Time/Bank workshop: What is the good of wage?
An intensive workshop on alternative currency theory and practice
Saturday 17 September 2011, 13:00 hours
Presented by Stroom Den Haag
Location: NAiM Bureau Europa, 
Avenue Céramique 226, Maastricht (NL)
Directions to NAiM click here
A wage is the foundation of capitalist relations of production. It is 
the measuring stick by which the productive capacities of the worker are
 given value. Does the regime of wage as a predominant system through 
which value is distributed to a labor-force adequately measure your 
investment in the field of labor, however? How can a system that was 
developed for the productivity cycles of a factory and agricultural 
economy compensate for immaterial production? Do you feel subjected to 
an exhausting life of increasingly undervalued labor? Have you grown 
frustrated with the unregulated wage protocols of the service sectors? 
Join us in Maastricht for an intensive afternoon discussion on 
Time/Bank's and other 
alternative currency models that are being developed today for the needs
 and desires of the service sectors and beyond!
PROGRAM
Imagining the Future(s) of Wage 
Jaromil Rojo of DYNDY
DYNDY is an information hub focused on the development of Pattern 
Languages for Alternative and Complementary Money Systems. Jaromil Rojo 
will discuss strategic organizational models that could inform and 
empower grassroots communities through tools to overcome scarcity. The 
focus of the presentation will be on crowdfunding schemes and credit 
circuits, as well p2p and crypto currency platforms. These systems will 
be addressed as imagined technologies of the future that could further 
current developments in community driven and Commons centered 
sustainability models.
Time Banks and the Labor Theory of Value
Presented by Noah Brehmer of Time/Bank Stroom Den Haag
The vision of time as a monetary representation of labor emerged in the 
19th century. Pierre Joseph Proudhon, Karl Rodbertus, John Gray, Josiah 
Warren and others were key protagonists behind these revolutionary 
narratives. Envisioning social-utopian realities where all would have an
 equal share in the means and ends of production, they organized 
currency systems that were morally bound to a labor theory of value. A 
labor theory of value holds that when labor or its product is sold, in 
exchange, it ought to receive goods or services embodying the amount of 
labor necessary to produce an article of exactly similar and equal 
quantity. The equivalency of wage envisioned by these 19th century 
political figures fell decisively short of any commensurable 
manifestation however. Noah Brehmer will present research on the labor 
theory of value and its historical shortcomings. Following this brief 
historical illustration of precedents in alternative currency models a 
speculative blueprint will be drawn for time banking movements of the 
21st century. 
The measure of all things? Art, precarious labor and the wage relation
Presented by Joost de Bloois of Amsterdam University
Over the past decade, the notion of ‘precarity' has served as a rallying
 cry for political and cultural activism alike. As the structural 
uncertainty of livelihood, ‘precarity' has come to signify the 
socio-economic, as well as existential, condition for large segments of 
society under global, neo-liberal capitalism. Today, ‘precarious' work 
does not just entail physical labor: it is precisely within so-called 
‘immaterial labor' (care work, emotional labor, creative industries, the
 cultural sector at large) that we encounter ‘precarity' as a common 
denominator. One crucial aspect of this type of precarious work (as 
theorized by a.o. André Gorz or Franco Berardi) is that it is not just 
structurally underpaid, but that, by its very nature, it is largely in 
excess of any traditional financial measuring stick. Today's living 
labor generates a different type of surplus value than it did for 
traditional Marxism (cf. Diedrich Diederichsen): if product and producer
 merge, if living labor becomes ‘bio-political', than surplus value 
becomes immeasurable. Contemporary struggles against ‘precarity', 
whether these are political or cultural, should therefore not just be 
defensive of existing rights, but also look for alternative models for 
the wage relation.
More about Time/Bank Den Haag click here.
- Saturday 17 Sep '11 1 pm
 
- NAiM Bureau Europa, Avenue Céramique 226, Maastricht
 
- Entrance: free
 

















