Upstream - Documentary #8: Worker Cooperatives Pt. 2 – Islands within a Sea of Capitalism (Documentary)
Episode Date: June 12, 2018In the second episode of the series on worker cooperatives, we build on the conversation that we began in Episode one, which explored how cooperatives can serve as a force to widen the spheres of demo...cracy in our society. This second episode shifts the focus outward, exploring how cooperatives confront global capitalism. "Islands within a Sea of Capitalism" takes a deep dive into the Mondragon Cooperative Corporation—the largest network of federated cooperatives in the world. We take listeners on a journey through the Basque region of northern Spain where Mondragon is located, and explore Mondragon's successes and challenges through candid conversations with several worker-members at Mondragon headquarters and at various cooperatives within the federation. After presenting an in-depth exploration of the recent and mixed history of Mondragon from multiple perspectives—including a Marxist analysis—we travel across the Atlantic to Jackson, Mississippi, where an ambitious initiative is just getting underway. Cooperation Jackson is part of the same trans-local organizing movement that inspired Cooperation Richmond, which was featured in Episode one. Cooperation Jackson aims to be the Mondragon of North America. Featuring: Kali Akuno — Co-founder and co-director of Cooperation Jackson Gorka Espiau —Senior Fellow at the Agirre Lehendakaria Center at the University of the Basque Country Sam Gindin — Writer, director of research at the Canadian Auto Workers (retired) Professor of Political Science at York University (retired) Ander Exteberria — Cooperative dissemination at Mondragon Corporation Izaksun Ezpeleta — Worker/member at Fagor Electronics Andoni — Worker/member at Fagor Ederland. Music by: Chris Zabriskie, Will Stratton, Mississippi Sheiks Many thanks to Phil Wrigglesworth for the cover art, as well as to Ellie Llewelyn, Kenneth Rosales, and Neda Raymond for assistance with translation and voice over. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts.
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This episode of Upstream was made possible with support by the Guerrilla Foundation.
You are listening to Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream. A radio documentary series that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew about economics.
I'm Della Duncan.
And I'm Robert Raymond.
Join us as we journey upstream.
To the heart of our economic system and discover cutting-edge stories
of game-changing solutions
based on connection,
resilience,
and prosperity for all.
Imagine a vast expanding sea, a sea of global capitalism.
Beneath the surface is a frightening place, a ruthless world filled with unyielding competition and greed.
The logic of this ocean is kill or be killed, every creature for itself.
The prophets of this underworld are immense leviathans engaged in an endless hunt.
They roam the depths, ceaselessly consuming.
But above the surface, islands dot the horizon.
Green, lush sanctuaries.
Islands of alternatives.
Movements, organizations, and communities that are rethinking ownership,
dismantling hierarchies, prioritizing cooperation and generosity,
and putting people and planet before profit.
The islands are there, if you know where to look for them. Deep in the heart of the Basque region of northern Spain, in a valley surrounded by
majestic mountains, sits the town of Mondragón.
There's a mythical quality that pervades this place.
Scars in the surrounding hills make palpable the legends
of medieval iron workers who fought against invading forces, a fight characterized in more
contemporary times by the Basque separatist movement, heirs to the autonomous values that
carried their swordsmith ancestors to victory more than a thousand years ago. Mondragón looks similar to any other small
European town. Narrow streets, grand churches, bustling squares, except for one thing. The walls
of this town are covered with giant murals exalting workers, celebrating Basque solidarity,
and denouncing the late fascist military dictator Franco.
Spain is one of the most unequal countries in Europe, but that's not the case in Mondragon.
The Basque country has the lowest unemployment rate, the lowest inequality rate,
and one of the highest incomes per capita in all of Spain.
The region is also known for its worker cooperatives, of which there
are about 2,000. The largest and most well-known co-op in the region is the Mondragon Cooperative
Corporation, a federated ecosystem of co-ops that is one of the largest economic actors in Spain
and one of the most well-known examples of large-scale worker cooperatives around the world.
We traveled to Mondragon to learn what we could about worker cooperatives,
the Mondragon Corporation, and the role of the worker co-op in economic system change. My name is Izaskun Espeleta.
I'm 51 years old and we are in the town of Mondragon.
We wanted to speak with a worker in a Mondragon cooperative. Since the corporation has such a
strong presence in town, this was fairly easy to do. Walking into any tapas restaurant, cafe,
or pincho's bar, it was likely that at least a couple of the folks hanging around would be Mondragon workers. I work in Fagor Electronics. We make TV circuit boards. It's a very beautiful
job and the majority of us are women. We asked Iza Ascún if she enjoys working at a Mondragon
cooperative. I really like it here in the cooperative. I mean, in a capitalist firm,
I don't think I would have the right to speak. But here, I have the same opportunity as anybody else.
I am equal. I have a vote, and I can give my opinion, and I can say what we need to get rid
of and what we're going to improve on. But in a capitalist firm, the boss gives the orders,
and you, you just shut up and work. And then you go home.
Here you have opportunities to speak, to improve.
They offer you a lot of ways to improve.
And in the end, even though we're each in our own level,
I believe it's a very different story than in a capitalist firm,
where the boss calls the shots and you do your eight hours and that's it.
I believe we just have much better conditions.
Welcome to Mondragón.
A business association with a management model based on people and cooperation.
de empresas con un modelo de gestión basado en las personas y la cooperación. Network, located in the Basque country. It's located in a modern building with a big stylized M logo in front. From the metal pipe handrails and sculptures to the ball-bearing jewelry worn
by the secretary who signs you in, everything has an industrial chic essence to it.
I am Ander Echeverria. I'm from this town and I'm working in the corporation, Mondragon Corporation, since more or less 20 years ago.
And now what I'm doing is cooperative dissemination.
I try to explain visitors what we are so we can be inspiring to replicate anyway this model around the world.
To understand how Mondragon came to be,
we first need to understand the context out of which it arose.
Between 1936 and 1939,
an alliance of democratic leftists fought in the Spanish Civil War
against a monarchist
fascist constituency led by General Francisco Franco.
These leftist forces were in the process of implementing widespread progressive parliamentary
reforms when a series of military coups attempting to consolidate power back in the hands of
the aristocratic classes resulted in widespread skirmishes
that rapidly led to civil war. These were dark and tumultuous times. The people of Spain
experienced incredible levels of material deprivation and violence, leaving hundreds
of thousands dead and millions displaced. The Basque country was heavily impacted during the war. In a strange coincidence, our visit to Mondragon headquarters landed exactly on the 80th anniversary of the day that Guernica,
a Basque town about 50 kilometers to the south of Mondragon, was bombed, leaving hundreds of civilians dead.
dead. The left ultimately lost the war, leaving the fascists under the leadership of the Franco dictatorship in power for the next several decades.
And it is in this post-Civil War period that the Mondragon story begins, with a priest.
So the beginning was a priest that was born near Bilbao,
and his mission was to be a priest in the town of Mondragon since 1941.
His name was Father José María Erezmentiereta, and his mission was to build a movement of local resilience
and to establish, as he put it himself,
a flood of solidarity within the town of Mondragon.
He strongly believed in the centrality of work,
in the development and betterment of the self and society.
And Erezmentiereta is going to say, if you want to change the world, you have two options.
You can change it from the top to the bottom, and for that you have to be at the power,
or you can change it from the bottom up, and for that you have to change people.
That was the option of Arismendiareta. He said, you have to change people. That was the option of Erezmendi Areta.
He said, we have to create a new person. In Mondragón at the time, there was a private
school run by the largest company in town, Unión Cerrejera, which provided high quality
technical education, but only to company workers and their male family members.
Erezmendi Areta tried to get the company to open the school to the public.
He said, please, open the school to everybody.
And the answer of Unión Cerrera was, no.
If the answer was yes, we finish.
And no was for Erez Mendendi Areta the beginning of a process.
A process that began with him establishing his own non-profit cooperative school in 1943,
the Escuela Profesional, now called the University of Mondragon.
A few years later, in 1953, Erezmendi Areta would approach the same company
and urge them to open up affordable
shares and offer management opportunities to their workers. The answer of the Unión
Ferrojera was no. The conclusion of Erez Mendiereta, it is not possible to change
companies. What we have to do is our own company with the ideas we have. In 1956,
Erezmendiereta established the first industrial cooperative of Mondragon,
ULGOR, now named Fagor. Another thing that Erezmendiereta did in the early years was to
create a bank with the purpose of supporting the growing network of co-ops
that would emerge over the next few decades.
The bank, Caja Laboral, operates as a credit union
and collects a reserve of money from the Mondragon members
to provide a level of resilience for the co-ops themselves.
Erismendireta also created an independent social security system,
giving cooperative members a degree of economic security
that was not provided by the Spanish government.
We visited Fagor, Ederland, an automotive parts factory,
to speak with one of the workers there.
So, what's your name?
Andoni.
And where do you work?
I work in Fagor, in the foundry.
We make disc brakes out of iron.
And it's a cooperative?
Yes.
And are you a worker member?
Yes, I will become a worker member this month.
And what if I told you that there aren't very many worker cooperatives in the United States?
What would
you think of this? I think it's good to have cooperatives in the perspective that you help
each other, extend a hand to one another. If one isn't doing well economically and the other is
doing well, they help each other. What Andini is referring to is the system of worker solidarity in the
Mondragon cooperatives, where if one co-op goes bankrupt, worker members will be reassigned to
another company instead of being laid off. Another example of solidarity is in the pay ratio.
At Mondragon, the average difference between the lowest and highest paid worker is one to six. Compared to
the United States, this is astounding. According to a 2018 report prepared by the staff of
Representative Keith Ellison titled Rewarding or Hoarding, the average CEO to median worker pay
ratio in the United States has now reached 339 to 1. And that's the median worker,
not the lowest. We asked Andini what he thought of this.
Six to me is a lot already. To me, six is a lot because if I'm a worker at a factory,
a peon, and I make X and my boss makes six times more, it feels exaggerated.
Even though the responsibilities are greater, that seems a lot.
And 300 times, I'm out of here.
You would leave if this was the case?
Yeah, I wouldn't like that.
No, no, no.
We don't like it either.
It should be more equitable.
There shouldn't be that much of a difference.
The pay ratio is decided collectively by Mondragon's worker members.
Democratic participation is key to the Mondragon mission.
Each co-op holds one or two general assembly meetings per year. Decisions made at these meetings range from approving budgets
to deciding to open new factories abroad. The assemblies also elect a general council,
where larger decisions are made, including the approval or removal of the CEO.
decisions are made, including the approval or removal of the CEO. This council could be comprised of any of Mondragon's worker members, receptionists, machine operators, android experts. Mondragon
cooperatives also have advisory bodies called social councils that serve as an intermediary
between the workers and their managers. These are just some of the ways that democracy
is enshrined in the Mondragon workplace. y hoy soy proscrito, va a cerrar la luna y solo quiero bailar.
Va a cerrar la luna y solo pido algo más, cuando te marches quemaré esta ciudad. What a beautiful city. Civil War, and for many years created this structure of education and training, etc.
But it was actually during the 80s when the whole country transformed systemically.
That was the moment where Mondragon really scaled up.
Here's Gorka Espiao, the senior fellow at the Aguirre Center at the University of the
Basque Country in Bilbao, who we heard from in episode one.
of the Basque country in Bilbao, who we heard from in episode one.
Only 30, 40 years ago, this area was in the middle of a huge crisis because it was the end of dictatorship.
So it was the moment where 40 years of dictatorship
that actually had declared these regions,
both the region of Mondragon and Bilbao, traitor regions,
because they were fighting against fascism and Franco during the war. declared these regions, both the region of Mondragon and Bilbao, traitor regions, because
they were fighting against fascism and Franco during the war. So after 40 years of dictatorship,
there was a new democratic model emerging. But that moment of political instability
was also happening when the whole industry collapsed because the economy in this area was based on heavy industries,
seed building, manufacturing,
a very similar story to many industrial areas in Europe and in North America as well.
This was the beginning of the global neoliberal era of capitalism,
marked by the deregulation of international markets,
which disempowered workers and strengthened the power of capital around the world.
How the Basque country navigated these uncharted waters tells the story of both success and failure.
Normally, when you have a situation like that, if you compare internationally,
normally these areas just get worse and worse.
It is really difficult to transform a society that is just suffering all those problems at the same
time. But in the Basque Country, actually what happened was the opposite. In a very short time,
the economy, the self-government, all the key elements of society were transformed in a very, very different way.
So actually, when the European institutions and the whole world were saying, forget about industry and manufacturing and go for services, forget about your own culture and all language and go for the mainstream ones.
When all these messages were being adopted internationally,
in this area, the most important institutions, associations,
and communities actually decided to do the opposite.
And it was taking the decision to reinvest in manufacturing,
but not only to reinvest in manufacturing,
but actually to structure the companies following social economy models. And this was the moment where a lot of workers actually
took ownership of companies that were collapsing. It was the moment where the Mondragon model
started to scale up. The Basque country's alternative path of development throughout
this period probably has something to do with the region's underlying values of egalitarianism, self-governance and solidarity, which formed part of the metanarrative or overarching story of this time.
well, we are living in a very difficult time and we are Basques.
And being Basques means creating a collective response in solidarity.
And he said, we need to create a new model, a sustainable social and economic model.
And nobody's going to help us.
So if we don't do it, nobody's going to do it for us.
And that logic, that story is the story that every single person from very, very different backgrounds and in very different places
will tell you about why they did what they did 20, 30 years ago.
And that is crucial in order to understand how Mondragon operates,
but also how Basque society in general has operated for a long time.
Mondragon responded to the global economic crisis of the late 1970s by implementing a number of
defensive mechanisms that reflected its solidaristic values. For example, instead of
laying off workers, they took collective pay cuts, consolidated management services, and relocated members whose businesses went under.
Yet, although they were more resilient, this isn't the whole story. It was during this crisis that
Mondragon also began relying on certain defensive practices that resembled the responses of
traditional companies. One of these responses was a shift towards more temporary contract workers who are
not worker members. In the late 70s, in the early 80s, some of our cooperatives disappeared.
And we had serious problems. And at that time, we decided, well, we are going to accept temporary contract workers.
And first was one, and then two.
Today, more or less, it's 15%.
This was just the first sign of the Mondragon project getting knocked off kilter.
Temporary contract workers have no right to vote or participate in decision-making processes.
And despite working alongside worker members and contributing to the company just as other workers
do, they don't get a share in the profits. The company has, in effect, added on a group of
precarious workers whose numbers they can expand or contract based on market conditions.
numbers they can expand or contract based on market conditions. But this wasn't all.
More cracks began to show in the 1990s.
30 years ago, one of our suppliers telephoned us.
Hello, how are you? Fine, thanks. You are my supplier? Yes. Do you want to continue being my supplier? Yes, of course. You have to be with me in Mexico,
100 meters from my factory. Mondragon's first international factory was the Coprici
production plant in Mexico. Its opening was the beginning of a trend that would lead to more than
100 international production subsidiaries employing thousands of workers abroad.
Although Ondar explained to us that Mondragon did try to cooperativize many of these subsidiaries employing thousands of workers abroad. Although Ander explained to us that
Mondragon did try to cooperativize many of these subsidiaries, there were either legal or cultural
obstacles that stood in the way. As a result, none of these subsidiaries are cooperatives,
and none of these international workers are members. Today, there are actually more non-cooperative firms than cooperatives
within Mondragon. And finally, the third major blow to Mondragon's flood of solidarity has to
do with their pay ratio. It's increasing, slowly but steadily. When Erezmendireta established the
first co-ops, the maximum pay ratio was half of what it is today. It was 1 to 3.
Today is not 1-3. 1-3 was bulgur, and during 20 years was 1-3. Then the society changed.
Solidarity is not so present, and today is 1-6. The weakening of solidaristic values is not limited to the Mondragon Corporation.
As it turns out, the Basque country as a whole is experiencing a similar trend.
Despite still being one of the most equal places in Europe,
inequality in this region is actually on the rise.
We asked Gorka what he thought of this.
The problem is that now the story we are
telling ourselves today is different to the story we told 30 years ago. So therefore we are actually
taking decisions that are also different and in some ways we are doing what everybody else is doing. So we are in some ways, we are forgetting who we are or where
we come from. And we are applying the same mentality that the rest of the developed world
is applying. And the risk of that is that probably in 10, 15 years, if we keep doing the same thing
that the rest are doing, we will end up in the same place. So there is at
the moment a really interesting debate about the story that we tell ourselves about who we are now
and what type of society we want to create. In the case of Mondragon, this is also part of the
Mondragon internal discussion as well. So is Mondragon just a normal company now and they just need to
operate as everyone else? Or is Mondragon something different?
Well, we decided to ask Ander.
So you mentioned some of the challenges. Can you talk a little bit about the pressures that
Mondragon experiences competing with global capitalism? And what is the narrative around that?
Does Mondragon see itself as like a radical business
trying to change the world into co-ops
or trying to fight against this global capital?
What's the story that Mondragon holds
in the Basque region and in the world?
First of all, we are companies, we are business, and we are doing our work.
We are working in our businesses.
We don't want to change the world because we can't.
We are only 101, yes?
We want to change what we have close to us, our region,
and we think that it has changed thanks to us,
and we want to be existing for that, to improve always the quality of life in the place where we
are. And we are not competing with another system, but we are competing with other companies. Yes, we are
competing in terms of business, but not in terms of philosophy. What we want is if for the rest of
the world, we are inspiring, this is great. Yes, but we are not taking part in conferences,
But we are not taking part in conferences or in books or in research because we feel that we are going to change the world ourselves, but because we are going to be inspiring for the rest of the world and for people that are very active to change their place, their region.
That's our aim.
So it's kind of this idea of leading through example almost.
You're not actively campaigning, but surely you recognize, Mondragon recognizes that it is quite radical in what it's doing. Yes, that's a good question. But if you ask any of my colleagues,
worker members of our cooperatives about that, they are going to say,
what are you saying? I'm working in a machine or I am working in the accounting department.
And that's all. Yes. We, in general, we don't realize what we are.
This lack of self-awareness was reflected in the attitudes of the worker members we spoke with.
We asked Iza Askun if she felt like she was part of a larger movement against capitalism.
It doesn't go against. It's simply another work philosophy.
But I don't think it goes against. It's another alternative, another option,
but it's not against, because there are always capitalist companies here too, so there are
options for everyone. And here's Andini again. Against capitalism?
First, I would need to know what we mean by capitalism.
I don't know.
I don't know if it's against capitalism.
I don't know what to tell you.
I guess what I mean is,
do you think that what you're doing is part of a movement?
No.
No. Movement? No. I don't think so.
So for you, working in a cooperative is just something normal?
Yes.
It's not special?
No, no.
No, no, I don't see it as something special.
I see it as a job.
And do you think that right now in the world that we have an economic problem, that we're in a crisis?
Yes, it has been here in Spain too.
And what is the nature of the crisis in your opinion?
That work has gone down, but it has benefited others.
Those with more powers have benefited.
The banks too.
They never lose. But when there is help, they don't help the poor. Ultimately, they step on them.
Step on the poor. Step on the workers. I see it that way.
And our program is called Upstream,
and it's a metaphor about going upstream in a river
from the problems you mentioned to their root causes.
So in your opinion, when you look at all these economic problems
and you go upstream, what do you see as the root causes?
Well, we're always worried about the things that aren't important.
Things that we buy don't have much value.
We are consumers and we don't value what is actually important in life.
And it's a vicious cycle.
We always want more and more, a big house, a nice car.
Capitalism, like what we're talking about.
This is the problem.
And Mondragon, is it a solution?
The solution is to provide work, right?
And if you provide more work, then people can consume, buy their house and their car, do what they want with their money, achieve the ideas they have, the dreams they have.
But I don't know if it'll get us out of the crisis
or address the root causes.
So it is possibly a little better because it gives jobs and it's better to work in Mondragon than a place that isn't a cooperative.
But at the same time, it might not address the root causes of the problems.
I don't know. These are some profound questions.
I don't think that much in the root causes that you're asking about.
I have a job, I work, I get out, and that's it. Hello? Hello?
Hello? Is this Sam?
Yes, it is. We made a call to Toronto, Canada to speak with Sam Gindin, a union organizer and writer who co-authored the book The Making of Global Capitalism.
Mondragon is one of the most successful co-ops in the world.
Mondragon is one of the most successful co-ops in the world.
But as they got into globalization and as they had to compete, they began to do a few things.
One is they began to hire workers who weren't co-op members.
So they were, in a sense, exploiting those workers' lower wages and less benefits and had less rights.
So already they started setting up a two-tier system within their own company. And then they had trouble with one of their major operations, an appliance maker, and they decided
to close it. When Fagor Electrodomesticos went bankrupt in 2013, 5,600 jobs were lost.
Although the worker members were relocated into other positions within the Mondragon Corporation, the 200 Basque temporary workers,
and the 3,500 wage laborers working in Fagor Electrodomésticos subsidiaries abroad were fired.
Well, again, this began to make them look just like any other firm who's trying to compete and
is lopping off whatever isn't quite productive. And it's not that these were bad people. You know,
it's the president basically
saying, look, we're operating under capitalism. And this is what you have to do if you want to
save what you have. The decision to take on more temporary contract workers and open non-cooperative
subsidiaries abroad were sacrifices Mondragon members would argue they had to make to adapt
to the pressures of neoliberal capitalism.
But these sacrifices have resulted in a multi-tiered system where decent pay, job security,
and workplace democracy for worker members relies on the exploitation of others. It's easy to criticize Madrugan for the direction it has taken. But considering the global economic pressures
building over the last 30 years, what alternative was there? Without those sacrifices, it's quite
possible that Madrugan would not exist today. And if we look more broadly, is this need to adapt or
perish within global capitalism unique to Madrugan? Or is it a struggle that all cooperatives have to reckon with?
As long as they have to compete with capitalism, it pushes them to have to do certain things just
out of being realistic. So this pressure of competition is really profound. If you ignore
that, then over time, there's all this pressure on you to just become like everybody else. Now,
in some circumstances, you can escape it.
And you can have these little islands of co-ops.
You can have a restaurant that people like to go to because it's cool.
And, you know, competition isn't that big a deal,
or a coffee shop or a bookstore.
But in terms of making major inroads into the economy,
that's going to be pretty difficult.
And while you're trying to do this,
the rest of capitalism is just going on like it always does.
Sam wrote a paper titled Chasing Utopia,
Worker Ownership and Cooperatives Will Not Succeed by Competing on Capitalism's Terms.
In his paper, he laid out his argument that both for the sustainability of the worker cooperative model
and for the democratization of the economy,
cooperatives today must begin to see themselves as part of broader class-based political movements
to radically transform power structures. He wrote, quote, in short, co-ops, once an integral part of
radical political movements, are now largely integrated into the capitalist order. They may lobby for particular
changes, but they no longer mobilize alongside those fighting capitalism.
As the left is destroyed, this is critical to the whole story, the larger destruction
of socialist parties and movements that happened really after the Second World War and continued,
and it in fact got worse.
That affects everything, because that was the role of socialist parties.
It was to integrate all of this into a larger context.
Once that stops happening, your own perspective gets narrowed.
If you're not part of a larger thing to transform society,
you tend to just kind of try to survive in your own
little world.
And that ends up institutionalizing these kinds of structures in a particular way.
They become more bureaucratic.
They become more concerned with, well, how do we just survive as a business?
Because things have become more competitive.
So you're getting more integrated into the system.
You're becoming more institutionalized as a business, and that's all a consequence of the defeat of the left and your goals being reoriented to just survival within capitalism.
grew out of soil scarred by a brutal civil war. The alliances on the left were utterly crushed by Franco, and as a result, Mondragon had to tread lightly. Of course, they probably shared
much in ideology with socialists and other groups on the left, but they chose to remain explicitly
apolitical. This neutrality allowed them to survive under the shadow of a hostile fascist dictatorship.
But, as it turns out, there was another threatening shadow on the horizon.
Global neoliberal capitalism.
It's states that have made globalization. It didn't just happen.
And if we're going to take this on, we have to take this on at the level of the national state.
If we're going to take this on, we have to take this on at the level of the national state,
which means that protests and trying to find small alternative spaces are important,
but they're only important if they're actually linked to a larger project,
because otherwise they get absorbed into capitalism or protests just come and go.
So that's the point.
We have to think about this large political question about changing power relationships so we can make cooperatives work. And then the question is,
well, how do you develop that power? And you can't do it if you're constantly just running
around putting out fires and worrying about your own problems. When we analyze cooperatives through this lens of broader transformation,
we can see how internally co-ops reject much of the hierarchy and exploitation that marks capitalism.
But on their own, are they a vehicle for systemic transformation?
They can bring democracy to the workplace
and help strengthen values of solidarity, egalitarianism, and cooperation
within communities, like we explored in episode one. But do they inherently challenge the power
structures that maintain the economic system and the rules that guide it? Rules that threaten their
ability to survive and thrive? Rules that maintain private property, the profit motive, the logic of Sam argues in his paper that, participatory economy lies in the capacity to change the rules of the game and transform the
state, then the evaluation of co-ops can't rest on whether this or that enterprise is economically
successful, but whether they contribute to building a working class with the vision,
confidence, class sensibility, and institutional strength to democratize the economy.
class sensibility, and institutional strength to democratize the economy.
Often cooperatives are formed, and it's an alternative to actually challenging the whole system. Mondragon actually emerged during the fascist period, because the fascists saw it
as an alternative to workers mobilizing to change the system. They could just focus on becoming a
part of capitalism. Marx talked about this in the
Communist Manifesto when he was criticizing the utopians. He was saying, instead of changing the
world, you're trying to go off and create these little worlds, these little islands. But that
just leaves all the power that exists as is, and no one's bothered by it. Co-ops have to become
part of a larger project, which is changing the rules of the game.
That's the point.
You have to be part of a larger project,
which means that you're relating to social movements differently.
You're aware of the limits of what you're doing
and why you have to change larger things
if you're changing the rules of the game.
You can't just change the rules of the game by saying,
I'm going to be different.
Islands of alternatives will always remain under siege as long as they exist within the global sea of capitalism where competition rules.
And because worker cooperatives have values and imperatives that go beyond blind growth and profit maximization, they are inherently less competitive within capitalism. As Sam writes in his article, rather than extending freer trade and constricting the ability of capital to remove productive
enterprises from the communities that enrich them. It is actually possible to have another world.
And the question is, well, how do we get there? So in terms of the question of co-ops, my main
argument is co-ops have a role to play. workers taking over factories when they're frustrated or they see no
alternative it's fine as a defensive thing but these things are only fine in terms of building
something if you see them as part of as a part of a process which is leading to a different society
with different values unless you extend workplace fights to larger fights
that include not just other workers and other workplaces, but your life in the community,
because class is expressed in the community. Unless you do that, you can't build the kind of
force that can change society. And you have to change society to really have a really true,
relevant economic democracy.
So what does it look like when cooperatives are vehicles of a broader transformation
and not just islands of alternatives?
Hello?
Hello, Ms. Ritudela.
Yes, this is she. Hi, Kali, how are you?
I'm doing okay.
Can you introduce yourself for our listeners?
Hi, Kali. How are you?
I'm doing okay.
Can you introduce yourself for our listeners?
My name is Kali Okuno.
I'm the director of Cooperation Jackson, based in Jackson, Mississippi,
which is an emerging network of cooperative and supporting solidarity economy institutions that we're working to have transform.
Jackson is the economy and the social relationships,
starting with the establishment
of more equity in the community, but overall trying to upend some of the old school, long-standing
differentials in the power that exists in the economy here locally, but to also kind of transform
and be a model of the transformation of more of an ecologically and regenerative way of doing production
and putting the means of production directly in the hands of members of the community.
And what's your background, and how did you come to do this work?
It really started in the early 2000s when I was the director of the School of Social Justice and Community Development in Oakland, California.
And I woke up just with a terrible nightmare into the second year of that project.
And the nightmare was, what was I preparing, you know, the kids that I had recruited,
what was I really preparing them for in terms of, you know, a job, in terms of opportunity?
Just kind of recognizing that given the shifts of the economy, that much of what we were preparing for was going to be rapidly becoming obsolete, and that
this was a population that was going to become increasingly more and more disposable.
So I just woke up feeling like I just set a lot of kids up and their parents up with
kind of false hopes and false expectations.
And I just couldn't live with that. And so I just
started on the journey trying to figure out, you know, what could be done? What could working class
people, particularly Black working class people, what could we do to put more direct control and
power in our own hands towards shaping the economy, creating the economy that would serve us and suit our needs.
This sparked a journey that would eventually lead Callie to Jackson, Mississippi. Cooperation Jackson is part of the same translocal movement as Cooperation Richmond,
featured in episode one of this series.
The project, launched in 2014, is still in the early stages of development.
Kali and others have been in the process of collecting research and gathering information
in order to embed resilience and longevity into their movement from the start.
Cooperation Jackson came out of a shared vision called the Jackson-Kush Plan,
developed by the New African Peoples Organization, the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement,
and the Jackson People's Assembly in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
The plan has three fundamental pillars, building people's assemblies, building a network of
progressive political candidates, and building a broad-based solidarity economy.
Cooperation Jackson is the vehicle created to advance the third pillar of
the plan, the solidarity economy pillar, and aims specifically to advance the struggle for economic
democracy as a prelude towards the democratic transition to eco-socialism. It's the practical
and project-based part of the plan and is led by the strategy of cooperative development.
Cooperation Jackson will focus on strengthening the solidarity economy by creating a Mondragon-like
federation of local worker co-ops, working to cooperativize entire supply chains in the city,
developing a co-op incubator similar to Cooperation Richmond's, creating programs
to democratize technology,
and launching a cooperative financial system.
It's crucial to understand the context out of which all this is happening.
Jackson is a progressive bubble within a Republican supermajority state dominated by the
far-right Tea Party. The city is home to a state capitol building that flies a Confederate battle
flag and a city hall built by slave labor. It's the largest city in Mississippi with about 200,000
people, over 80% of whom are Black. Almost 30% of the population in Jackson fall
below the poverty line, and unemployment hovers at around 40 to 50%. Won't you come back to your daddy one more time?
We've been living with the politics that everyone is now experiencing with the Trump regime, as we call it.
The virulent racism, the outright misogyny, the viciousness.
We've been living with that for quite some time.
That has been the norm
and order of the day here in Mississippi for well over 50 years. Not much has really changed in that
regards into the politics. But what that has produced is a certain level of clarity that you
have in the community's minds about what their interests are and who's opposed to those interests
that I think has made some of the different aspects of the work that we've been trying to
do within the overall framework of the Jackson push plan somewhat simple.
You know, the, the type of clarity that, that we are now seeing, you know,
on a mass level with the women's movement, with the movement for black lives,
I think that level of political clarity has been in Mississippi and within
Jackson in particular for some time, which enables our work to really move, I think,
in some ways that may be a bit harder in other communities.
Cooperation Jackson's vision has been significantly influenced and informed by Mondragon,
particularly by Mondragon's relationship with the Basque movement for self-determination and
sovereignty, which has a great deal of resonance with the movement for Black liberation that Cooperation
Jackson is embedded in. Cooperation Jackson's key values and operating principles draw on those of
Mondragon's, and Kali believes that Cooperation Jackson is actually poised to become the Mondragon
of the United States, given Jackson's industrial infrastructure, strategic location along several trade routes,
and its association with historic cooperative developments in African-American communities throughout the country.
When we spoke with Kali, we asked him about Mondragon's recent history,
including the challenges they've faced and the sacrifices they've made.
There are tremendous amount of lessons to be learned from what's going on in Mondragon
that I don't think should dissuade people. I think we just need to view them from a critical eye.
I think we continue to give them support. I think we push upon them why they're doing certain things
like the contract workers and the kind of the wage inequality.
This is beginning to seep in. We have been studying these kind of shifts and development of mantra on ourself from afar and trying to learn all we can from them.
and some strategic decisions that they have made,
which has led them to this, I think,
really kind of a turning point for Mondragon.
That is really, I think, within the course of the next couple of years,
if my read is correct,
they're going to have to really make a decision as to what extent can they actually remain a cooperative
as opposed to just kind of a new type of shareholder venture and
enterprise. And mind you, we took a lot from the Mondragon experience within our work because we
felt that there were some parallels politically. You know, not that Mondragon ever explicitly had
a relationship to some of the more vocal Basque independence forces. We know that there was always
different points in time some exchange,
but they always had a key point around
their focus was employing the Basque people, right?
And while we've always thought
that that's a good baseline goal,
our criticism,
that that goal didn't go far enough
and that we would have liked to see them
articulate much more kind of anti-capitalist, if not
all-out socialist constructive goals and aims.
And that is what we've been trying to focus and work on.
Erzmendir Yatta's goal in starting the Madrugón cooperatives was to create meaningful employment
for the people of the Basque Country.
The overarching vision of Cooperation Jackson is to place the ownership and control
over the primary means of production directly in the hands of the Black working class, but also
to build and advance the development of the ecologically regenerative forces of production,
and to democratically transform the political economy of the city of Jackson, the state of Mississippi, and the entire southeastern
region. Even though Cooperation Jackson sees the importance of going local and building municipal
socialism, they don't believe that economic democracy can be built in isolation on the local
level, and instead that movements must have wider relationships and links. They feel the initiative to create a solidarity economy in Jackson cannot be divorced from a more general class struggle,
and that self-determination for people of African descent and the democratic transformation of Jackson and the state of Mississippi
is a necessary prelude to the radical decolonization and transformation of the United States itself.
We're not just trying to build cooperatives for cooperative's sake, but we're trying to build
vehicles very explicitly and very intentionally of social transformation. And what we're trying
to do is fundamentally change the relations of production in our community. We have to build these vehicles
with clear political goals in mind. And if they don't have clear political goals and
intention in mind, they can't be vehicles of transformation. And we want to see them
be vehicles of transformation. They need to be vehicles of transformation. And that the
form, at its best, I think could empower working class people, but it has to be done with a political focus and intent in mind.
Cooperation Jackson is up against one of the most hostile state governments in the United States.
The capitalist sea surrounding them
is particularly choppy, and their struggle is a difficult one. It's possible that they
too may have to make sacrifices. There's no guarantee of success. But their vision is
powerful. They not only aim to strengthen their island, but to cooperativize the whole
sea.
Even as islands, it would be wrong to dismiss the transformative power of co-ops.
As we explored in episode one of this series, and as Michael W. Howard has written,
quote,
It is from these efforts that experience in democratic self-governance can be learned,
dreams can be kept alive, and seeds of wider transformation can be sown, even if Mondragon-like federations cannot on their own bring about a gradual transformation to a post-capitalist
system.
to a post-capitalist system.
No, perhaps not on their own.
But despite a difficult history,
the wisdom of Erezmendriyeta and the scale and strength of Mondragon
remain an inspiration to much of the co-op world.
And when cooperatives are part of larger movements
to challenge oppressive power structures,
dismantle the logic that drives exploitation and greed,
and grow workplace struggles into community, regional, national, and international movements for liberation,
then not only can we better sustain the cooperative movement,
but we can, as Kali Akuno says, give birth to the new world waiting to be born.
Thank you to the Johns, Will Stratton, the Mississippi Shakes, and Chris Zabriskie for the music in this episode.
Thank you to Phil Rigglesworth for the cover art.
And thank you to Ellie Llewellyn, Kenneth Rosales, and Netta Raymond for help with translation.
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Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter at Upstream Podcast. අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි අපි Thank you.