards, Ai-jen Poo, Mike Elk, Liz Shuler, Katie Porter, Matthias Schmelzer, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Abigail Disney, Melinda French Gates, and Robin Wall Kimmerer.

Related Posts:

Excerpts of wisdom from The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World  [Added January 2026]

Green Business, Corporate Social Responsibility, and Ethical Finance Resources

Fossil-Fuel Divestment and Future-Friendly Investments

NOTE: We’ll be publishing a companion post within the next year: Generosity vs Greed: How the Super-Wealthy Could Be Super-Heroes. And we offer strategic advising services to individuals, foundations, or philanthropic organizations who would like guidance in identifying important groups and programs to fund.

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March 21, 2025
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This post provides a list of links to green-business-related organizations, associations, websites, books, and other resources, which are useful not only to people who own, manage, or work for companies, but to all of us—as consumers and citizens who are affected by business decisions and corporate practices every day. The resources are organized into the following categories:

  • Green Business (general)
  • Corporate Social Responsibility
  • Environmental & Social Entrepreneurship, Innovation, Financing, and Investing
  • Clean, Green Jobs
  • Local Economies / Community Investment and Resilience
  • Confronting the Corporate Corruption of Government
  • Ecological Economics
  • Online Media
  • Books

[Note: New links were added to this post in April 2012.]

Green Business (general)

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February 20, 2012
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